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Owd Codger

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Everything posted by Owd Codger

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dr-K7QJ5RQQ Willam Hart Delfonics Loving Him
  2. I've was playing an old copy of a Hospital Radio show I did some years ago. This was a track that came as a bit of a surprise. Was it played at venues at all? Sounds like a Blaxploitation type of soundtrack. nice mellow tune
  3. Slightly off topic, but found a "jukebox" ( is there such a thing these days))?), in a bar in Scarborough last week. Offered a " Northern Soul" selection, didn't expect a surprise, but delighted to find it included Eddie & Ernie, Sidra's Theme, Invitations, Lainie Hill,Kenny Lynch, Precisions ( Why Girl), amongst others...5 for £1. Really p***ed my mates off.
  4. Always had time for this tune. Good group and Thom Bell magic
  5. I think early days they had the band on one track...singer on the other. But they may not have retained these after the mixing and cutting. At some stage, the various tracks were retained, and increased technology meant that the various elements of the band could be separated onto different channels...as were vocals, lead backup etc
  6. Things like Hitch Hike, Pride and joy are on Martha and Vandellas lp Dance Party....Marvin had these out in 63 same band tracks, so they must have been doing it in 63. I might have a dig and see if I can spot first use of a previous band track.
  7. Regarding the above, it's usually a good idea to look at the date of a release ....say mid 1965....and think it terms of much of the recording going back several months, even say 1964, as the process of recording a 45, with band track, vocals, strings etc spread over several months. Often the singers were on tour and producers worked on the tracks for months and had to do vocals when they returned to Detroit..briefly. " I'll keep holding on ".....Hunter / Stevenson actually rushed to New York to get the vocals done ....they couldn't wait for such a normal process.
  8. Paul Nixon. He was given extensive access to Motown's vaults and tape library. You'll see his name on many UK CDs. I think perhaps around 1963 they started using backing tracks and adding vocals ....the improvement in recording equipment allowed them to do this. Their main techie....Mike Mclean ...gave Motown a real improvement, moving over the years to 2, 4, 8, track etc. Re what makes an instrumental. " Festival Time" is a backing track with added sweetening....overdubs and strings of course. So a band track is just that, but as with the Mirwood things, do they become instrumentals with added overdubs and strings? Does a track have to be completely distanced to any vocal...who knows.
  9. Yes If there was a plan to do so, probably overdubs/strings etc would be added. Earl van Dyke's "That Motown Sound" lp was the original backing track with EVD adding organ overdubs on top. Likewise, his " I can't help myself" I assume the original poster was hoping to hear the original track as opposed to a fresh arrangement. I very doubt that a fresh instrumental exists.
  10. I asked a major Motown CD compiler if there is a backing track for ALL vocal in the Motown vaults. He replied; Absolutely if the 2-3-4-8 or 16 track tape is in the vaults which I would say covers 99.9 per cent of Motown recordings then there is a backing track
  11. here are the credit details courtesy of DFTMC Baby A Go-Go (Richard Jacques-Ronald Miller) published Stein & Van Stock alt title: Baby Don't Leave Me Barbara McNair; recorded Hitsville, completed 26-May-66 ; produced by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier 03-Jun-02; CD (M): Motown 544 619 2 A Cellarful Of Motown! [UK] details of alternate lyrics...again from DFTMC Countin' On You, Babe (Richard Jacques-Ronald Miller) Barbara McNair; recorded L.A. (?), completed by 08-Mar-66 ; produced by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier 26-Jan-04; CD (S): Motown 017 554 2 Barbara McNair - The Ultimate Motown Collection [UK]
  12. Mal C We are talking about Barbara McNair. Are you getting mixed up with another recording By Brenda Holloway
  13. Same track..but not sure it exists without vocals as a released item
  14. There is no version that I know of.
  15. Just come across this thread. I raised this on another forum years ago, got no response, so I thought I'd imagined it! I had to laugh when in the first show, full of "genuine" tunes from about 1968 played in the club ( or so the show portrayed) , they featured a Four Tops track , possibly Clip My Wings, that didn't surface until about 2005. Talk about Up Front.
  16. Just heard Four Tops/ Supremes "Knock on my door" on TV show Dinner Date ( wife's choice...I'm waiting for Test Match highlights).
  17. The same tape has "count the times" c/u as "Sims twins"????
  18. Probably a 'tape swapper' cover...not a DJ thing. Some tape swappers were keen on including the odd cover up, which amused and annoyed me in equal measure.
  19. Thanks...yes I'm certain that it is Timi Yuro
  20. Can anybody please help me to identify a track I have on an old tape, c/u as Cookie Jackson. It's actually That's Right, walk on by....but I can only find a cover version by Kiki Dee. Early 60s female. ...written by Clyde Otis, Joy Byers thank you
  21. Just dug out my Fantastic Four CD, which is a reissue of their album released on Soul after joining Motown. This album contains Ric Tic masters, and I thought I'd check out the liner notes. Interestingly, all the groups singles on Ric Tic are mentioned. Unfortunately, the text is in Japanese, so there may well be some interesting info, but alas I can't read it.
  22. That is correct. TMG release due to UK demand. But in the USA, after buy out, there was no real demand , so Motown didn't release anything on him from his Ric Tic masters. JJ Barnes tells the story that Eddie Holland told him he was too similar to Marvin Gaye....the likeness on his Ric Tic 45s is uncanny on some of them. Motown did record things on him at Hitsville, but again they never issued these tracks. CFOM in the UK features some of them.
  23. There are reports that Ed Wingate wanted to get out of the music business, and he actually approached Berry Gordy with an offer to sell GW. Motown wanted the studio, as by 1966 they were running at maximum capacity. So it was a good business move to buy GW. It solved many problems. I personally don't think that Gordy was worried by " competition" on a grand scale. In 1966, as we know, dozens of Detroit labels were issuing records. Yes GW/ Ric Tic was the major Detroit competition and locally, were getting attention. But Nationally and in crossover pop terms, not much of a worry to Motown. Producers might have been annoyed that some musicians were MIA...recording elsewhere....but not that big a problem. It made a few good lines in the SITSOM movie....rather like old footballers/Cricketers telling stories at Sportsman' s dinners. Of course, it's only my opinion, but I think the pressing need to stop GW is a myth. By 1966, The Marvelettes alone had more "hit "records than the entire GW set up. Mr Godin pushed this story in B& S. That probably gave the story more credence than anything else. But as they say, if the myth becomes the story....print the myth. BTW I love many of the GW/ RT tracks as much as anybody on this forum so I am not in any way anti GW.
  24. Regarding Motown's " Cavalier " approach to these GW masters, this was at a time when Motown were discarding things of quality like " Suspicion "," Forever in my heart" , " Reconsider ", " it's too late for you and me".. " Love starved heart" ..the kind of unreleased tracks that ignited the NS scene years ago. So it can be seen that these GW items were not a priority...hence their shoddy treatment


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