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Dean Rudland

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Everything posted by Dean Rudland

  1. There were plenty of copies of the box in Rough Trade East at 3 o'clock on Saturday. I reckon a call tomorrow would secure a copy.
  2. Tony Rounce's reminiscence of George including a moment that will live with me for ever - our meeting with George, which included him getting up and singing a previously unknown song for us. https://acerecords.co.uk/news/2013/george-jackson
  3. All the releases before and after this in the FD catalogue originally appeared with the multi-coloured label, so I think this did as well. Because it was a popular title it was reissued with the white coloured label when FD began to self distribute in 1972/3. Garth is right that the recent pressings have used the multi-coloured label. If you have a recent reissue the card stock will be white as opposed to the brown of an FD original.You can see this by looking inside the sleeve. EDIT: Just found this listing, which shows the first press original, with labels and spine. https://www.ebay.com/itm/GIL-SCOTT-HERON-PIECES-OF-A-MAN-ORIG-71-FLYING-DUTCHMAN-LP-GEORGE-PIROS-MASTER-/160973957119?pt=Music_on_Vinyl&hash=item257acba7ff&nma=true&si=X0unYfgaNRMe78xHM3bjkBfW7Co%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557
  4. It's on the Fame Studios Story box set that we put out in November 2011, previously unreleased and found on a tape with the song title on it and versions by 'boy' and 'girl'. As Chalky says its available in the Fame Singles Box, available direct from Ace for £30, for 5 singles. https://acerecords.co.uk/the-fame-singles-box no speeding up on that sound clip.
  5. That's actually something I hadn't put together. I always presumed the UA bit was after Fania, but perhaps it makes sense that it was a short interlude before his final splurge at Fania. The players on the Barrio Band album are basically the Fania All Stars, and that shot of Harvey from Our Latin Thing shows him as the musical director of that band. Harvey is a lovely fellow who I interviewed extensively a few years back. At the age of 76/77 he is still very active.
  6. I think he was there slightly longer. For instance Heavy Duty was a joint venture between Fania and Harvey and he produced the first Ralfi Pagan album on Fania and part of the second. The Harvey Averne Barrio Band record on HD is from 1971. He joined the label in 1967, and co-produced Ray Barretto's 'Acid' LP. Also his Atlantic album Viva Soul was basically a Fania album licensed out.
  7. The low thousands? I worked on Fania for four years and had reams of paperwork about pressing numbers. So I think I'm right there. Boxes of multiples that's speculation, but not sure how there would be.
  8. Not true, the label says 'from the album', they knew that the track was going to be on the album from the moment it was recorded, so they would have put that on the single. It was released to promote the album, probably simultaneously. As the record was pressed in the low thousands, I can't imagine there's that many to find. Harvey's two boxes were probably the last multiples lying around.
  9. I wished I'd scanned the pressing figures on this. Certainly more than hundreds, but less than almost everything - maybe actually everything - on the label. I think it was a 1000, but maybe 2000. Seem to remember Central Park was double that.
  10. It wasn't though. As the 45 says it was from the Fania LP - at this point Fania were using Uptite to release material that they thought might cross over to the soul charts - both the LP and the single were released at pretty much at the same time. Reissue it isn't. About ten years ago Harvey sold a box or two of these, and apart from those, its been a very scarce 45 - significantly less were pressed of this than Central Park, or in fact almost all the other Uptite releases.
  11. I've seen this copy and like new doesn't even begin to describe it. I can't imagine that there are too many copies around in this condition. The mint copy on popsike had writing on the label, and an absolutely knackered copy went for a couple of thousand dollars.
  12. There's no Youtube link, but surely the most gloriously carry on style innuendo you will hear on a record is Pussycat by the Latin Blues Band. One of the ad-libbing voices on this is the producer Bobby Marin, who has become a good friend of mine, and his voice still sounds identical to how it sounds on the record.
  13. Bob artists like D'angelo, India Arie, Erykah Badu, Maxwell etc all referred to themselves as 'soul' as have many others.
  14. Please do Bob. I'd love to see that, because of the year of recording it shouldn't exist.
  15. So what is the value of a mint issue of this, and who has one. Virtually every single copy of this record I've seen has been the white demo. This record is far rarer than 'Look At Me Now', so if you really want one.... I'm not saying this is a reasonable price (though I certainly don't think there are many better records), I'm just not convinced that you'd have many offers of one if you put a want up, because I don't think that many are out there.
  16. The British press has no crowd noise, and I always presumed this was a problem with a stereo master being folded back into mono - but I had no proof of that. I never thought there were two alternate versions, so I might check this today. I also presumed that all US copies had the crowd noise, could someone confirm if this is the case?
  17. The TK reissues that have been coming from Henry Stone are virtually all dubs as he lost the rights and the tapes to Roulette, and then to Rhino in the States and EMI in the ROW. The ones from EMI or Rhino are mainly from master tapes.
  18. For some reason a certain era of American collector is obsessed with stereo mixes, even for stuff that was originally meant to be mono.
  19. The ones in the shops from the late 80s were new pressings pressed by Palacio, who had bought out the rights for Venezuela from label owner Jerry Masucci, who needed the money for some investment. They were all done from masters which were of varying generations of originality, and were often of really bad pressing quality. I can't tell if Manship's is one of those or a slightly earlier pressing (I'm not sure if the 80s ones had Palacio on the front cover). However it is certainly no earlier than 1976/77 when Fania began to use those palm tree labels.
  20. The three albums Gil Scott-Heron recorded for Bob Thiele’s Flying Dutchman label are some of the most important in the history of black music. They show a multi-talented artist reaching maturity with his first recorded efforts. ‘The Revolution Will Not Be Televised’ transcended its place as an album track to become an aphorism, a slogan on a T-shirt, omnipresent shorthand for alternative culture. Over the years these recordings have been treated in a haphazard way, reissued in cheaply packaged collections that used edited versions of some of the most important tracks. “The Revolution Begins” gathers together every piece of music released by Gil on Flying Dutchman, including a track recorded with Bernard “Pretty” Purdie which has never been previously reissued. We have gone back to the original master tapes, bringing you sound that’s better than you’ll have ever heard and new clarity to Gil’s words and the musical performances. Access to those tapes has also enabled us to assemble an alternate version of Gil’s third album, “Free Will”. Gil emerged in 1970 as the author of a novel, The Vulture, and a small book of poetry titled Small Talk at 125th and Lenox. Through a contact at his publishing company, he was introduced to producer Bob Thiele, who couldn’t afford to make an album of music, but agreed to make a spoken word record. Titled after his book of poems, and recorded with just Gil and three percussionists, the album opened with the coruscating ‘The Revolution Will Not Be Televised’. Still enthralling over 40 years on, it’s often forgotten how good this version is in comparison to the recording Gil made with a full band for his second album. His performance is perfectly judged, bringing emphasis where it was needed, without ever resorting to histrionics. By the time he reaches the final “The revolution will be no rerun, brothers, the revolution will be live”, the listener is hooked as surely as if he was watching a weekly soap opera. The rest of the album covered topics as diverse as the harsh conditions in the housing projects, music and a subway poster for a horror movie. Most of the work still stands up today, with Gil always retaining a sense of humour and humanity, however angry he is. “Small Talk at 125th and Lenox” did well enough for Thiele to commission a follow-up, to be recorded with a full band. Gil had been working up a number of songs with Brian Jackson, a fellow student at Lincoln University. It was Jackson who lifted Gil’s music out of the rudimentary — something Gil was always keen to point out: “Brian was integral.” “Pieces Of A Man” is an astounding album. Recorded with a band of top session musicians, with Jackson on piano, there isn’t a bad track. The title track is a beautiful and moving tale of the destruction of a man’s worth told from the viewpoint of his son, while ‘Home Is Where The Hatred Is’ captures the hellish nature of drug addiction and the hypocrisy of those who criticise rather than help addicts. ‘Lady Day and John Coltrane’ is not just a tribute to the titular heroes but to the uplifting quality of music itself. The album sold well enough and Esther Phillips’ cover of ‘Home Is Where The Hatred Is’ brought further attention to Gil. Thiele was keen to get a third album together and the resultant “Free Will” was Gil’s most political yet. The wondrous ‘Did You Hear What They Said?’ skewers the Vietnam War more effectively than any thousand-word polemic. The title track takes aim at those who talk about themselves rather than getting involved in helping the community. The second side is a return to the spoken-word style of the first album and in ‘No Knock’ and ‘The King Alfred Plan’ gives us vibrant attacks on the Nixon administration. The album was the final release on the label. The alternate version contained here gives us a wonderful insight into Gil’s way of working. At the time of their release, these albums did OK, but didn’t sell a whole lot of copies. Today they are the basis for the laudatory essays that appeared at the time of his 2011 comeback album “I’m New Here” and on his death a few months later. This 3CD set contains the best from a career that was full of great records. By Dean Rudland The three CD set will be released on Ace records BGP label on November 26th 2012 Buy from Ace: Pre order from Ace Free delivery in the UK What's on the idscs: Side 1 01 Lady Day And John Coltrane 02 Home Is Where The Hatred Is 03 Save The Children 04 The Revolution Will Not Be Televised 05 Did You Hear What They Said? 06 Pieces Of A Man 07 Speed Kills 08 Everyday 09 I Think I'll Call It Morning 10 When You Are Who You Are 11 Free Will 12 Or Down You Fall 13 The Needle's Eye 14 The Middle Of Your Day 15 A Sign Of The Ages 16 Who'll Pay Reparations On My Soul? Side 2 01 Introduction / The Revolution Will Not Be Televised 02 Whitey On The Moon 03 No Knock 04 Small Talk At 125th & Lenox 05 Billy Green Is Dead 06 Sex Education: Ghetto Style 07 The Vulture 08 The Prisoner 09 ...And Then He Wrote Meditations 10 Plastic Pattern People 11 The Get Out Of The Ghetto Blues 12 Artificialness 13 Ain't No New Thing 14 Brother 15 Evolution (And Flashback) 16 The King Alfred Plan 17 Enough 18 Paint It Black 19 Omen 20 Wiggy 21 Comment #1 22 The Subject Was Faggots Side 3 01 Did You Hear What They Said? (Alt take 1) 02 The Middle Of Your Day (Alt take 1) 03 Free Will (Alt take 1) 04 The Get Out Of The Ghetto Blues (alternate ending) 05 Speed Kills (Alt take 3) 06 The King Alfred Plan (Alt) 07 No Knock (Alt) 08 Wiggy (Alt) 09 Ain't No New Thing (breakdown take) 10 Billy Green Is Dead (Alt) 11 ...And Then He Wrote Meditations (Alt) 12 No Knock (breakdown Alt take) 13 Free Will (Alt take 2)
  21. The three albums Gil Scott-Heron recorded for Bob Thiele’s Flying Dutchman label are... Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
  22. I like the Elektra version because it was the one I heard first, but the Cadet version is just sublime, one of the greatest soul records ever.
  23. Paul I suspect any day now. I'll check with the sales guys today, and if there is any delay I'll let you know. Dean
  24. Wasn't saying that you did Bob. Just that I never got the feeling when talking with Terry that he had sung, rather than hung with Terry.
  25. You're not wrong there. Will get it sorted.


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