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Shrine Northern - The 60s Rarest Dance Label - Kent Records - New Vinyl Lp

Shrine Northern - The 60s Rarest Dance Label - Kent Records - New Vinyl Lp magazine cover

Upcoming vinyl lp  release from Kent Records, the release notes from Ady Croasdell aka @Ady Croasdell follow below

SHRINE NORTHERN - THE 60s RAREST DANCE LABEL

Ace Records Ltd is proud to announce the purchase of the Shrine label and Eddie Singleton’s independent productions.

To celebrate we have compiled an album of the very best dance recordings the label made in 1965 and 1966, primarily in Washington DC.

The business’s failure made this music incredibly hard to find for record collectors and Shrine is rightly known as the rarest soul label.

It is much more than that though. The music was made by some one of the original founders of Motown, Raynoma Liles Gordy and her Motown-schooled cousin Mike Ossman, New York music business luminaries Eddie Singleton and Harry Bass and the up-and-coming talents of Washington’s Keni St Lewis and Maxx Kidd. The acts included the hugely respected Ray Pollard and fellow New Yorker J.D. Bryant, talented and established Washington and Baltimore acts Eddie Daye & The Four Bars, Bobby Reed and the Enjoyables. Importantly, they discovered and developed the local talent of the area in the shape of the Cautions, Les Chansonettes, the Prophets and Shirley Edwards.

It took decades for UK Northern Soul fans to realise the significance of the label. It finally clicked for Stafford’s Top Of The World all-nighter DJs who searched out the incredibly hard to find later releases and played them to the cult-following of the rare soul scene. The scarcity was caused by Shrine pressing up a batch of fourteen future singles but only getting a handful released before they folded. The vast majority of the later releases were destroyed in a warehouse fire or simply binned as stillborn commercial failures.

Such was the scarcity that when the first Shrine compilations were issued in 1990, the Prophets tracks from Eddie Singleton’s master tapes were assumed to be unreleased - until Shrine sleuth Andy Rix later obtained one from a group member.

The music captures the exuberance of soul music in its peak years. The rhythms are pounding, the vocals soaring and the songs positive and cleverly composed. Undeniably Motown-influenced, they never copy others’ songs but feature the group harmonies of New York City on the Counts, Enjoyables and Prophets singles, while the Ray Pollard and J.D. Bryant tracks have that city’s big ballad soul sound. Les Chansonettes and the D C Blossoms are shimmering femme group sounds at their most tantalising.

The label produced soul in many shades but here we’ve concentrated on its in-house dance specialties. Don’t worry about the price-tags; just listen to that quality.

Ady Croasdell

Side 1

01 Guess Who Loves You - Eddie Daye & The 4 Bars
02 No Other Way - The Cautions
03 Baby Don't Leave Me - Bobby Reed
04 Don' t Let Him Hurt You - Les Chansonettes
05 Hey Boy - The D C Blossoms
06 If I Had (One Gold Piece) - The Prophets
07 Dream My Heart - Shirley Edwards

Side 2


01 Stop Overlooking Me - The Cairos
02 Shame - The Enjoyables
03 I Won't Be Coming Back - J.D. Bryant
04 My Only Love - The Counts
05 I Won' t Believe It Till I See It - Little Bobby Parker
06 Takin' My Time - Leroy Taylor & The Four Kays
07 This Time (I'm Gonna Be True) - Ray Pollard


"Shrine Northern - The 60s Rarest Dance Label" is out 28.04.2023

https://acerecords.co.uk/shrine-northern-the-60s-rarest-dance-label

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Listen: Sample #1

Listen: Sample #2


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Nice to see Shrine get a new lease of life and some quality releases to showcase the label.  I would imagine there are many out there with lots to learn about the label given the influx of "new" people to the scene.  It deserves all the fuss the Loma releases got.

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I wonder if buying the masters came with a sweetener? Maybe a full set of mint shrine 45s with intact labels😂

great to see some new exposure to the label 👍

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39 minutes ago, Dobber said:

I wonder if buying the masters came with a sweetener? Maybe a full set of mint shrine 45s with intact labels😂

great to see some new exposure to the label 👍

Haha, I doubt it though.  If I remember reading rightly Eddie didn't have any 45s, the masters for Horace Lps came from the Guy who owned the studio, Edgewood?

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As it states above ... The acts included talented and established Washington and Baltimore acts

.... I guess a lesser established act from Baltimore too ... 

 

ShrineRecBaltMarch65.jpg

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Whichever is Number 3 (Thomas Circle, Washington DC), it was the home Shrine Records (the town house on the left we believe). The photo is from 1968 or just after, at that time it was a radical centre in the City.

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Every track I’ve heard on this label is a killer! Dream My Heart and Stop Overlooking Me, great tunes and from what I know the warehouse burnt down in a riot so the records are pretty rare! 

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