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So as I say, in the very early days Stateside and London American kickstarted the scene, and the whole collecting thing, but in the 40 years since, by breadth of variety, worldwide appeal, and sheer
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Begat, there's a word I haven't seen much since I last read the bible Might adopt it as word of the month!
Before i start I have deliberately excluded the Tamla Motown stable from my calculations.
I have done this because there has always been a distinction between Motown and what became
known as Northern Soul.
I also dont want to diminish the part played by other UK labels Columbia, Pye Int, Sue Etc.
I would say that the two most influential record labels in the history of Northern Soul have got to be
UK London-American and UK Stateside.
Given that the vast majority of records ever played on the scene are U.S. imports, this statement
may sound pretty wierd. However here's the case for the defence.
During the formative years of the scene, up to the closure of the Wheel, virtually all the records
played were UK copies.Yes we all know about the Baby Reconsider enigma and a few Ric Tic stuff.
You only have to look at the bootleg Soul Sounds label, how many of these were originally
played on import copies ?.
This continued onto theTorch where many of the big sounds were played on UK labels Beatiful Night,Chubby Checker,
Lynne Randell,Nancy Ames,Levi Jackson,Lou Johnson, Bok To Back,Little Richard Etc.
About this time (1972) ,as if by some strange coincidence, boatloads of cut out records started to
appear in shops/markets all over the UK. e.g. Bostocks Bradford,F.L. Moores,Shude Hill Market Manchester.
So here's the scenario.
You are a record collector and you're now faced with thousand of records on labels you
have never heard of by artists you have never heard of either,Sandi Sheldon,Carstairs Rose Batiste.
You can't ask or expect the shop owner to play every record that looks interesting, so what do you do ?.
You use the knowledge/information that you already possess.
This means you look for the artists you already know via their releases on UK labels.
Edwin Starr/Darrell Banks for instance, this explains why Ric Tic/Revilot were two of the earliest import labels
to be sought after. because collectors would just buy anything on the label regardless of the artist.
How many people had heard of J.J.Barnes, before the Ric Tic stuff was found, even though there are two
UK releases by him prior to that ?.
Lets face it, which lunatic would buy or even consider a record called Sking In The Snow if they had not already
heard the Invitations on Stateside.
In addition to looking for artists they knew, I reckon early UK "crate diggers" also used other information
found on the labels of UK releases such as;
A Mala Recording
A Revilot Recording
A Goldwax Recording
A Solid Hitbound Production
The two labels which always did this were of course London-American and Stateside.
These two labels also issued most of the early northern sounds by percentage of releases
which means they were the source of most of the required information.
Therefore these two labels MUST be the most influential in the history of Northern Soul
Discuss.
Kegsy
Edited by Kegsy