In the high Mecca era in mid '70s I made the mistake of believing that the greatest Sixties Soul records had already been 'discovered' and played and the obvious logic was pursuing new rare soul. How wrong was that? Over the next twenty years I heard great sixties that I'd never heard before, yet still loved and yearned for modern soul.
Everyone on this site, without exception, has made mistakes.
Maybe it was discounting modern records that are actually brilliant soul records. Or under-pricing very rare records you can't get your hands on now. Or under-valuing Motown and then hearing a killer sound. Maybe it was disssing a DJ who then played a blinding set. Or initially hating a venue that went on to become part of your life. Maybe it was thinking that the UK is king and when you went abroad you fell in love with a new scene.
God, I even moved south to London in the 80s and discovered the 100 Club. Admitting that London could deliver a rare soul club was hard but, I had to admit it.
In the high Mecca era in mid '70s I made the mistake of believing that the greatest Sixties Soul records had already been 'discovered' and played and the obvious logic was pursuing new rare soul. How wrong was that? Over the next twenty years I heard great sixties that I'd never heard before, yet still loved and yearned for modern soul.
Everyone on this site, without exception, has made mistakes.
Maybe it was discounting modern records that are actually brilliant soul records. Or under-pricing very rare records you can't get your hands on now. Or under-valuing Motown and then hearing a killer sound. Maybe it was disssing a DJ who then played a blinding set. Or initially hating a venue that went on to become part of your life. Maybe it was thinking that the UK is king and when you went abroad you fell in love with a new scene.
God, I even moved south to London in the 80s and discovered the 100 Club. Admitting that London could deliver a rare soul club was hard but, I had to admit it.
What were you wrong about?