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In case anyone missed it, Mike found this article four years ago in Detroit Free Press from May 1966. A Record Is Made with Sweat and Soul BY LORAINE ALTERMAN Emotion filled
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This is me with Harry Weinger twenty years ago. Unfortunately the writing on the box is illegible. Can’t answer either question, sorry.
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I think it was Love , which turned into hate..... Can I say we all owe Mr Godin a tremendous thanks for his role in the Motown story here in the UK (Affected my life from 1967). No Godin,
As a young teenager when US records started appearing over here, Ric-Tic was the one that really stood out and threw up some great tracks. Stuff by San Remo Strings, Bob Wilson, Al Kent, Edwin Starr, Laura Lee all fuelled a search for ever more obscure tracks, even a ZTSC numbered record had to be bought blind. I believe someone has a Ric-Tic tattoo and my school books had the logo scribbled on them.
Some fifty plus years later the records are mostly quite common and cheap yet I don't think the label has ever had a decent CD treatment similar to Shrine, Mirwood, RCA, Okeh etc. Anyone explain why? The popular tracks are scattered amongst various compilations but there must be enough other records to make a decent couple of CDs.
When Motown bought the label I'd have thought there would have been quite a lot of recorded tracks ready for issue but then shelved. What happened to the tapes, did Motown get them?
Ace/Kent recent All Turned On CD included a couple of Ric-Tic tracks with extended playing times so the tapes must be available. Maybe @Ady Croasdell ,@Gilly or others would be able to come up with some answers.
I'd also include Wingate and Golden World for a CD compilation and are there any unreleased tracks?