May 8, 200817 yr Author I played them back to back, the voices fitted in together a nice duet but the backing was a right old mess.
May 8, 200817 yr Author That's the first song I have ever put up to get 5 gold stars in the first hour.
May 8, 200817 yr Author MGM 13217 - The Panic Is On / There She Is - 1964 3153 - Lou Johnson - Reach Out For Me / Magic Potion - 1963 3127 - Lou Johnson - You Better Let Him Go / Wouldn't That Be Something - 1962 3115 - Lou Johnson - If I Never Get To Love You / Thank You Anyway (Mr. DJ) - 1962 Not sure if Lou's is the first version.
May 8, 200817 yr IMHO, a nice track but dog poo when compared to roy hamilton's masterpiece. sorry! Bit harsh, bloody good stab at it by Lou though. Just doesn't have the "tell me tell me tell me" bit at the end which puts Roy's ahead by a nose I reckon.
May 8, 200817 yr IMHO, a nice track but dog poo when compared to roy hamilton's masterpiece. sorry! Have to agree with you. p.s. I posted this up about 3 years ago with another Lou J track from the unissued LP, if anyone still has that it's worth a listen, can't remember the title now but it's really slow until the middle when it goes berserk
May 8, 200817 yr Bit harsh, bloody good stab at it by Lou though. Just doesn't have the "tell me tell me tell me" bit at the end which puts Roy's ahead by a nose I reckon. Isn't it Roy Hamilton's version of Reach Out For Me from the RCA Victor lp which features the "tell me, tell me, tell me" ending? Lou's version of The Panic Is On is very interesting and always sounded good when Ady played it out. At home it sounds a bit unfinished when compared to Roy Hamilton's epic. Still great to hear his voice on anything though. I've stated here before that I feel he was a vital piece in the jigsaw of early soul, as his phrasing and power was far more down home than Roy Hamilton, Jackie Wilson, Sam Cooke etc. In that way he really paved the way for the success of, for example, Otis Redding. Edited May 8, 200817 yr by garethx
May 8, 200817 yr Isn't it Roy Hamilton's version of Reach Out For Me from the RCA Victor lp which features the "tell me, tell me, tell me" ending? Yes of course it is! Crossed wires, sorry Gareth - was thinking of Lou's version of that..
May 8, 200817 yr I am a big fan of both Lou and Roy and enjoy both versions...I like the melancholy feel of Lou's take, but Roy's is the superior (vocals and arrangement)...imo. Oddly enough I found the following in a shop the other weekend: LOU JOHNSON-UNSATISFIED-BIG TOP (blue)- £ 15.00 LOU JOHNSON-MAGIC POTION (inst) / THERE'S ALWAYS SOMETHING...-BIG HILL- £ 10.00 LOU JOHNSON-KENTUCKY BLUEBIRD-BIG HILL D- £ 10.00 LOU JOHNSON-IT AIN'T NO USE-HILL TOP- £ 10.00 I'll cover the postage if anyone wants them as a set.
May 8, 200817 yr roy hamilton just has the edge for me after listening to them both a couple of times. chris
May 8, 200817 yr As nice as Lou's version is, Roy Hamiltons is a much better record in all respects. Agree, Lou's version is nothing more than pleasant, Roy's has got much more power and a better vocal.
May 8, 200817 yr Roy's has got much more power and a better vocal. I'm thinking the ninety quid price tag that this carried for so long has now gone and it's more than that, if you can find one..?
May 8, 200817 yr Isn't it Roy Hamilton's version of Reach Out For Me from the RCA Victor lp which features the "tell me, tell me, tell me" ending? Lou's version of The Panic Is On is very interesting and always sounded good when Ady played it out. At home it sounds a bit unfinished when compared to Roy Hamilton's epic. Still great to hear his voice on anything though. I've stated here before that I feel he was a vital piece in the jigsaw of early soul, as his phrasing and power was far more down home than Roy Hamilton, Jackie Wilson, Sam Cooke etc. In that way he really paved the way for the success of, for example, Otis Redding. For what its worth I think Lou Johnsons most spine tingling, dramatic and soulful track is his take on -Last One To Be Loved
May 8, 200817 yr Bit harsh, bloody good stab at it by Lou though. Just doesn't have the "tell me tell me tell me" bit at the end which puts Roy's ahead by a nose I reckon. ok, it's indeed a bit harsh to say lou's take is dog poo, that's german diplomacy for you i just think lou sounds like a more demo-ish take whereas roy is a prime example of a big-city-everything-but-the-kitchen-sink-thrown-in-beat ballad.
May 8, 200817 yr Lou Johnson - The last one to be loved - Big Hill For reference, that's the flip to his take on 'Kentucky Bluebird'...great tuneage!
May 10, 200817 yr paid $100 mint copy mgm many moons ago still in my all time top ten the voice just so powerful so great to hear tunes like this out
Great version unissed shame a white demo would look great in the box.