Posted March 3, 200916 yr Up for offers is my PROMO copy of this northern soul classic.This is a very clean copy, overall grade a conservative ex.PM with offers or questions Regards Darryl
March 3, 200916 yr No intention at all to hi-jack your sale just curiosity. This David and Ruben is a later re-issue of the Majestics 1965 classic on Linda isn't it?
March 3, 200916 yr No intention at all to hi-jack your sale just curiosity. This David and Ruben is a later re-issue of the Majestics 1965 classic on Linda isn't it? yeah `69? i think.
March 3, 200916 yr It has the horns missing at the start Still a great tune though I think the horns are only missing on the warner brothers David & Ruben and not the Rampart copy.
March 3, 200916 yr I think the horns are only missing on the warner brothers David & Ruben and not the Rampart copy. was the rampart contempary to the linda i.e `65?
March 3, 200916 yr No that was 69 as well. My God! why did they re-issued in 1969 a 1965 record that sold next to nothing in its day in two different labels with two different takes (with and without horns)? Fascinating!
March 3, 200916 yr My God! why did they re-issued in 1969 a 1965 record that sold next to nothing in its day in two different labels with two different takes (with and without horns)? Fascinating! My theory is that the original Linda issue actually sold very well in California upon release in 1965 and remained popular in that region throughout the 60s (or perhaps more likely, the flipside), prompting Rampart (a subsidiary label to Faro Records who also owned the Linda label) to give it a new go in 1969, and when the Rampart release started shifting units Warner Bros showed interest and released it nationally (but edited out the fanfare intro because it perhaps sounded a bit too "dated" in 1969). I might ofcourse be totally wrong, but those are my thoughts about this. Edited March 3, 200916 yr by Sebastian
March 3, 200916 yr My theory is that the original Linda issue actually sold very well in California upon release in 1965 and remained popular in that region throughout the 60s (or perhaps more likely, the flipside), prompting Rampart (a subsidiary label to Faro Records who also owned the Linda label) to give it a new go in 1969, and when the Rampart release started shifting units Warner Bros showed interest and released it nationally (but edited out the fanfare intro because it perhaps sounded a bit too "dated" in 1969). I might ofcourse be totally wrong, but those are my thoughts about this. The Warner Bros release is Warner Bros/Seven Arts Records, where does Seven Arts come into the story ?
March 3, 200916 yr The Warner Bros release is Warner Bros/Seven Arts Records, where does Seven Arts come into the story ? According to Wikipedia: Seven Arts Productions was founded in 1957 by Ray Stark and Eliot Hyman. The company was a frequent producer of movies for other studios, including Lolita for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, The Misfits for United Artists, and Is Paris Burning for Paramount Pictures. Over time they expanded their involvement in movies from just being producers to becoming equity investors with the studios, partnering with legendary horror film company Hammer Film Productions on many projects, and producing Seven Days in May and Promise Her Anything for release by Paramount; on these productions, they retained ancillary rights that they had surrendered on earlier films. In 1967 they acquired Jack Warner's controlling interest in Warner Bros. for $95 million and merged with it, becoming Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
March 3, 200916 yr Hi Sebastian The Low Rider book by Ruben Molina suggests that the flip was the Latino music fan's fave side. Otherwise I think you're spot on. Paul
Up for offers is my PROMO copy of this northern soul classic.This is a very clean copy, overall grade a conservative ex.PM with offers or questions
Regards Darryl