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Mike

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  1. just seen a 45 that was being sold for £5.99 in feb 2017 now up for sale for £45 in the sales forum the 45 is sold out now does that mean it was that good it sold out straight away or... maybe its sold out cause dealers were buying up all the copies to sell on 4 months later at 10 x price yet another self harming snake eating itself thing ?
  2. one for the sunshine pop category (dustbin ) ? Sunshine pop (originally called soft pop[3]) is a lightly-produced subgenre of pop music originating in Southern California in the mid 1960s. Rooted in easy-listening, advertising jingles, and the growing drug culture, sunshine pop acts combined nostalgic or anxious moods with "an appreciation for the beauty of the world".[1] It largely consisting of lesser-known artists who imitated more popular groups like the Beach Boys, the Mamas & the Papas, and the 5th Dimension. While the Beach Boys are noted as prominent influences, they rarely worked in the genre.[1][2] Sunshine pop enjoyed mainstream success in the latter half of the decade, with many of its top 40 hits peaking in the spring and summer of 1967, especially just before the Summer of Love. Popular bands include the Mamas & the Papas, the Turtles, and the Association. Other acts, like the Millennium, Sagittarius, and the Yellow Balloon were less successful but gained a cult following years later;[4] with albums like Begin (1968) and Present Tense (1968) highly sought-after on the collectors’ market.[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunshine_pop
  3. Soul Source Weekly Newsletter Welcome to the Soul Source Weekly Newsletters. This weekly newsletter is sent out every Monday A quick and easy way for all Soul Source members to keep up with all that is going on via Soul Source in 2017. Can catch up with all the highlights of recent soul content below... Latest News and Articles The Invisible Man: The Story of Rod Temperton - Kindle preview mike Thursday at 09:43 564 views 2 comments Interview with Mark IVs Otis Brown Jr via Cordial recordings source news Wednesday at 07:37 424 views 0 comments Team Louis - Exus Trek - A Sponsored Midnight Walk Triode June 7 1038 views 3 comments BBC Radio 6 Northern Soul World Cup source news June 6 1774 views 7 comments Nothing But A House Party: The Birth Of The Philly Sound 1967-71 - New Kent Release source news June 6 1304 views 3 comments New Melvin Brown Release - Izipho Soul July 2017 source news June 5 657 views 4 comments Soul Junction: Robert Montgomery - Time Of The Day/Take Me High SJ537 chalky June 3 821 views 2 comments Forum Topics Barry White Record? ik001 4 hours ago 1 comments On Target Podcast #128 Mod Marty 6 hours ago 1 comments Does this look kosher LOL TattooDave 10 hours ago 21 comments Tony Orlando - She Doesn't Know It - Valuation DUFUS 16 hours ago 1 comments Best of 70s/Crossover LP Tracks-Volume 7! chris anderton 16 hours ago 1 comments The Chiffons singing backing on The Next In Line El Corol Yesterday at 15:04 4 comments Crackle on records jazz Yesterday at 06:03 6 comments Lichfield House Mod66 Saturday at 20:46 1 comments record stores in Pittsburgh? ljblanken Saturday at 19:42 5 comments Earl Wright demo geeselad Saturday at 19:14 5 comments Latest Videos The Prophet of Funk Music Video - Rex Garvin mike June 8 0 comments Lee Fields & The Expressions - Make The World mike June 4 0 comments Mr Jukes - Grant Green ft Charles Bradley mike May 31 0 comments Lakuta - Rice & Peace mike May 24 0 comments The Como Mamas - Count Your Blessings mike May 24 1 comments Latest Weekenders and Allnighters BLACKHEART ALL NIGHTER SHEFFIELD ALL NIGHTER SHEFFIELD ALL NIGHTER SHEFFIELD ALL NIGHTER BLACKHEART ALL NIGHTER BLACKHEART ALL NIGHTER Floorshakers Mini Nighter with Jimmy Mac, at The Night Owl Latest Gallery Images Soul Source - A source for soul! View all the above and much more soul content via... https://www.soul-source.co.uk/ Can unsubscribe via... *|unsubscribe|*
  4. i saw him at the 100, but can't recall many if any photos or vids there's a few sort of publicity shots via Mark Hanson from around that time of visit one in the gallery artists section any others out there?
  5. chico is an active member on here @soul-chef mark hopes active as well yep? @MarkHopes give them a shout? sure they help out
  6. The Invisible Man: The Story of Rod Temperton - Kindle preview View full article
  7. The Invisible Man: The Story of Rod Temperton, the 'Thriller' Songwriter Hardcover – 1 Jun 2017 by Jed Pitman (Author) Out this month via both kindle and hardcover editions, can view the Kindle preview below Blurb The Invisible Man tells the remarkable story of how Rod Temperton worked his way up from a Grimsby fish factory to become one of the most successful songwriters of all time. Born in Cleethorpes in 1949, Temperton embarked on a career in music with the funk band Heatwave, for whom he wrote the international hits ‘Boogie Nights’ and ‘Always and Forever’, before his songwriting talent caught the attention of Michael Jackson’s legendary producer, Quincy Jones. For Jackson’s Off the Wall album, Temperton penned both the hit ‘Rock with You’ and the album’s title track. Three years later, continuing his relationship with the pair, Temperton started work on what would become the bestselling album of all time – Michael Jackson’s Thriller – writing three songs, including the now legendary title track. And yet despite collaborating with some of music’s biggest stars, including Donna Summer and Michael McDonald, Temperton was famously reclusive and seldom gave interviews, one of the exceptions being for author Jed Pitman’s Sony Award-winning radio documentary on Temperton allowed him unprecedented access to the great man. About the Author Jed Pitman is a radio producer and author. He produced the documentary The Invisible Man: The Rod Temperton Story for BBC Radio 2, which won a host of awards, including a Sony Award for best documentary. He co-wrote former England cricketer Chris Lewis' autobiography Crazy (The History Press, 2017).
  8. Interview with Mark IVs Otis Brown Jr via Cordial recordings View full article
  9. As part of the release promotion of Mark IV - Hang Ups / Give Me Just A Little - Cordial Recordings Cordial Recordings have pushed out an interview with Otis Brown Jr regarding his time with Mark IV Interview Are you from New Jersey originally? No I’m actually from Summerville, South Carolina originally. Summerville is this little town near the east coast. I attended South Carolina State University in Orangeburg, South Carolina. . Was your introduction to music was playing the drums? Yes I started playing in a rhythm band in third grade. Actually they were out of instruments and I was just clicking some sticks together with the band just to be in it. Then when I moved up to sixth grade I started taking band with the music teachers and when in seventh grade I actually started taking drums lessons. That was always my fascination, the drums. I’ve played drums ever since. I went to college on a scholarship to be in a band – marching band, jazz band, and concert band. I actually majored in music. Which were the first r’n’b or soul group that you played with or were you playing jazz when you went of school? In high school our band director, Aaron Brown, organised a rhythm and blues band. When I was a junior in high school. Organised a band of high school musicians which he called The Shades Of Brown. I was the drummer. He put this band together and we ended up playing at school proms and doing local events in the town of Summerville. We were making money in high school doing what we loved to do. We used to put on our own shows. We did a show at the National Guard Amory in Summerville and everybody in the town came to see us play. They were very proud of us being young boys in high school putting together a band, selling tickets and putting on a big show. It was such a wonderful event. I remember at the time Archie Bell and The Drells had just put out ‘Tighten Up.’ We had learned to play it but we didn’t feel very comfortable playing it for the fans. All our friends said “come on guys play it, we know that you guys aren’t Archie Bell and The Drells, but just play it.” We ended up playing that song at the show and Roual, I tell you it was a big hit. From that point on I said that this is what I wanted to do, to play music. This was in 1968. What did you do when you left school? I did some local hustles with construction companies and things like that, but from that point I started playing with some adult brothers. The guy’s name was Guitar Wash. His name was Washington but he called himself Guitar Wash for short. He played guitar and his brother played bass. They latched onto me somehow or I latched on to them so I ended up playing with them out in the country at the Country Clubs, homes and ranches. They paid me a pretty nice little penny so I was making money with them as well. That was a nice little side hustle for me, making a few dollars here and there. So what happened afterwards up until you got involved with Mark IV, which I believe would have been 1975? I went to South Carolina State in the fall of ’69. I organised a group with a friend of mine, which were called….no actually I started playing with a group called The Charades. You know once you get into a town and you can play half decent you’ll find yourself a band to play with. I ended up playing with a group called The Charades as a freshman in college. This was a local group in Orangeburg, South Carolina, but they had a nice reputation and a nice following. In that year with that group I ended up playing with Candi Staton when she had her first hit and later on we backed up Betty Wright when she did ‘Clean Up Woman.’ I can’t remember what Candi Statons hit was at the time, but we backed her up. We played a lot of clubs, proms and things of that nature. Then as a sophomore a friend and I organised a group called A Different Bag because we wanted to be a little different from all the other local groups. We played at many functions. We actually played at a College in Alabama. We went to Talladega State for some prom or something that they had there. I remember it so well because when we came back our van broke down on the road in the middle of nowhere, but we found a way to get back home. When I became a junior there was a group there called the Soul Agents, which was one of the premier groups there in Orangeburg. There were two of them. The Exotics was one of them and The Soul Agents was the other. The drummer with The Soul Agents was also in the college marching band with me. He graduated and the group asked me to be their drummer, so I played with The Soul Agents in my junior and senior years in college. As a senior in college, the most outstanding senior musician gets to orchestrate a piece for the Wind Ensemble to play . I did an arrangement of ‘Ellies Love Theme’ from the movie Shaft. One of the notable musicians that had graduated from South Carolina State was invited back to do some music that he had done on Broadway. He brought Bernard Purdie and Dave Spinozza with him. We rehearsed his music in preparation for the spring concert. Then after we rehearsed their music Prof told me to go ahead and rehearse my arrangement of ‘Ellies Love Theme’ with The Wind Ensemble. Those guys heard it and said “Prof that’s pretty good. Can we play along with that?” Prof said “Hey ask Otis.” They said “Otis can we play with you.” I said “You New York cats want to play with my stuff, I said ABSOLUTELY!.” They said “Do you have the lead sheets?” I gave them the lead sheets and I go these guys from New York to play my arrangement with the Wind Ensemble at the college. It was really a big hit. So Bernard Purdie asked me “What are you going to do when you leave college?” I said “I’m going to pursue a career as a professional career.” He gave me his card and said “Next week you’re on spring break, give me a call.” So I called him and he asked my wife and me, I was married at the time, to come up to New York to arrange two songs for a movie that he was doing. I did it. The rest is history. I ended up in New York working for Bernard Purdie. I worked for him for quite a few years. I actually helped him write his first drum book. I just hit the New York music scene from there. I went on and actually played with an artist being produced by Roberta Flack. I also did a little stint with the Main Ingredient. One thing I forgot to mention was that when I was a Junior college, The Soul Agents actually played with James Brown for about a year. We were on the road with James Brown and Bobby Byrd in my Junior year at College. You know I actually did a few nice things as I was coming along. What was James like to work with? James was a hard task master. He fined his musicians whenever they made a mistake. He was really a perfectionist with what he did. He was just a professional all around. He worked his musicians hard, but nobody worked any harder than he worked. But that’s how I ended up in New York, at the request of Bernard “Pretty” Purdie. So you’re in New York, what year would have that been? We got into New York in late ’73 and I was working with Bernard Purdie doing some arrangements for local artists. Playing local gigs. I ended up playing with a group called Evolution II, led by my friend and guitarist, David Baron, who is now deceased. We played all over New York. I was doing some musicals, weddings, some poolside parties. You name it and we did it. That was what we did in ’73 to ‘’74. Then in ’75 that was when I actually played with the Main Ingredient for a short stint. I got that gig through Bernard Purdie. Would that have been the year that you met Mark IV? I met the Mark IV I would have to say in 74 or 75. I can’t remember the exact year that we did ‘Signs Of A Dying Love.’ I think that it was ’75. You know these years all seem to come together on me, Roual. Mark IV (without Otis Brown Jr) Can you remember how you met Mark IV? Well what actually happened was I ended up teaching music in a local middle school in the city of New Jersey and I met a producer there called Donald Shaw. I met him and he found out that I was a musician and teaching music. We made a connection and somehow someone told him about the group the Mark IV that was available. They’d just come off the road with Roy C Hammond. They said that they were looking for a producer, a manager and someone to record them. I think Melba Moore’s husband at the time was going to finance the music and my partner Donald and I were going to produce it. So I ended up writing music day and night for about two weeks getting all these string parts, horn parts and everything written. Then just before we were going to go into the studio to do the recording he backed out, so when he backed out I was sitting there with all this music and didn’t have the money to go in and record it. My partner called and said “T, he called me T for short, let’s just take this group. We’ll sign them to a contract. You’ll do the music, we’ll produce them and we’ll see if we can get them a deal. So that’s what we did. I got a band together. I rehearsed the band, that way with rehearsing the band you’re sure to get what you want when you went to the studio. We rehearsed a couple of times a week in a friend’s apartment in New York. I mean we rehearsed really hard, so the band was really tight when we laid down the tracks for the one’s I’d written the horn and string parts for. What we actually did Roual was we laid down everything on the same day which was the norm back then. We laid down the rhythm section, then after I had in time the horns would come in after the rhythm section. Then after the horns came I had it in time so that the strings would come in. We had a full day in the studio putting down the tracks with the rhythm, horns and strings. Then of course we went back later to do the vocals. Would this have been the session with ‘Signs Of A Dying Love,’ ‘Hang Ups’ and ‘I Knew It Wouldn’t Last?’ You’re really challenging my memory. That session included ‘Give Me Just A Little Love’ and ‘Hang Ups.’ Let me just go back ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ was originally done a little differently and the musicians on that were not the same musicians that’s on ‘Hang Ups’ and ‘I Knew It Wouldn’t Last’ because I was just going to go into the studio and record ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ in New York and I recall that the piano player that was supposed to do that session couldn’t make it. I had to get a substitute at the last minute and we did a quick rehearsal in some studio in New York. I’d have to ask Donald Shaw on where that song was actually recorded because all of this stuff is running together in my head. There’s two different versions of ‘Signs Of A Dying Love!’ There is two versions of it because we did one of them when we did ‘Hang Ups’ and ‘Give Me Just A Little Love.’ The guitar player that played that solo on ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ and all the other recordings with us is at the House Of Music in West Orange New Jersey. So you’re right there’s two versions of it. I really should have Donald Shaw with me because sometimes his memory seems to be a bit better than mine. There appears to be three different recording sessions by Mark IV. There’s certainly three different master tapes! Yes and as I told you the ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ 2 inch master was destroyed by a fire in a garage that I owned so I’m fortunate to still have the other tapes. I had one 45 that I cannot put my hands on because I don’t know where it is. The reason is that I was with a friend who was showing me how to put it on YouTube or somewhere that I could at least get royalties from the plays that the song was getting. It was getting plays all over the place and we weren’t getting any money from it. So we put it on to see if we could get some pennies. Of course I haven’t seen any yet. So we did that song ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ which was in our opinion the strongest that we had and the most ready. That’s why we put that out on the OTB label. I actually got a signatory from the local musicians union in Passaic, New Jersey. I had to go before their board and they asked me what my intentions were. Was I going to contribute money to the musicians fund, blah, blah, blah and I said yes, yes, yes. They gave me this signatory so we started the label. We were actually trying to get a major label deal with the Mark IV because we had all the stuff ready. We had a consultant who had worked with Epic Records and her name was Diane Hyatt. She worked with us every step of the way. We submitted our stuff to all the major labels trying to get a deal and she took it to Epic because she was pretty certain at the time that Epic were going to sign the group and the word was out in the industry that Epic were going to sign Mark IV. Then Epic had a shake up with their executives and the new President who came in said that they’re not taking any new artists because we’re not doing justice with the artists that we have. So that deal fell through and because of it all the other companies had backed off beforehand because they all knew that Epic were interested. When the Epic deal fell through we had no deal with any record company and no one wanted to touch it after that so we decided to put ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ out on our own label. Which is how OTB came into existence because we had to have a vehicle to put our record out, so we put it out on OTB. Did you have any distribution for OTB? No, we did it all ourselves Roual. We got the record to the one stops and fought for some airplay here and there. We never really got any real air play on the record. I don’t know how the record got out there to be recognised. We got some local play in the south because we took the group on tour down south and a lot of promoters could at least put a song on the advertisement on the radio with a little snippet of the record. The Mark IV had a little following in the south. Once a record is put out on a label it gets a little more credibility than just throwing it out there on its own. I don’t know how it got any notoriety because I know that it’s being sold on the internet for hundreds of dollars per copy. We went to some sites where they were selling it for a four hundred dollars per copy. I know that they’re bootlegging it and we figured that we needed to do something and that’s why I’m glad that you reached out to me. Do you have memories of each individual member? I remember Jimmy because as the lead singer he was definitely the most talented and he didn’t have any difficulty singing from deep within his soul, whilst putting all his emotions and expressions into everything that he sang. You never caught him at a moment where he was laid back. He just gave his all. He was a dynamic singer and he was always in good voice. He was willing to try anything that you asked him to try. He never pushed back on anything that I asked him to do. As the musical director, I found him to be a top notch performer and he gave everything that he had. There was also Walter who had more, for the want of better words, a more popish kind of voice. He sang songs like the Gibb brothers and Leo Sayer. He actually sang one of Leo Sayer’s songs when we put them on the road. He had that little crispier sharper edge to his voice. So I remember Jimmy Ponder and Walter Moreland. Then there was Buck. I’m trying to remember Buck….Buck had a voice that had a lot of range to it. He could sing the high tenor parts. He could sing baritone. For the road show, we gave each one of them lead to one degree or the other. We made sure that they all sang lead on something. They didn’t just do a repertoire of Mark IV songs because the repertoire was very diverse. Then there was the other guy Preston, who was basically a harmony guy. He never really sang any lead. He just rounded up the harmonies of the group. You gave him his part with his notes and he just sang them. That was just his role. Buck, I can’t remember his real name. If I had to guess it would be Lawrence Jones. So the group as I recall was Preston, there was Buck, Walter Moreland and Jimmy Ponder. Was Preston in the original line up or did he join after Mercury? When I got the group they were the four that were there. If there was any changes before that or after our time I wouldn’t know. Those were the four that we had. So you released ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ and you took the group on tour. When did your relationship with Mark IV end? We took the Mark IV on tour with a really nice tight band. If I had to tell you who the band members were I couldn’t, but I can describe them. I had a trumpet player and I think his name was Jonathan Pratt. I had a bass player and his name I think was Peter Brown. I don’t know if he went on to be the great Peter Brown. There was a keyboard player and I don’t remember his name but he was really the musical director at the time for the band that was on the road. I can’t even picture the guitar player. We got the band together, the repertoire together and the group went on the road with a Southern tour. We hit Alabama, North Carolina, Georgia and the group got really tight whilst we were out there performing. Of course that’s going to happen when you’re playing 3 or 4 nights per week. We got really really tight and when we got back to New Jersey the word got out that the Mark IV were available for bookings so we performed at a local club in Orange, New Jersey called the Orange Peel. We got a bunch of agents come out to hear the group and the show was so tight and the agents started bidding for the group. They were like “I can get these guys gigging all the way down the east coast every night every week.” Somehow something happened after that night at the Orange Peel the group started discussing who funded the group whilst they were on the road and whilst they were down and out. They saw money coming in and two guys went up against the other two guys in an argument and then a fight ensued. Then the next thing that you know Donald and I are standing in between the two sides to try to keep them from fighting. The club owner called the cops. The cops came and broke things up. Then we all went our separate ways. My partner Donald Shaw met with them separately. He met with Jimmy Ponder and another before meeting with the other two. He asked both sides whether they could reconcile their differences and they said “no they couldn’t.” When they couldn’t do that there was nothing else that we could do. If they couldn’t work together as a group we didn’t have a group. Believe it or not for the next six weeks after that the agents kept calling to see whether the group had gotten back together so that they could really put them to work. It didn’t happen. That was the end of that relationship. Tragic and sad, but that’s the way that it ended between the Mark IV and us. After that happened I didn’t follow up with the group. I ended up holding some speakers and equipment for them before Jimmy Ponder tracked me down I around 1980 or ’81 because he was going on the road or something and I had his speakers. I’d stored them at the Arts High school in Newark, New Jersey. I was the bandmaster at the time. He came by to collect everything and we exchanged pleasantries. That was the end of it. As a matter of fact when he came round I was putting out ‘Strut On.’ After the dispute at the Orange Peel, Donald Shaw and I sat down in his living room and we wrote ‘Strut On.’ We wrote that together, produced it and put it out. That was it. Just one more thing with regards Mark IV is that the two writers of ‘Sign Of A Dying Love’ were the Lewis brothers. How did you meet up with them because they appear to be interesting characters? They were very interesting characters. When you’re out there looking for songwriters and doing those kind of things somehow Donald Shaw introduced me to the Lewis brothers. They had a night club over in the Bronx and they had a friend called Farmer and they would just get together and write songs.. They used a reel to reel tape player and they would write these songs with Farmer playing a little keyboard. They’d put the music together and I would go over to their night club. I listened to what they had and I’d give them my input to do this and do that. They would do it and that’s how I met them. I met them in the Bronx. I don’t know the street that they were on if my life depended on it, but somehow I got there. We got ‘Signs Of A Dying Love’ from them those guys. I think they also did ‘I Knew It Wouldn’t Last.’ I can’t remember how many songs we got from them. From what I understand they left New York and went back to North Carolina, which was their home. I don’t know where Farmer is either, but I know that I’ve promised you that I would do some research, and see if I can track them down. What happened after Mark IV and ‘Strut On?’ What did you do next? After I did ‘Strut On’ Don and I produced quite a few artists. We did some hip hop. Some pretty good hot hip Donald owns the rights to that music. We were offered some advance money, but for some reason or the other it did not work out. For a while we just didn’t do anything. I’ve just finished working with Donald on a record with a young lady who is great and very talented. I don’t know what happening with that project. I’ve worked with Donald down through the years with various artists. The stuff was good but was never released. I did this last project with him that just finished up two or three months ago. I did it reluctantly because I don’t want to do music in the studio and it goes nowhere. I have records in my basement right now that if I don’t get somebody to take them I’m just going to have to chuck them. We put records out and didn’t do the necessary promotional work or the money to do it the way that it should have been done. One thing I’ve found, and I’m sure that you know it is that you have to have some money to really work it, to promote it, get some shows, do the mastering and the pressing. There’s a lot involved when you’re trying to do it yourself. If you don’t have the dollars to back you up it’s not going to work. That’s what I told Don that if we’re not working on a major label deal or that we don’t have the resources that we need to do as a label I just don’t want to be involved with it. He twisted my arm on this last one. One of your major accomplishment along with your wife is your son! That’s right Otis Brown III. He’s quite an accomplishment in his own right. He’s quite a musician I should say. He’s quite an accomplished musician for the level of people that he plays with and doing his own CD and in matter of fact he’s working on his new CD right now. He’s writing his music and getting it lined up and working on that. You know to play with the people of the caliber of Esperanza Spalding, Joe Lavano, Herbie Hancock and the list goes on and on. We, my wife Norma and I are very proud of him. Do you have any final words on Mark IV? The guys really worked hard back in the day. It was really great working with them. I had a lot of fun with the guys, whilst working on the songs and putting the vocal harmonies together. Giving them the business, whilst they gave me their business. We just had a lot of fun. They were a very talented group. They destroyed themselves because they had reached a point that they were going to achieve the success that they were after, but they couldn’t let their differences be in the past. They couldn’t reconcile with each other. Interview Otis Brown Jr by Roual Galloway 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Release Details Cordial Recordings are proud to launch the label with two unissued cuts from Mark IV that were originally recorded in the mid 70s with the uptempo 'Hang Ups' and the mellow groover 'Give Me Just A Little.' The full release date is 26th June 2017.
  10. Soul Source Weekly Newsletter Welcome to the Soul Source Weekly Newsletters. This weekly newsletter is sent out every Monday A quick and easy way for all Soul Source members to keep up with all that is going on via Soul Source in 2017. Can catch up with all the highlights of recent soul content below... Latest News and Articles Team Louis - Exus Trek - A Sponsored Midnight Walk Triode June 7 814 views 1 comments BBC Radio 6 Northern Soul World Cup source news June 6 1458 views 4 comments Nothing But A House Party: The Birth Of The Philly Sound 1967-71 - New Kent Release source news June 6 1078 views 3 comments New Melvin Brown Release - Izipho Soul July 2017 source news June 5 545 views 4 comments Soul Junction: Robert Montgomery - Time Of The Day/Take Me High SJ537 chalky June 3 607 views 1 comments True Soul - Rare Soul Weekender - Edinburgh - Friday 29th Sept 2017 source news June 2 1387 views 0 comments EBay High Flyers - Most Valued Soul Records - May 2017 source news June 1 1449 views 1 comments Forum Topics Los Angeles - Record Finding Help? DUFUS 4 hours ago 3 comments Sven zetterberg "heartaches was all you got" dylan 17 hours ago 1 comments Calvin Grayson Love just begun deadwaxdetective 21 hours ago 3 comments The Tribulations Mouldy Old Soul Monday at 18:55 9 comments Montreal record spots and dealers TailorMade Gaz B Monday at 14:13 1 comments Playlists - Horse and Groom, Doncaster - Chillout June 11t 16th PS-Soul Monday at 12:01 7 comments The Admirations chalky Sunday at 19:19 8 comments Happy Birthday billywhizz TattooDave Sunday at 10:10 7 comments Cartsairs choice help jazz Sunday at 07:07 3 comments Comin' Down - Transition From Rhythm to Soul Desmond Checker Saturday at 18:57 5 comments Latest Videos The Prophet of Funk Music Video - Rex Garvin mike Thursday at 08:32 0 comments Lee Fields & The Expressions - Make The World mike June 4 0 comments Mr Jukes - Grant Green ft Charles Bradley mike May 31 0 comments Lakuta - Rice & Peace mike May 24 0 comments The Como Mamas - Count Your Blessings mike May 24 1 comments Latest Weekenders and Allnighters PRESTATYN WEEKENDER @Pontins Rugby Soul Club - 16th anniversary Rugby Soul Club Rugby Soul Club Rugby Soul Club Rugby Soul Club Costa Del Soul 10th Anniversary Latest Gallery Images Soul Source - A source for soul! View all the above and much more soul content via... https://www.soul-source.co.uk/ Can unsubscribe via... *|unsubscribe|*
  11. Stumbled on this while looking for some info and as 3 years on, thought give the 'idea' a kick You can read above what the thinking was, a chance for switched on promoters to highlight their club. It started off well with 2 decent features but as often happens on here after the initial kick the response was all a bit disappointing and it all started going down the pulling teeth road and then just quickly died a death Here's the 2 decent features from 2014 https://www.soul-source.co.uk/articles/soul-articles/solid-hit-soul-club-london-club-feature-r2881/ https://www.soul-source.co.uk/articles/soul-articles/rugby-soul-club-rugby-uk-club-feature-r2897/ Anyway 3 years on the thinking is to give it another go if there are still any switched on promoters out there in the real world who would like their clubs to be featured in a similar manner, then just have a read of the two above, get some words down in a similar format and then just pm me your words and a few images via @mike easy as that....
  12. yep, same here, one result that wasn't expecting I'd say its worth a video post
  13. but aint anything msm like this always gonna be that way ? anyway here's the result/winner myself wouldn't have betted on Marvin!
  14. a highlight comment as happening next weekend 15th June https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/Jo-Lewis10 Link to Louis profile and avatar @Louis
  15. Had the below via email, video above hit the youtube logo to visit youtube page My father was a music legend. We are about to do a documentary about him. And we have unreleased material. Please go on youtube and check out my prophet of funk music video. Enter it in just like that. The Prophet of Funk Music Video........720 747 5794
  16. Gary Farrington asked me to post this on this topic for him need to click to download and play video-1496829969.mp4
  17. bit more on it all here in the news bit https://www.soul-source.co.uk/articles/news-soul/northern-soul-bbc-radio-6-world-cup/
  18. BBC Radio 6 Northern Soul World Cup View full article
  19. BBC geezer has what may be an interesting show setup, all a bit mainstream tracks wise but guess that was always going to be so, info and link follow below Steve Lamacq's Northern Soul World Cup From 5 to 9 June, we will be crowning another champion in the latest edition of our, always popular, occasionally divisive, musical World Cup. Back in March, 6 Music’s very own Jarvis Cocker, lifted the Alternative 90s Trophy, on behalf of Common People, when Pulp beat Primal Scream in a tense final. Now it’s time to shine your shoes, and dust the talcum powder of your wide-legged trousers, as we search for the best Northern Soul track. The winner will be revealed on the show on Friday 9 June. You can vote in the first knock out round until 5pm, Tuesday 6 June, on our Twitter. Read the full terms and conditions here. There are some tough ties in the first round, not least two titans of the nominations: Frankie Valli vs The Snake. The full shortlist is below: 1. Al Wilson - The Snake 2. Billy Butler – The Right Track 3. Chuck Wood - Seven Days Too Long 4. Dobie Gray - Out On The Floor 5. Edwin Starr - Time 6. Frank Wilson - Do I Love You (Indeed I Do) 7. FFrankie Valli - The Night 8. Gloria Jones - Tainted Love 9. Jimmy Radcliffe - Long After Tonight Is All Over 10. Judy Street - What 11.Luther Ingram - Exus Trek 12.Marvin Gaye - This Love Starved Heart Of Mine (It’s Killing Me) 13.R Dean Taylor - There’s A Ghost In My House 14.Rita & The Tiaras - Gone With The Wind Is My Love 15.Tobi Legend - Time Will Pass You By 16.Tony Clarke - Landslide Get involved in the vote below... http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3GFBk4KGmzbScBjZTm91MKq/steve-lamacqs-northern-soul-world-cup
  20. booklet scan just added there seems to be an issue with the Juno player looking into it mike
  21. Nothing But A House Party: The Birth Of The Philly Sound 1967-71 - New Kent Release View full article
  22. Details and preview of a new release from Kent Records Nothing But A House Party: The Birth Of The Philly Sound 1967-71 CDKEND 466 Read details and listen below... Preview Listen Release notes preview Classic 60s/70s soul from the City of Brotherly Love, recorded before the Philadelphia Sound went International. For the whole of the 1970s, the Philly Sound was a leading and immediately identifiable component of black American music. A crack team of producers, songwriters and musicians raised worldwide awareness of Philadelphia soul to the level the Motown Sound had enjoyed during the previous decade. Anyone with half an ear for music could spot a Philly soul record by... Full release notes at https://acerecords.co.uk/nothing-but-a-house-party-the-birth-of-the-philly-sound-1967-71 Track Listing 1. The Show Stoppers - "Ain't Nothing But A House Party" 2. The Delfonics - "You've Been Untrue" 3. George Tindley - "It's All Over But The Shouting" 4. Jerry Butler - "Never Give You Up" 5. Honey & The Bees - "Help Me (Get Over My Used To Be Lover)" 6. Executive Suite - "Christine" 7. Cliff Nobles - "Love Is All Right" 8. The Ambassadors - "Ain't Got The Love Of One Girl (On My Mind)" 9. Lou Jackson - "Peace To You Brother" 10. Archie Bell & The Drells - "My Balloon's Going Up" 11. Brenda & The Tabulations - "That's The Price You Have To Pay" 12. The Moods - "Rainmaker" 13. Moses Smith - "Keep On Striving" 14. Sonny Ross - "Piper Must Be Paid" 15. Barbara Mason - "You Better Stop It" 16. Sunshine - "Goin' Home To An Empty House" 17. The Intruders - "Every Day Is A Holiday" 18. Freddie Scott - "(You) Got What I Need" 19. Len Barry - "Girl You're Too Young" 20. Oscar Weathers - "Your Fool Still Loves You" 21. The Continental 4 - "What You Gave Up" 22. Peaches & Herb - "Let's Make A Promise" 23. Winfield Parker - "I'm On My Way" 24. The Ethics - "Standing In The Darkness"
  23. Word from member Pat Biggerstaff @s7oul on a new release on the 'Izipho Soul' Label due out this July 2017 MELVIN BROWN & JAMES MATTHEWS - CRYING FOR YOUR LOVE (Previously unreleased) / LOVE STORMY WEATHER (IZIPHO SOUL 45) Blurb and preview follows.... I am delighted to announce the latest record release on my label IZIPHO SOUL Melvin Brown - 'Crying For Your Love' is an incredible piece of previously unreleased Soul Music! Recorded in the same 1976 session as the legendary 'Love Stormy Weather', which will be on the other side. (clip attached, please excuse movie sound quality and be assured the actual record will be clear and crisp) I am taking reservations at £15 a copy (not pre orders, no payment required until the record is out in July) please message me if you would like to secure a copy. It's an absolute pleasure working on this project with the man himself Movin' Melvin Brown. Melvin Brown is still active in the entertainment industry. Truly a renaissance man. He is a wonderful singer, dancer, writer, philosopher and man of peace. His energy and his spirit light up any room. He has devoted his life to sharing his joy with the world. Many thanks Pat @s7oul (link to profile - click above to message Pat) Preview Video Scans
  24. New Melvin Brown Release - Izipho Soul July 2017 View full article

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