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macca

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Everything posted by macca

  1. I loved this record then and now. This was a Searling spin if I remember right. Ms Washburn's vocal is superb and the lyrics pretty in tune with the times. Protest Soul!!
  2. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    It's short for psychedelia, you know, bands with names like the screamin' fire hydrants, the chocolate subway etc...
  3. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    I'm confused now. Could it be worse than Gypsy - Dry Well? That was pure psyche, surely. And the Seven Dwarfs...? And the simply dreadful Hey Little Wayout Girl? I was a full time paid up member of the SP back then.
  4. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    As has been said many times before on here, contemporary music has always been played on the scene, but it was usually stuff that had blanked stateside. We were/are a rare soul scene and as such a lot of people would like it to stay that way. I don't think the Soul Police really enter into it.
  5. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    Yes, Sharon is superb.
  6. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    Get yerself down to an Untouchables event in the smoke or the EuroYeYe in Spain & you'll find out...
  7. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    True, I did miss your point, in fairness you did say current releases. I think the last modern Soul record I listened to was Macy Gray's 'I Try', and that was 2000'ish. Sadly, I find most of these contemporary releases unpalatable, but that's just my taste and tastes are like colours, there are lots of them! My apologies...
  8. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    Have to disagree there. Chapter Five is massive on the psych/freakbeat scene which is thoroughly populated by nubiles that dance on tables and dudes wearing 'kerchiefs' and hipsters. Their average age is 25 I'd say. When I hit the nightclubs in 1976 I'd have to be arseholed to dance to Disco. Back then I preferred The Del Rays and The World Column to Brass Construction and Crown Heights Affair and to be honest I still do. I don't see that playing charted material from the 70s is going to pump vital blood into an ageing UK scene.
  9. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    dark brown leather-soled loafers (with red socks) for me. around 1978 we (my group of friends) started to wear moccassins. the bag, up to 1976, was a white adidas jobbie, which I later ditched for a plain khaki millets tool bag. I carried three shirt changes, deodorant and v-neck lambswool jumper, which I'd wear for the first hour, until hyperventilation set in. I never liked polyveldts or the flat cap craze, though I did wear a beret for a very short period, till common sense got the better of me.
  10. We've been down this road soooo many times. Many of us were Soul fans before we got into 'Northern Soul'. The artists had obscure names like Percy Wiggins, Herb Ward, Sam Williams etc, but they were evidently Soul records and therefore instantly appealed. So for me, the Soul quotient was important. I didn't care for the deluge of 60's Brit Pop in 1978/9 and still don't, so the Northern Soul embraces all argument for me never really washed, at the risk of being labelled a purist, soul snob/police or whatever. One doesn't have to like it any more than one has to like Soul.
  11. It's not really worth falling out over, is it? I never went to the Torch/cats. Had I been born two years earlier, I may well have gone, but I wasn't. Ever since I got into this scene, I've heard people eulogising rapturously over the earlier venues, but each person has their time and place. If I really could choose, I'd be a claret slurping, wench shagging toff on a grand tour of Italy and Greece in 1820. Bugger Northern Soul.
  12. So the first time I heard Tamala Lewis in 1977/8, I was hearing a new oldie then? I disagree, respectfully of course.
  13. In 1976/7, I remember grumbling about funk & disco, not newies. As Kev said, a newie was a record that a jock was trying to break, whether a 60s recording or a 70's recording. That's the way I remember it, at least.
  14. So what category do records like the nightliters, cal tjader, and the dynatones fall into then? Not northern?Webby, if you're going to quote Dylan in your opening post, get the bugger right. It's 'I'm a poet, and I know it, hope I don't blow it.' I think you may have blown it. R&B is the bedrock, nay, the very cornerstone of the all-nighter scene, I know that 'cos I bought the Kent Birth of Soul CD.
  15. An opportunity to recant, followed by confession under duress, and then the stake (or the snake)...
  16. macca posted a post in a topic in Look At Your Box
    What a wonderful site this is. Never fails to amaze me, liver withering responses included. How could anyone term the Jack Jones record 'gritty'? A rum old do, as they say in Dereham.
  17. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    Winter In America is a masterpiece I never tire of. His dad was the first black to play for Celtic, I believe.
  18. Great educative thread chaps. Nobody's mentioned Barbara Acklin Am I Still The Same Girl? I'm no expert on this genre, quite a 'pagan' in fact, but listening to some of the sound files you're posting, I reckon it would fall into the Crossover category. A lot of Tyrone Davis's tunes as well. Is it because they're ten a penny and therefore not so desirable? Someone mentioned Ty Karim 'Lighten Up Baby'. I thought that was more your typical 'Northern' tune. Enlighten me por favor...
  19. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    In colloquial Spanish, 'me es inverosimil' is the equivalent of 'I don't care one way or the other'. The things one learns on here...
  20. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    Maybe the sanctimoniousness of the older guys regarding this undoubtedly historic appearance is due to the fact that their perceived seniority at the time, all of 20 years, led them them foolishly to believe they were guardians of the sacred flame, just like the Ulams in Quest For Fire. Bugger me, them goji berries are having an effect on me.
  21. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    how did those hats and caps stay on?
  22. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    Come to think of it, the tune very often mattered even less. Even at 4am on the main floor of Wigan circa 76. Some people were so smashed, tunes like Joe 90 were slipped into playlists with the greatest of ease. Getting all precious about Footsee now, 35 years later, is pointless. Pete has all the right in the world to love paula parfitt, lynn randell, samantha jones, jeanette harper, peggy march et al, because they're all a part of this scene, whether one percieves them as crap records or not. Oldies venues should definitely air them in my opinion. Warts and all NS, whether some of us like the term or not...
  23. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    The kazoo was used to perfection by many a blues songster, such as henry thomas. it has a long history, and is of african origin, so it's links to NS are unquestionable. Deeve, I didn't say we played footsee at the youth club, I'm just saying we were 'moved' by the dancers on TOTP. If you were 15, types like Jethro were to be looked up to.
  24. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    I can say that our badges attracted a whole lot more attention at the school tuck shop after that broadcast. We were all talking about it, including the pop fans. There were much more folk 'nosing in' on us at the youth club after it too. Till that point we'd been hidden away in a storeroom. After footsee on TOTP we were allowed to go out into the main hall... with our records of course. When the school closed for summer, the discos in the youth club continued and began to draw people well over school age from all over the area, purely because of the 'scene' we had going. Gary Spencer and Andy 'Smudge' Smith, then around 18 years old, used to bring their latest Soul Bowl acquisitions down as well, so they were exciting times. :-)
  25. macca posted a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    A weekend soulie is a person that has a life from sunday to thursday... I assume.

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