Everything posted by Davenpete
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Hifi Sean Ft. Crystal Waters - Testify
Methinks they've been listening to the piano in Love Slipped Through My Fingers. Dx
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Lorenzo Manley Swoop down on you
Would love a copy of this version:
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Shawn Robinson story
Certainly doesn't sound like Kim.
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Shawn Robinson story
I know there's an unissued version supposedly by Diana Ross.
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Soul Stop Records, Stamford, Lincs
Er... I wasn't entirely serious.
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Soul Stop Records, Stamford, Lincs
Are they the guys that released things like Muriel Day on a well produced red label... If so it's probably Carl Fortnum Dx
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Pat Brady mid 80s cover ups
Also Cody Black Slowly Moulding at Bradford - he was fucking good back then. Dx
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the Vows on VIP
The Magnetics isn't it? Dx
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Tavares and Freda Payne
REALLY are we still hearing this sort of viewpoint after all these years?
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Tavares and Freda Payne
Loved this since I first heard it a few years ago, something deeply charming about it - cheap as chips on eBay - though I've not got round to getting one yet. Dx
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Motown LP Only Tracks Mix
Great stuff - but You're the One came out twice on single. Dx
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Chuck Jackson - What's with this loneliness
Is it not unissued - released only on a 100 Club Anniversary Single and Horace's/Ace-Kent? Dx
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Acetates.....anyone ever tried to clean them?
Don't use lighter fluid (though it's great on ordinary vinyl) Dx
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Help with title please
Remember buying this and then being appalled with myself - went in the sales box pretty rapid- seem to remember there's another version also on Viva by a different group (not the one above) - ? Dx PS In fact I've just found it on youtube - Eternal Flame
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So how many dj on here with bootlegs and re-issue vinyl?
I'm sure your box is packed with records LOTS of people don't like Daz! : ) Hope you're well mate. Dx
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So how many dj on here with bootlegs and re-issue vinyl?
A few thoughts from my point of view: 1. On the rare occasion I get out nowadays I want to hear a spot that is imaginative, enjoyable, well constructed and danceable (even though I hardly ever dance nowadays) 2. In practice that tends to mean the spot is from people who will be playing from original vinyl, but that's because of the DJs I happen to rate 3. That could be Club Sounds, RnB (though of the rhythm n soul variety NOT jump blues!), pure northern, crossover, 70s, 80s or even modern modern - or better still a night that blends all of these 4. I would rather hear a really good £5 forgotten oldie or unknown sound that I really rate than fucking Get It Babe - even if it's on red issue - or any other sound that (whether or not it's a great record) I'm pig sick of - never mind Do I love you which is just not a very good record (and which I know FW himself was embarrassed by because he thought it was garbage) 5. Equally if it's a shite record it could be worth £millions - it's still shite 6. I have no interest in DJs doing a 'listen to my wallet' spot - only in spots I rate - cheque book collectors/DJ's are very, very rarely any good 7. If I hear 6 records in a night that are a] good and b] I don't know/hardly know at all I'm chuffed to fuck 8. I have no doubt whatsoever that almost every single DJ of any standing has at some point played a bootleg - though that may well have been accidentally 9. Afew years ago people were playing acetates all over the place that were blindly accepted (often even in the most high brow venues), even though most people with any knowledge were well aware they were simply cuts (NOT studio acetates) from CDs of stuff that was available on original vinyl - so they effectively became a way of DJs being 'allowed' to play bootlegs Dx
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New to the Scene and looking for advice
Just goes to show that in every era there's crap been played. Dx
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New to the Scene and looking for advice
It's a lovely soulful mid tempo floater... : ) Definitely makes Mitch Ryder sound like a shrinking violet.
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Jimmy Hart "Sugar Baby" Blue Rock 4035 - Help Requested
F*cking wonderful - always absolutely loved this - I'm thinking the Mercury vinyl is laid down slow? Dx
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New to the Scene and looking for advice
Shirley Ellis' 'Soul Time' is very much part of the '60s club soul' period - first played between about 66 and 71 (before anyone mentions that the Wheel opened in 63 - I'm talking about when 'the sound' developed) - look for you tube clips mentioning the Twisted Wheel and you'll find A LOT of this type of stuff (similarly Twisted Wheel compilations). Mitch Ryder 'Devil With A Blue Dress', Don Covay 'See Saw', The Sheep 'Hide and Seek', Virginia Wolves 'Stay', Brooks & Jerry 'I Got What It Takes', Showmen 'Our Love Will Grow' and "Take it Baby', Art Freeman 'Slipping Around', Wilson Pickett 'Three Time Loser' etc etc sound like things you're likely to enjoy. You'll love the Twisted Wheel revivals in Manchester. Dx
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New to the Scene and looking for advice
Drill down into YouTube - you'll find vast numbers of tracks listed as Northern or streams of 'Northern Soul Classics' - that will give you a good opportunity to decide what you like and don't like... There's a very broad spectrum and one man's soulful gem is another's nightmare. Collecting original vinyl is nowadays an extremely expensive pass time - and one where you can easily find yourself spending a lot on something that turns out to be fake. Unless you REALLY know your stuff, the only way to minimise the risk is to buy from a top notch dealer or touch nothing without checking Manships bootleg guide - but that adds a premium. Of course you may merely be interested in simply owning a track on vinyl and aren't to bothered if it's a bootleg or reissue - in which case you can pick up virtually anything nowadays on seven inch. Pete Smith is a good chap for buying records off and very reasonably priced in the scheme of things. There are A LOT of CD compilations around - the straight Northern compilations from the likes of Kent you can't really go wrong with. (Though as something of a musical Nazi it's not really my cup of tea) A big venue like Stoke will certainly blow your socks off with a baptism of fire and will be worth the trip. You'll find mist local evening dos are fairly pedestrian musically - though that's not necessarily a bad thing starting out - just bear in mind that they are the tip of the iceberg musically and whilst you'll hear all the classics you'll love like The Precisions, DJs playing what to me is the really orgasmic stuff needs to be tracked down. Welcome aboard Dx
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Stax Dancers
Wonderful AND the other side of What you gonna do - unfortunately I found that out AFTER I'd bought a double sided demo. Dx
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
FFS
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Stax Dancers
Always really liked Her Am I by Linda Lyndell paid about for pence hapenny for it.
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Stax Dancers
Bucket loads of Margie Joseph, headed up by What You Gonna Do and Medicine Bend (which I believe was played at Wigan - ?) Dx