Everything posted by Thinksmart
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A potted bio intro !
Excellent reading, yes keep it coming. I was listening to Norman Jay talking recently and he was talking similarly about local Soul selections such as Archie Bell and the Drells 'Don't Let Love Get You Down' with its mid-tempo Philly Groove that were break-out plays for him separate to Reggae. Interesting about the CCR song too - that's a wonderful, deep song. The Ted Hawkins version is a particular favourite of mine: https://youtu.be/v8UsXFrfq7I?si=R8_XujQUsHHp0LHe
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A potted bio intro !
Welcome. Did your audience have any particular Soul style or selections?
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When and Where was the 1st All Nighter held in the UK ?
By 1965 the Stones and Hollies were playing theatres, pier halls and cinemas as pop acts rather than club nights and 'rave ups', so likely 1964 latest. Their concert schedules of 1964 onwards are available online. One unofficial early nighter venue for trad jazz in 50s was Chislehurst Caves, in Kent. There were also reputedly allnight Jazz sessions alongside Festival of Britain in 1951. But it feels to me that Americana Club in 1955 was the first official nighter playing black Jazz and R&B we might enjoy.
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When and Where was the 1st All Nighter held in the UK ?
Roburt seems busy so they look to be 1963-64.
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When and Where was the 1st All Nighter held in the UK ?
The Americana club at The Mapleton was holding all nighters from 1955 prior to the same people doing so at the Flamingo. A lot more at https://flashbak.com/club-americana-on-coventry-street-in-1955-43350/ There is also this related vinyl below. I recommend the book mentioned in the article to explore London's other side and it's follow up. Northern Soul DirectClub Americana - All Night Dancing At The Mapleton - Vari...However, it is a little known fact that there was a second club, cloistered in the basement of the Mapleton, the ‘Americana’. The club was..
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Fantasy football
Fantasy Northern Soul.... pick your venue and DJs to receive points for new plays, reactivated oldies, attendance numbers etc....
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casino classics question
The early CD era was great for me, I devoured them all and still do. Then that combined with legal downloads. By the early 1990s the Motown Northern Soul discoveries were starting to leak out on CD illegally and then legally. That coincided with lots more venues and nighters again. It's slowing down now in compilations but lots of new Soul music to enjoy as mentioned in the relevant thread here. Bandcamp is good now too I find.
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casino classics question
I laid my hands on every cheap Soul complilation I could in the early 1980s... All the various Motown ones, Casino Classics, Out On The Floor by Inferno Records, the two Keepin' The Faith on PRT (https://www.discogs.com/release/2926498-Various-Keepin-The-Faith), the early GoldSoul, Rare Soul Uncovered and first Kent LPs. Some would even turn up in my local Woolworths which had rotating stock every week (a brilliant double LP of Veejay blues and soul I've never seen since and not listed anywhere). As soon as I got access, I'd raid Rob's Records in Nottingham every week, especially once I was a Saturday lad on the Victoria fish market about 1983 and had earnings. I'd also go downstairs into Pendulum Records and buy everything new that week, usually 2-3 Kent compilations and equivalent a week. Then once I caught up, it was onto collecting singles. Ah happy days!
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New Soul Releases
Nice enough but Jessie's vocal is too high in the mix, at least in the online play. Is it a demo? What's the Yvonne Baker on it? I'd buy it on legal download (as I do a lot) but it seems to be vinyl only.
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New Soul Releases
I've only heard this one once on Solar Radio and nowhere else or again there. It's from end of last year. Definitely not one for NS purists, it's kind of an update to 1970s Modern Soul style with nice Soul claps and definitely danceable. It has quite a distinct sound and a deliberately odd ending.... it intrigued me enough to buy it download and it often appears in my head, so embedded itself there. I like that it evokes but doesn't copy any particular style.
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New Soul Releases
On Gina Sedman's new album 1972, the song 'Like A Whisper' stands out, a gentle mid-tempo song that doesn't try too hard and is all the more powerful for it.
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New Soul Releases
The new 7:45s album 'Spinning' out a couple of weeks ago has three songs that are very Northern Soul in style that I'll embed below. I'm always in two minds about this, I'm generally more comfortable when an artist is not trying to deliberately create the NS sound but I'm also grateful for new releases carrying on this aspect of Soul Music. The first track here evokes it well, but is it 'too on the nose'? I could see it being played out at some venues but the Youtube channel is definitely trying to make a direct association. We know that for some it causes some discomfort when music is specifically targetted towards and promoted inwards to the scene. Also 'We Will Be Friends' is brass-led midtempo 80s-style modern. 'The Music's Always There For You' is Disco Soul
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News: Love Train: The Songs Of Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff
Enjoying this one over the weekend, can we have volume 2 next week?
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New Soul Releases
A standout from the new Durand Jones and the Indications album 'Flowers'. This has an early 1970s uptempo Soul sound similar to Major Harris, The Artistocrats, The Originals etc. Sounds more full and powerful on the album than Youtube will represent. Darn it, just saw that Mike posted the same track earlier. Feel free to remove this duplicate post, I cannot see a delete option.
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Walter Scott R.I.P.
The Whispers had a huge discography across many decades, with great music in each. They makes for great home listening in all eras, possibly so many releases and successful they are perhaps less appreciated than equivalents such as The Dells. I have a double CD of the Janus era that covers five years and is all great. Then there is the Solar era and smooth Soul that followed. Plus the 60s Dore tracks. RIP and thank you.
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News: New Album - New Breed R&B - Money Talks - Kent Records
Playing this today and it's a scorcher of a compilation. Feel good, uptempo Rhythm and Blues, it's a delightful listen. I was taken by how a good proportion of these feel equally Northern Soul, which perhaps is a reflection of how the genres have blurred and Northern Soul has embraced earlier music. R&B was always there from the start (and before that), but if this had been released as an NS themed release a fair number of the tracks wouldn't of batted anyone's eyelids on that basis. From whatever perspective, it's just a wonderful, heart warming release. The Love Train - Gamble and Huff Songbook CD is great too and had me singing along internally. It also showed how versatile their songs are to interpretation. Volume 2 must be planned already....surely.... Just keep them coming Kent! It makes my month when the CDs arrive from you, since the early LPs to today.
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Catacombs, 1973.
Like a lot of venues it looks to of had a rock/prog/blues night specifically - here being Monday
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SOUND CLIP - REAL HUMDINGER - EDWIN STAR
Yes I heard a clip on Richard's Sunday show this week. Nice!
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The Art of Ian Clarke
As a teenager when the Kent albums were coming out, I was buying them all. Ian's artwork was an intrinsic part of the enjoyment. It added so much intrigue, context and atmosphere when I didn't know the artists and pre-internet there wasn't anywhere to go find out. It's hard to convey how important they were to me then. I'd adore a book of the artwork which I've said here many times. Those covers front and back are imprinted on me, I read and scoured them so many times. Eventually when I met my know wife in '87, I loaned the whole set and many more compilations to a friend. When I surfaced and wanted them back, he said they were all damaged, gone, taken at parties. I was gutted, I still am. Then very soon after the CDs started being produced and I've had all of those. But as enjoyable as that is, it wasn't the same as those original Kent LP covers.
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John Edwards R.I.P
https://soultracks.com/news-john-edwards-lead-singer-of-the-spinners-dies-at-80/ RIP
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Ted Massey- RIP
Thanks Ted for all the promotion, enthusiasm and playing out of our great music. RIP
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News: 25th Anniversary The Hayley Records Story by founder Rob Moss
Thanks for the label, article, dedication and all the work involved. I do not collect vinyl any more but treasure the Hayley CDs which are in my private music server. It will be great if there is a non vinyl way to buy later issued tracks not on the CDs.
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Tom Williams (of Buster & Eddie, etc) R.I.P.
The first £100 record if I recall the anecdote correctly. RIP
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For Sale: Edsel 4CD 'There's No Stopping Us Now', as new
For sale. Recently issued in February 2025, 4CD set 'There's No Stopping Us Now' on Edsel label in as new condition. Excellent sound quality. Used once. Sent promptly from Nottingham for UK buyers only. Contact via messaging at Forum. £25 + £4 postage and packaging (can add tracking and signed for at buyer cost). The set sells for £32 upwards when new. Payment via Paypal. I only have 1 set for sale, then this post will be closed. For details and tracklisting see link here: https://www.demonmusicgroup.co.uk/catalogue/releases/theres-no-stopping-us-now-the-female-mods-forgotten-story-4cd/ Thanks Mark
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Roy Ayers R.I.P.
RIP. A very diverse musician, his music always has the 'feel good' factor. A lot more Soul over the years than his Jazz-Funk labelling would indicate.