Woodbutcher
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Viewing Topic: some UK Northern soul bits and bobs for sale
Everything posted by Woodbutcher
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
First airing at Cleethorpes Winter Gardens in 76' according to an old thread , but way before my time ...
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
Sounds like The "Born Again" Selecter ...
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Anyone fancy posting
Couldn't pick 5 if you asked me , far too many 'favourite' toons ... I can however direct you towards Karl's excellent site regarding the tunes played at the Stafford all-niters , umpteen podcasts chock full of beauties ... https://www.soulunderground.co.uk/TheStaffordStory/ There are also some great podcasts to be heard on Mixcloud ... Karls are all on there ( https://beta.mixcloud.com/Chalkster/ ) and Pete Smith has some good'uns too ( https://beta.mixcloud.com/mayfairmenthol/ ) I've uploaded a few too ( https://beta.mixcloud.com/Woodbutcher/ )
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Ebay Flirtations, Genuine?
Nah , just a plain old-fashioned 70's counterfeit bootleg ...
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Ebay Flirtations, Genuine?
Have sent them a very polite message ... Going to struggle in a battle with the other one listed at $1.26 ...
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
Bit more about Mike Morton here ... This article from Music Now of July 25th 1970 makes it clear that music was Mike's second priority, after dry-cleaning:'Mike Morton has an unusual angle on pop music. At 33 years of age he is hardly the prototype teenybopper idol, yet each week he plays live to more than 5,000 kids and reaches many thousands more through Radio One appearances. Though things have certainly declined since the days when tea-time dances drew 1,000 dancers to the Lyceum, the ballroom still remains an important factor in influencing the record-buying habits of teenagers. Mike and his group, the Mike Morton Sound, have been resident at the Orchid, Purley - one of the biggest dance venues in the country - for years, and now the affable guitarist has embarked on a new venture which could help change the face of pop. Travel down Clapham High Street in South London and, opposite the British Transport Museum, you’ll spot a garish former cinema now known as the Majestic Bingo Hall. It's just one of Mike ’s business ventures, along with a chain of dry-cleaning shops, and this unlikely spot could rapidly become a haven for pop stars. Explains Mike: “About nine months ago I made a record called ‘Suzanne’ for Plexium Records. I’d done plenty of TV and radio recordings before, but it was my first time in a pukka studio. I thought we’d take about three hours to make the record, but in the end it took 12. When I got the bills in I was staggered. I began to think that there must be a market in the recording studio business for people who have potential but can’t pay the ridiculous charges of West End Studios, and the germ of an idea took root.” Now, in an amazingly short time, Mike has transformed the upper circle of the Majestic into one of the most modern, largest and best-equipped studios in the country. Out have come the seats and the Edwardian decor, and in have gone sound booths, soundproof walls, one of the most luxurious control rooms around, and ultra-sophisticated eight-track recording facilities, all in a setting of plush wall-to-wall carpeting, soft lights and lavish drapes. More than a mile of cable alone has been used, and in excess of £50,000 spent already. “We can offer facilities beyond compare, including a spacious licensed bar, and yet I’ve deliberately kept our charges down to a mere £14 an hour flat rate - less than half what most studios are charging. Groups can even hire a Lowrey organ for use on their sessions, and we’ve got first-rate engineers. I believe there is a real demand for a modestly-priced studio, providing there is nothing modest or second-rate about the quality it provides.” Mike knows the graft of trying to break through. He started playing guitar at 17 and, after a summer season on the Isle of Wight, formed a trio called the Blue Notes which toured with people like Petula Clark and the Platters. He joined Mecca in the early 60s, then left for a spell with Bob Miller & the Millermen, and was a regular member of the studio bands on the pioneering TV pop shows Six Five Special, Drumbeat and Dig This. “I had a fantastic year when I was with Drumbeat. I was earning £100 a week, which was an enormous sum in those days. I saved hard, borrowed a lot more from the bank, and opened a chain of dry-cleaning shops. Then Cyril Stapleton found an old cinema in Chertsey which he thought would make a good bingo hall. Cyril asked me to come in with him. Several others were going to put in money, but everyone pulled out because their advisors said it wasn’t viable, so in the end I went into it on my own. Then, two years ago, I bought the Majestic.” In between times, Mike has worked on the Continent for a year, then rejoined Mecca as resident at the Orchid. “We play the current chart things plus the pop standards, and I’d be bold enough to say that it’s the best group in the country for out-and-out entertainment. We aren’t strictly a pop outfit, because we have to serve a wider purpose, but we are rather unique because it’s an 11-piece and eight of them sing!” Many of Mike’s singers find extra employment recording cover versions of pop hits for labels like Music For Pleasure and Marble Arch, and Mike sees this as one outlet for his studios: “Since we play all these things onstage and on Radio One, I could take the whole band into my studio and cut cover version LPs by the dozen.” But perhaps the most exciting prospect of the Majestic is its potential for onstage recordings: “The hall holds 1000. We could put on big-time concerts and pipe the sound straight through to the studio and get an unequalled sound. The things against live recordings at the moment are the cost and technical problems of shifting complicated and bulky recording equipment around the country - there will not be any such problem here.”'
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
No , exactly the same amount as I could ...
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
So enlighten me , what exactly have you added to the 2008 story regarding Mike Morton/Blue Sharks ... ?
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
So we had to wait another eight years for someone else (your good self) to do , by your own admission , exactly the same ... the post in 2008 did the confirming , all you're doing is crowing about finding a £1 record for £1 ... congratulatons ...
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THE BLUE SHARKS: THE SOUL SCENE'S LONGEST EVER 'COVER-UP'?
The "cat was out of the bag" in 2008 if not earlier so can't quite see the point in this ...
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Record on YouTube
Link would help ...
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Comedy Sale Of The Day
At best you'll just get the standard reply that she's used before ... "I know nothing about these records , I just found them in the loft".
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fave live band/singer from back in the day
The Jam on each of the thirty+ times I saw them ... closely followed by Nine Below Zero who are thankfully still doing the business to this day ... Soul-wise it would have to be the gentleman who was Edwin Starr .
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4000+ Northern Soul Record Collection Auction News Item
To save you a lengthy search through ... https://www.the-saleroom.com/en-gb/auction-catalogues/j-c-featonby-auctioneers-and-valuers/catalogue-id-srfe10015?page=6
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Comedy Sale Of The Day
Two Sassy's , 1002 and 1002-2 , different flipsides .
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Friday Night Oldies Night "beginning of the end"?
Speak for yourself , never went to Wigan when I was starting out on 'the scene' as I was advised by all and sundry that it was a toilet and on the downward spiral in '80/81 ... so the likes of Leicester - Stafford - Norwich - Blackburn - 100 Club were my stomping grounds ... none of which were for looking backwards ...
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Fair? Unfair
Someone may well buy it to play it if the price is low enough , but a crack half way across the disc like that one renders the record as Fair as far as a collector is concerned regardless of whether it "plays fine" , and the price should reflect that.
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2 very rare latin soul 45s
All three clips the same ...
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
Her version of "I love the ground you walk on" is a great ballad , but the tune in question is just dire.
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
Too many great nights at the 'Embankment' to let a little slip of judgement like this to get in the way Len ... I grew to love Gene Vito but this is one giant leap too far ...
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
And I used to have such respect for you sir ...
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
Should just start playing automatically on the page linked to (works fine here still) , if not then I can't really help ... the actual sales post ain't hard to find though ...
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
Link to the soundfile in my last post ... don't come back on here with bleeding ears and say you weren't warned though ...
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What is 'Proper' dancing?
That's because they've not yet been to the 2nd lesson , or their 'tutor' packed in after one YT video so they're in a kind of limbo ...
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Misuse of the "Rare Soul" title
I'm referring to this monstrosity being lauded as a "Rare soul" record ... which it never was , is not now , nor ever will be ... https://vocaroo.com/i/s12MuwQwIrmp