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Mickey Finn

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Everything posted by Mickey Finn

  1. Has Millie ever explained the change in direction? Was it a strategic choice to move away from emotional heartbreak to more risque material? If she has been underrated, maybe her later career direction disguised her true talents for a lot of people, although there were always flashes of it, despite poor choices like "Back to the sh%t".
  2. Hi Peter, you asked for favourite artist doing an unusual duet ... the favourite artist is too dependent on time and circumstances but I'd count Jimmy Ruffin as someone very respectable. I first heard this before I heard the original and bought it within 24 hours, lovely version of Luther's My sensitivity by Jimmy, backed and produced by Heaven 17:
  3. The album also appears in a special reissue set from 2006, commanding an even higher price: https://www.discogs.com/sell/release/1038390?ev=rb The set is a beautiful production and unlikely itself to be reissued. Alternatively, there's always a chance that another reissue of "Right on" will appear at some point, most likely out of Japan.
  4. As with most things it depends on the condition and the seller. If you don't mind whatever passes for "VG" (not always what I would call very good) then you can usually find stuff under a tenner. Some of the Mint copies are also headlining at that price, although check the postage for some creative mark-ups. Here's an example: https://www.discogs.com/release/3454343-Various-That-Driving-Beat-60s-70s-Northern-Soul-Stompers Some decently priced copies of varying nick, and some chancer offering a VG copy at $54 plus postage that takes it up to $72, plus whatever import VAT. That's stupid money. I can't claim to have done a comprehensive study, but I've been filling some gaps in the collection in recent months and was surprised to see what some people are charging for what was originally the ultimate in budget series. Another surprise was discovering that this was blocked on Discogs: https://www.discogs.com/release/5490631-Various-They-Call-It-Crossover-More-Mid-Tempo-Soul-Gems Sean Hampsey compiled it and explains the situation in the notes there. I found a copy in Italy for a reasonable 12 euros plus postage making it about 20 overall. Fantastic comp, and indicative of the care with which the series was put together.
  5. These deserve recognition. Ian Dewhirst was involved in putting together the series and he and various others compiled the various volumes. The concept was basically starting a great collection on a budget, so ironic that some are now fetching stupid money, but a good sign of their quality.

    until

    What do Frankie Knuckles, the Fantastic Johnny C and Taggy Matcher (I kid you not) have in common? They are among the many musical highlights of another fantastic Whitby weekender that gave us a full across the board musical experience and a chance to meet old friends while making new ones. Friday evening’s kick off in the big room with Kev got us in the mood with the likes of Patti and the Emblems and Gene Chandler. The always reliable Phil Kingswood got the modern room going an hour later with a very modern set that was mostly 90s to the present and finished with Tears which sounded so good after all these years. Steve Woomble took over and gave us the full Tom Moulton mix of New York City’s I’m doing fine. Brilliant. Upstairs to the market place and Andy Baskett was playing some very new reggae tunes including the most unlikely but really effective remake of Teenage kicks by Taggy Matcher with a very soulful vocal by Wolfgang Valbrun on top of some great dub stylings. Not at all what I expected but a personal highlight of the event. Up next was Soul Sam, returned to us after some health issues and packing the floor with …. Reggae? He gave us about a third of a set with some sixties ska and rocksteady along with more typical spins like Robert Tanner’s Sweet memories, the Medlows Love (part 1) and True Image It’s only a matter of time. John Heaney wrapped up the evening (and almost killed us) with a lively set including Tighten up. Phew, what a scorcher! That last sentence did not apply to the weather this weekend, which meant there was probably better afternoon attendance and dancefloor action during Saturday. We joined Derek Mead in the big room at 3 for some very well chosen youth club and more obscure early Casino memories along with some tunes he has featured over the last few years. Ray Pollard’s The drifter was a standout, sounding wonderful in the big room over a proper system. Hitsville Chalky continued in rocking style as always. We finished the afternoon session with Phil K in the marketplace playing some 70s dancers including Cleethorpes spin Center city by Fat Larry’s Band. Julie got the modern room going in the evening with some early doors floorfillers before Phil took over with more typical 70s modern sounds including the O’Jays I love music, with a curve ball thrown in by (I think) DJ Disciple typical of the kind of soulful house that Phil regularly selects and for me is part of what makes him a reliable spinner year after year. If you read this Phil and you can remember what you played please let us know. Sam Evans, who is surely the answer to Europe’s energy crisis, kept things moving with among others that great remix of Love x love. Then it was upstairs for Lee Fletcher’s selection of ska mod r’n’b etc, always high quality, followed by Soul Sam keeping the floor packed with more of the same and his more typical picks. Derek Mead kept things going with some great connoisseur spins including the highlight selection Mad mouth woman by Wayne Carter, sounding very like Reuben Wilson. Sunday is always special as the afternoon session begins gently and allows the deejays to dig a bit deeper. That’s certainly how Derek started in the main room with a quality set of some less played among the more familiar, including Denise Lasalle Right track, JoAnn Garrett a whole new plan and Jackie Wilson This love is real. Paul Lightly followed with 2 hours of mostly northern interspersed with some r and b (John Lee Hooker!) and modern (Soul-utions), keeping the floor busy. Then came Soul Sam with some great mostly Motown picks including his own firm favourites like Isley Bros My love is your love and the Four Tops There’s something about you, which had the floor almost erupt. Steve Luigi kept things moving along nicely in his traditional late afternoon slot. Out in the marketplace Ian Bottomley (aka Twink) played a very nice selection of 90s followed by late 60s tunes including Verdelle Smith If you can’t say anything nice and The Royalettes River of tears. Then came Rob Smith carrying on in similar style before Julie officially closed the marketplace sessions with some uplifting late 70s dancefloor classics by the Whispers, Stargard and Shalamar. Then Ozz took over with some seamless mixing beginning with …. Tears once again before moving on to some early 80s classics by DTrain, Evelyn King among others that had me well knackered after half an hour. John Barker in the big room showed no mercy - Flaming Emeralds Have some everybody was just crazy but it had to be done! A great set that had the floor heaving, and no Tribute! Snowy rounded off Sunday in the big room and played a selection of less obvious tunes including another highlight, Don’t depend on me by the Fantastic Johnny C. Whoever requested that, thanks, and to Snowy for playing it. Outside Sam Evans and Chris Box had the place rocking with party classics that sounded so fresh after 3 days solid of carefully chosen collectors’, connoisseurs’, and northern classics. What a way to go. Overall, it was a great success. Despite the competition elsewhere in the town this is unrivalled for the deejays, sound systems and traders. And where else can you dance to great music while looking out at the sun setting over the North Sea? To the numpties who ignored the instructions re talc, congratulations for spoiling what began the weekend as a terrific floor. By Sunday the humidity and talc combined had turned it into fly paper. Otherwise a great success all round, and tickets and accommodation bagged for next year. Many thanks to the organisers, deejays, sound and lighting techies, traders, Pavilion staff and punters for making it a highlight of the soul calendar and our summer holiday.
  6. Having been at such an event not so long ago I think more chemicals might have helped.
  7. I share your frustration with the repetition and sameness of a lot of sets, especially when, by definition, there has never been as much music to choose from as today. The choice gets bigger as the playlists get smaller, or so it seems. Those niche venues and the punters, deejays and radio presenters still looking for that next great tune are what will keep the scene going.
  8. Who can possibly know every record? Maybe there are people who know the vast majority of known records, but there are still deejays out there spinning tunes that only they seem to have and these are the spinners I make the effort to hear out and about when I can. Despite the internet and all the short cuts available to finding and acquiring records, there are still proper deejays who are somehow able to dig deeper and find new or possibly rediscover forgotten sounds that pass the quality test, play them out, and make their sets always unique and enjoyable. That's my motivation.
  9. Hi Mick, I'm unlikely to be nearly enough qualified to answer your question but (a) I like the question and (b) I like the way you say there's nothing wrong with any of the options available as you define them. So here goes ... Option 1: Most likely something that comes and goes, depending on fashion. Pubs have to compete for every penny so a lot of them will follow whatever seems to be fashionable. The genuine veterans of the scene who are happy with this type of event can most easily switch to the other two if needs be, although they might tone down the outfits a bit and risk hearing something less familiar. Option 2: This appeals to me more, musically at least, as long as the best dj arguments are not taken too seriously. The collector angle complicates it a bit because these precious rare pieces of vinyl are objects in their own right with values not totally connected to the music on them. That will attract people who are more interested in the investment than the sounds. But if that keeps the new discoveries coming then that's good. Option 3: I like this too but am too young to claim any connection with the original scene, coming to it way too late anyway. But the hunger for new sounds definitely appeals and this is what will keep the scene going more than anything - willingness to enjoy the new so that the old and familiar stays fresh and doesn't get stale like it would (for me at least) in option 1. Option 2 might suffer a bit from music police depending on who the experts are. Open music policy is the key, so ultimately this gets my vote. It also means that anyone in the early stages of a collection has a decent chance of avoiding bankruptcy if they get their hands on an underplayed, forgotten or even undiscovered record. That's got to be good for the scene. I'd like greater flexibility so that music can be enjoyed more on all legal physical formats without taking anything away from the serious collectors - I'm in this for the music first and for the chance to enjoy it over big sound systems with like minded people.
  10. Would be nice to have this on cd also. Looks very tasty indeed.
  11. My sentiments exactly. This looks like a compilation for readers of Q magazine rather than anyone likely to subscribe here. As such, not illegitimate, but compared to the compilations of Van McCoy and Thom Bell productions, for example, this is a very different proposition that won't be finding its way into my collection. For which Mrs Finn is very grateful.
  12. Many thanks for this. You have answered a question I posted on another thread some months ago about whatever happened to Joe Cobb - "Around '72 Joe Cobb decided he wanted to go off and learn piano ... and that's what he's still doing." That certainly seems to be the date when Cobb's name almost completely disappears from McCoy productions and compositions. Given Van's skill as a pianist he might not have had much need for another piano player.
  13. There's clearly a book in all this ... Just to underline your point that the vocal could have been Van himself, here's Bobby Eli paying tribute to him in a post from Soulful Detroit in 2004: Van was a great friend and colleague of mine. I had the esteemed pleasure of playing on many of his productions in Philly and witnessing first hand his incredible virtuosity. He was truly a gentleman and a scolar to the nth degree. Just watching him work in the studio was a marvel to behold. The way he stacked his own background vocals to make it sound as if it were different people with different timbres was pure magic. Thats mostly him on Right on the tip of my tongue! If I remember correctly the only other backing vocalist was Diane Destry. Vinnie barrett and I have been to his home in DC and he was the gracious host. One time it was a party for then mayor of DC, Walter Washington. His passing was truly a shock to us all. Van...RIP https://soulfuldetroit.com/archives/6593/7298.html?1092991229
  14. This is from Discogs, where it also says that Chris Jackson was an alias used by Marke. https://www.discogs.com/artist/2158104-Marke-Jackson
  15. Ordered this as soon as I saw it available, looks terrific. Once again, thanks to all at Kent for keeping these coming, including all the notes and research that goes with them.
  16. As a kid these were great value at 2 new pence per tube:
  17. Seeing that image of Pacers above reminded me of what they used to be called before being rebranded:
  18. Lovely looking production up to the usual high Kent standards, and some nice not so obvious tracks in there among the better known. Still plenty left to choose from if anyone wants to celebrate his 84th
  19. All the best to you, Peter
  20. As a punter and regular customer of those selling on Discogs I find the new "improved" version very clunky and less easy to use than before. It seems to take longer to load up and when I use the search features the results often don't load properly or disappear (i.e., no backtracking). Also frustrating!
  21. No worries, I get your main point and agree with it. The whole cultural appropriation argument to me is something I am very uncomfortable with because it is so open to abuse and, well, appropriation. My line is as MickL said in another thread on here: Give credit where it's due, it's all you can do. Wise words and we would avoid so much bother and aggravation if they were heeded, and not only in the soul scene.
  22. No, it's just certain academics playing the same self-promotion game by finding a form of oppression and then developing an angle on it. Nothing to do with Marx or the virgin Mary. As with social media, academics compete for likes (citations) via posts (publications) that simultaneously appropriate (borrow/adapt/quote) from the work of others whilst marking themselves out as somehow unique from the crowd and therefore worth following. Much of academic publishing today is influencer marketing gone mad. People who have never read Marx call this "Marxism" because its practitioners adopt oppressed poses and claim to speak for the oppressed, even as they build nice careers and are anything but oppressed themselves. Ultimately it's all about them and little or nothing to do with the ordinary people they claim to defend. Marxism it most definitely is not. It's just a variation on what seems to be the central theme of this and some other older threads - appropriation for the singular purpose of self-advancement.
  23. Very encouraging to see new releases like this. Mine should be winging its way as we speak. Thanks to all concerned.
  24. Mickey Finn replied to a post in a topic in All About the SOUL
    A decent obituary of Marlena here: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2024/jan/23/marlena-shaw-obituary

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