Northern Soul - help with best tracks?

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Art Awreet

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Jan 12, 2007
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After journeying thorugh a lot of top old 70's disco/funk/soul, I've recently started to go a bit further back and listen to northern soul tracks. From what I've listened to so far, Benny Spellman's "Fortune Teller" is a belter. However I'm not really that clued up on what are considered the best tunes from that era. Anyway I know there's quite a few people into Northern Soul on here so thought I'd see what people thought. In particular the more upbeat 4x4beat tracks. Are the best tracks usually the rarest?

Any recommendations for a Top 50 or Top 100 Northern Soul playlist?

Much appreciated
 

Ed

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Aug 1, 2002
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I'm no expert but I started with a couple of compilations

Ignore the horrendous title of this, it's packed with absolute beasts!

[ame=http://www.amazon.co.uk/Best-Northern-Soul-All-Nighter-Ever/dp/B000HKD8L6/ref=sr_1_30?ie=UTF8&qid=1295457436&sr=8-30]The Best Northern Soul All-Nighter ... Ever!: Various Artists: Amazon.co.uk: Music[/ame]


Then the other one I got first is this

[ame=http://www.amazon.co.uk/Crowd-Story-Northern-Soul/dp/B00004YU4L/ref=pd_sim_m_h__5]The In Crowd: The Story of Northern Soul: Various Artists: Amazon.co.uk: Music[/ame]

It is literally a treasure trove waiting to be opened, enjoy the ride!

Barrie Jay knows loads about Northern, hopefully he'll be along shortly....
 

Remington

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Nov 24, 2010
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Try Gloria Jones Tainted Love original.

That's my secret weapon to get everyone stomping. What a tune.

Anything by Jackie Wilson. Try mixing in some Motown with it when you play. :mad:
 

Barrie Jay

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Art

The best ones are not necessarily the rarest. Often prices have little to do with the quality.

Collecting obscure northern soul originals on vinyl will now cost a very tidy sum.

I got lots of compilations from ebay for £1 upwards - don`t mind getting them even if its only for one track tbh at that price. Some are shite but many good ones - just make sure they are the original recordings and not some ropey reworks (usually done by Ian Levine).

There are 100s I could recommend but throw `nothern soul` `wigan casino` `blackpool mecca` `twisted wheel` `va-vas` `catacoombes` or `the torch tunstall` into the search engine on Youtube and see what it picks up - then check all the uploads made by the same person and have a listen.

I tend to like the more 4 to the floor stuff tbh when it comes to northern and, whilst I like the more `funky` sound championed by Ian Levine and Colin Curtis you cannot beat a good stomper IMHO. Not too keen on most of the downbeat or mid tempo `southern` side.

Will dig out some good compilation recommendations for you when I have a little time.

Here`s a couple of channels to get you started:

YouTube - soulman7262's Channel

YouTube - keepingthefaith72's Channel

YouTube - bricomaligno's Channel

happy listening.

A few of my own personal faves:

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9WgdrSGKzU]YouTube - Lou Pride - I'm Com'un Home In The Morn'un[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zG0GpoNXo3Q]YouTube - Joe Hicks - Dont it Make You Feel Funky[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9e1r77USjSA]YouTube - Modern Redcaps,Never Too Young.wmv[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lAprdjXgnM]YouTube - Northern Soul Monster..Danny Wagner[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smpDMSQVwcc]YouTube - Jackie Lee - Do The Temptation Walk[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQlN_M9Vtgo]YouTube - The Artistics - Hope We Have[/ame]

YouTube - bricomaligno's Channel

I could be here all night !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

Art Awreet

Member
Jan 12, 2007
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16
London
Thanks guys. Some great tips there and I'll defo have a listen to these soon. I do like the more upbeat Motown stuff too so the idea of combining is a good one.

Barrie - Was it common in the Northern Soul clubs back in the day to combine Northern with Motown? Also when was the Blackpool Mecca in its pomp? Was that later than the other clubs you've listed?

Cheers
 

Jiglo

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Mar 21, 2005
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The most memorable 2 for me are....

Dobie Gray - Out On The Floor
Judy Street - What

I find myself singing them both a lot because they're both really catchy songs :thumbsup: :D

Pity I can't make the soul do as it's been ages since I last went to one, but i'm off on my hols this sunday. Have a good one all:thumbsup: :)
 

U31

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Dec 18, 2007
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Kiss me brown eye
2 here, so far, Marks in the 'Dam that weekend...
Im asking around if anyone else fancies a doo! :thumbsup:

Edit: Alex, Deb, have you Text Adam W? He loved it the last time he came to King Georges 3 floors of soul?
 

Barrie Jay

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Interview with Levine here

Ian Levine | DJHistory.com

Art

To get some history the full article is well worth a read (and saves me typing) but this bit tells how the discovery and breaking of one tune (The Carstairs It Really Hurts Me girl) was the beginning of the end of the Northern Scene as we knew it - so I have copied it below.

I am surprised to see Ian admit `we went too far`. He did indeed but what he never quite got, and perhaps doesn`t to this day, is whereas Colin played some quality new stuff, many of the tunes Ian played were considered absolute dross by many. That was the main reason for the campaign to get him out.

I also think he saw a commercial opportunity to write and produce his own material and use the scene as a promotional tool.

Ideally, Colin and Ian should have created a new movement alongside the Northern Scene. History tells us otherwise.

From the article:

Back in England I found this dealer called John Anderson who’d moved from Scotland to Kings Lynn. I told him I wanted this Carstairs record and he’d just had a shipment in from America of 100,000 demo records from radio stations. We went through this collection, me, Andy Hanley, and Bernie Golding, and we found three copies of the Carstairs record. Went back to Blackpool, played the record and changed the whole scene. Blackpool Mecca suddenly became the home of this new northern soul sound. I would’ve heard this record in 1973, when it was supposedly released, but not obtained it until 1974. After the Carstairs came this record by Marvin Holmes called You Better Keep Her, Boby Franklin The Ladies Choice, Don Thomas Come On Train, Jay Armstead I’ve Got The Vibes. This new wave of shuffly, hypnotic rhythms, as opposed to the stompiness of the sixties stuff. It was wonderful for a while.

Wigan hated it and carried on playing the sixties stompers. But when things like the Carstairs got played the floor was much busier than when some of the stompers were played. What had happened was the bootleggers had killed it off for us, because every record that we found – Eddie Foster I Never Knew, The Glories I Worship You Baby, the Sweet Things I’m In A World Of Trouble – every time, four or five weeks after they’d started to break they were bootlegging. Simon Soussan who had been an entrepreneur discovering soul records, went to LA. He would bootleg the record, counterfeit the label, I think he bought some pressing plant to do it in, press 2 or 3,000 records send it over to Selectadisc and sell it.

Our rule at Blackpool was as soon as a record was bootlegged we dropped it like a hot potato. If three or four bootlegs were coming in every week, which they were at that time, three or four records got dropped from the playlist and three or four had to be found to replace them. The quality of the sounds started to deteriorate. What was happening in ’75 was the floor was packing to the more modern stuff and the crowd were dictating which way it went. Wigan was the complete opposite. They were looking for anything they could find with a beat, so all they could find at that time were pop records, like Gary Lewis & the Playboys’ My Heart’s Symphony.

They were playing some good soul records, but a lot of white pop was getting played. Muriel Day Nine Times Out Of Ten, Lorraine Silver Lost Summer Love, Brian Hyland The Joker Went Wild. Then it got worse. It got to Hawaii 5-0 by the Ventures and even to Joe 90. The soul fans started to desert Wigan. At the same time, Dave McAleer was releasing these records on Disco Demand, by Wigan’s Chosen Few. They had these horrible pop novelty hits that were masquerading as northern soul. So whereas the diehards hated it and quit Wigan, thousands of new people would see these dancers on Top of the Pops with their badges and singlets and think oh, this is the new thing, let’s get into this.

A new crowd descended on Wigan, who stayed for a while, but were really like sightseers and tourists who’d got into northern soul through the TV exposure it got. Blackpool Mecca was much more for purists. There was a huge war between Russ Winstanley and myself at that time. There were two feuds going on that split the scene. The one between Blackpool and Wigan, or between me and Russ, funnily enough I get on great with him now, and respect him.

The most bitter feud of all was between Dave Godin, who had championed northern soul in Blues & Soul for a long time and Tony Cummings at Black Music. In 1971, northern soul was Godin’s baby. He’d been to the Wheel in 1970, and written this article called the Land of 1,000 Dances, then he came to Blackpool Mecca and I was pictured with him on the steps of the Mecca in 1971.

Tony Cummings had been a very respected soul journalist ran a company called Black Wax which sold imports. Opened up Black Music. In 1971, Cummings decided to come up with a load of London soul fans and see what northern soul was about. Dave Godin found out about this and phoned up the manager of the Mecca, Bill Pye, and had them barred from coming in. They’d come all that way and weren’t allowed into the building. When Tony Cummings became editor of Black Music magazine he became very interested in northern soul. He wrote probably the best article ever written about northern soul which was about ten pages long. There was a record being played in 1973 by Eddie Foster called I Never Knew. He picked up on this record as a fictional example. It was magical! It was fantastic and everyone was raving about this article. Dave Godin was seething because someone had out-Godined Godin. He couldn’t stand it.

Immediately, we became the hated enemy. So he found this club in Cleethorpes that Mary Chapman was running. Suddenly in Blues & Soul it was Blackpool Mecca’s finished, Cleethorpes is the place to be, all this stuff. The scene got ripped apart by it and in the end a load of it was very libellous.

It all crystallised at the Ritz. Neil Rushton was running these all-dayers there. Everybody came. It was a huge success. 1,500-2,000 every Sunday. All the Blackpool crowd came because me and Colin played and all the Wigan crowd came because Richard Searling DJed. At that time we were playing all this modern disco stuff that we were playing at the Mecca: Doctor Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band, Tavares, Car Wash, Jaws by Lalo Schifrin. And they were playing anything with a stomping beat. It was like two football crowds: Manchester City and Manchester United. It didn’t work. All of these Wiganites with their singlets and baggy pants were shouting, ‘Fuck off! Get off! Play some stompers!’

They went for me and one of the Blackpool guys, Steve Naylor, stepped in defence of their DJ – me - and got his glasses smashed. They started wearing these Levine Must Go badges and one Saturday night Pete King from Wolverhampton and Shelvo from Leicester had got an 11ft. banner that said Levine Must Go and walked through the Highland Room with it. It was all getting quite nasty because they hated the change in the music from the stompers to the modern stuff. I’ll go on record here and say: We went too far. The northern soul scene was very special. I’ve never been one to be told what to do. I was a soul rebel at 14. The concept of northern soul was that people could travel 200 miles on a Saturday night to hear records they couldn’t hear anywhere else.

And what we started with the Carstairs and Marvin Holmes, they were equally rare but more modern. Then we’re playing the Tavares, Crown Heights Affair and Kool & the Gang, even. And suddenly, you weren’t hearing anything that you couldn’t hear anywhere else. It had no uniqueness about it. We should’ve stopped it before it went too far. Because what we did was split that scene into two with an axe. Wigan Casino, in retaliation to what we were doing, went so far the other way and played pathetic jokes for records like Hawaii 5-0. And for us to be playing Sylvester Mighty Real or Colin Curtis got as far as playing Parliament and Funkadelic. Nothing to do with northern soul. The fact of the matter is that northern soul never died it just shrunk down. We all left it and it survived for 15 years and now suddenly blossomed out again. Belle And Sebastian are playing northern soul at their gigs.
 
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Barrie Jay

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Ian mentions Gary Wilde (and rightly so) selling northern tunes from his cigarette kiosk in town and simply forgets to mention Sandy Mountain who owned Sinfonia records in Blackpool.

Sandy was one of the most knowledgeable people I have ever known regarding british releases and when he decided to start selling US imports Ian gave him a right verbal bashing saying that he would ruin the scene (imports were only available in Manchester at the time). Although Sandy closed his shop years ago and I have not seen him for time I don`t think Ian and Sandy ever spoke to each other again.

From when I was around aged 14 Sinfonia is where I used to spend my pocket money buying northern tunes freshly imported direct from the USA. He was a major source of music for local DJs and many would travel miles to his shop

Ian perhaps should also give credit to two of his closest friends, Colin and Eileen Newton, who bought 20 thousand soul singles direct from the US I recall in 1974. They were a source of many tunes that Ian broke (shall I say allegedly borrowed and never returned) and also a source for some of Les Cokell`s discoveries.

Oddly, with the resurgence of the Northern Scene around 10 years ago Colin and Eileen were `persuaded` to get the remainder of the tunes and their own collection from out of the loft where they had been stored for years.

As the scene was far more downtempo than it was back in the day many of the tunes that were discarded years ago as unsuitable turned out to be perfect for the more current vibe. I am reliably informed that a huge proportion of the biggest and rarest titles to be discovered over recent years were sourced from their collection.

I too spent many hours many years ago rummaging through piles of tunes and still have many that I bought off them to this day.

Anyway, another bit of a silly story regarding me and Ian. I was never his biggest fan although to be fair he did discover some cracking tunes and was a major player in the northern scene but between him and Russ Winstanley (grade A five star wanker) they did help destroy/ change the scene I loved so much.

I used to write a fortnightly article for Black Echoes (later to become Echoes) and I slagged off one off his own produced tunes (cannot recall which) but I honestly and truthfully did not know it was by him.

The following week at the Mecaa he had a right go at me saying it was a personal vendetta against him. I have never seen his so angry. It wasn`t but there was no way he was ever going to believe me. We never spoke again until the Mecca reunion at the Highland Room.