News — 1960s
The Stuart Cosgrove Trilogy: a Review by Toby Broom.
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Stuart Cosgrove's trilogy, Detroit 67 The Year That Changed Soul (2016), Memphis 68 The Tragedy Of Southern Soul (2018), and Harlem 69 The Future Of Soul (2018) are prodigious feats of research and scholarship – musical, political, social – and are best read, considered and reviewed as a whole. It is a trilogy to match any written work on music. Cosgrove sees in the story of each complete year in Detroit (1967), Memphis (1968) and Harlem (1969) pivots in black music, politics and society that shaped not only the histories of those years but the decades to come. In the era of Black...
Vinyl Preview: Eddie Holman (Soul-Direction SD002).
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E. Mark Windle 29 November 2020. Just received some news via "Man from Soul" Alan Kitchener, regarding an exciting new vinyl release on his Soul-Direction imprint, planned for early 2021: Eddie Holman – “Ready Willing Able” B/W “Too Young for Love” (Soul-Direction SD002) "Until recently this unknown Virtue acetate was unearthed from the belongings of legendary Philly producer/musician/songwriter John Stiles, and recorded around the same time as "Stay Mine For Heaven Sake" at Virtue Studios in Philadelphia. Eddie's rendition of "Ready, Willing and Able" was something that was thought to have been written for another singer which was to...
Mocha and Cream. The Story of Global Records - E. Mark Windle.
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The passing of Edwin James Balbier a couple of years ago went virtually unnoticed in UK northern scene circles: indeed few outside of the industry will recall his name. Yet, this individual would be the unwitting driving force behind one of the most popular soul re-issue (if brief) label imprints of the 1970s, even if it was the company’s younger soul music enthusiast employees who shaped the nature of the label arm of the operation. Balbier’s initial interests did not lie in soul music, but more generally in the oldies market. Born in 1930, the Philadelphian had an early career...
Radio, TV and the Nashville R&B Scene (Part Two) - E. Mark Windle.
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The DJs, producers and label owners WLAC DJs Gene Nobles and Herman Grizzard are often cited as the first who braved plugging black music in Nashville in the 1940s, largely through playing jazz records. Individual DJs pivotal to the story of the development of R&B and soul included Morgan Babb and Ted Jarrett at WSOK through the 1950s, then Bill “Hoss” Allen and John “R” Richbourg at WLAC in the 1960s and early 1970s. These DJs extended their role to other related industry activities, including record promotion, label ownership and production, cementing the R&B sound in Nashville’s music history. ...
Without My Girl: The Chashers' Story - E. Mark Windle.
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The Chashers’ “Without My Girl” is one of the more obscure releases and not that well known even among rare soul collectors, partly due to the record being one of the more recent discoveries on the northern scene. The track may have been first played in the UK at the Middleton all-nighters by DJs Carl Willingham and Phil Shields. By the time “Without My Girl” came out in late 1968, The Chashers had evolved from a merger of earlier bands. The two writers, Lamar (aka Tom) Collins, lead singer and Roy Thompson, guitar, were members of The Avalons, originally from...