Friday, 16 April 2021

Del Davis [2020] - Baby Don't Wake Me [Outta Sight #BMV-001]


Another double-sider released on Outta Site last year. The top side is Jackie Edwards NS Top 500 tune 'I Feel So Bad' coupled with a song he wrote recorded by Del Davis in 1971 on Bread. It was also reissued on Trojan the following year as a B side, credited as E. Abdhul, his real name was Wifred Gerald Edwards.

The Precisions - Complete Discography


The Precisions were an grossly underrated group from Detroit. They were formed in the eary 60s. The original members were Michael Morgan, Paul Merritt, Willie Norris and Fred Shockley. Arthur Ashford replaced Fred Shockley before they recorded the first of two releases on D-Town owned by Mike Hanks. 

In 1966 they joined Sidra who created the Drew sub-label specifically for their releases. Not long after their arrival at Sidra/Drew Paul Merritt left and was replaced by Dennis Gilmore and soon after that Willie Norris decided to quit and was replaced by Ron Davis. A fifth member, Billy Prince who was a friend of Gilmore's, joined the group.  Ron Davis left the group before their fourth release on Drew leaving a quartet.

Supporting the group were George McGregor, Mike Terry, Dale Warren and The Funk Brothers played on all the Drew sessions.

There is a good article on them written by Dave Moore ('There's That Beat' magazine) on Soul Source. Additional info came from Neil Rushton (Inferno).


The flip side of their first single on Drew 'Such Misery' became a Northern soul monster. Somehow Sam Coplin, a club owner in Dallas, TX, got hold of the backing track and released it by a white group Stemmons Express (named after a road in Dallas) under the title 'Woman, Love Thief' with different lyrics on his Karma label. This also became a big tune. The other side, 'Love Power' which was the official A side, isn't a bad tune either.

Their most successful single was 'If This Is Love (I'd Rather Be Lonely)' which reached #26 US R&B and #60 Hot 100 and is by far their best known NS tune, covered in 1968 by Eddie Spencer which saw a UK resissue in 1976, Geno Washington recorded it but it was unreleased and is just going to be issued on vinyl for the first time (I posted it earier today along with the covers). A New Zealand group Jamie & The Numbers also recordeed it in 2019.

Discography

Singles

A: Northern Soul
B: Sweet Soul Harmony

1965 - Mexican Love Song / You're Sweet [D-Town #1055]
A: Sweet Soul Harmony
B: Sweet Soul Harmony

1966 - Such Misery / A Lover's Plea [Drew #D-1001]
Dennis Gilmore on lead
A: NS Stemmons Express 
B: Doo-wop ballad

1967 - Sugar Ain't Sweet / Why Girl [Drew #D-1002] Unreleased
Only promo copies were pressed and found to be pressed off-centre so a decision was made, rather than to remedy it, was to release a different side.  Some promos have survived.
A: NS
B: NS

1967 - Why Girl / What I Want [Drew #D-1002]
A: NS
B: NS Sounds similar to the Sidra's Ronnie & Robyn style tunes

A: NS Classic
B: NS
NOTE: This got a UK release on Track #604014 in 1967

A: NS
B: NS

1968- Never Let Her GoA Place [Drew #D-1005]
A: Crossover - a superb Bridges, Knight & Eaton composition
B: NS

A: NS - another Bassolino, Coleman, Valvano written song. 
B: NS

A: Ballad
B: Mid-tempo / crossover

EPs

2006 - EP [Inferno #64727HY]
B2: Baby You're Mine (NB originally thought to be The Precisoins but is actually Lou Ragland)

2008 - EP  [Joe Boy / Inferno #none]
Found on a Sidra acetate and credited to Timmy Willis but is the first recording by The Precisions not released at the time as it was laid down by Paul Merritt just before he quit the group to be replaced by Dennis Gilmore.

Compilation

2008 - The Complete Sidra/Drew Recordings 1966-68 [Joe Boy #JBE-CD2008]
Such Misery
A Lover's Plea
Sugar Ain't Sweet
Why Girl
What I Want
If This Is Love (I'd Rather Be Lonely)
You'll Soon Be Gone
Instant Heartbreak (Just Add Tears)
Dream Girl
A Place
Never Let Her Go
Bonus Tracks:
Featuring Paul Merritt - Such Misery
Roger Fluker - Send Me A Sign
Originally thought to be by The Precisions but is Roger Fluker (aka Brian Stone) who was the choreographer for the group whose stage dance routines were second to none including The Temptations. McGregor believes that if the group had been on Motown they would have been superstars.
Lou Ragland - Baby You're Mine
Found with some unreleased Precisions material on a 10" acetate and thought to be by them but later discovered to be Lou Ragland.

Billy Prince

Billy Prince was the lead singer on 'If This Is Love'. He released a few solo singles before joining the group and has released a new single in Feb 2021 (originally released digitally in 2019).

Singles

1966 - You Never Should Have Loved Me / Say It Again [Verve #VK-10392]
A: NS Beat Ballad
B: NS Beat Ballad

1966 - One Shot Left / Somebody Help Me [Verve #VK-10462]
A: NS stormer - its sounds like a cross between Jerry Fuller 'Double Life' and Marvin Gaye 'Ain't That Peculiar'.
B: NS - another 'coincidence' - as this was written by Jackie Edwards - just posted Del Davis track also written by him. It was a #1 hit in UK for The Spencer Davis Group the same year.

2019 - You're My Angel / I Want You [Common Good #CGR-112]
A: An original song written as a tribute to Aretha Franklin and released digitally in 2019 - but now released on 7" available from BandCamp (below)
B: Cover of Marvin Gaye

A: A different mix and slightly longer

Albums

Produced by Jerry Williams Jr. (i.e. SDEG is Swamp Dogg Entertainment Group)

Billy Prince Of The Precisions 
2017 - The Soulful Member Of The Precisions [Gure Gauza Records #GGLP 101]

Post Summary 2021-04-16


New releases have all but dried up this week so I'm taking the opportunity to post some rare, mainly Northern Soul, tunes today.

- The Precisons complete discography

- Del Davis reissue from last year on Outta Sight

- A double-sider of two previously unreleased tracks by Brenda Holloway.

- A great, new previously unreleased, double-sider from North Broad St.

- An obscure B side from Barbara Mason

- Geno Washington's version of The Precision NS classic on Outta Sight (I also post a recent version that you may or may not be faliliar with). 

- The Tom - Emmanuelle & Ron Experience gets a reissue on Acid Jazz. 

- Arthur Willis & The Soulful Dynamics sells on John Manships auction for five figures! 

- I trawl through Madeline Bell's NS catalogue and feature a dozen different versions of one of the tracks. 

- I also bring you three versions of Linda Jones' NS classic.

Brenda Holloway [2021] - My Baby Moves Me / Spellbound [Outta Sight #SEV007]


Another double-sider from Outta Sight due for release on 25 May 2021 available for pre-order.

Both sides are previously unreleased (on vinyl) tracks recorded on Motown in 1966 by Brenda Holloway. 

'My Baby Love Me' first appeared on a 2010 compilation CD 'A Cellarful Of Motown Vol. 4' in 2010. The flip side 'Spellbound' was first issued on 'Motown Unreleased 1966' in 2016.


Arenita Walker / Cynthia Girty [2021] - Open Your Eyes / Where's My Smile [North Broad St #NBS004]


Colin Law's North Broad St label has acquired the master tapes for some unreleased 70s recordings by Arenita Walker and Cynthia Girty. Who? you might ask, well read on to find out.

Two sides are due to be NBS' fourth release on 17 May 2021 and they are taking pre-orders now and they are almost certainly going to sell out before official release due to the interest in them, so I suggest pre-ordering now to avoid disappointment.

Both Arenita and Cynthia were in Detroit groups in the 60s and were also both writers. They became close friends and in the early 80s were members of the P-Funk group Godmoma with a third member Carolyn Myles.

Walker & Girty wrote several songs together which were recorded by Bobby Womack ('Stop Before We Start' 1978), David Ruffin ('Still In Love With You' 1980), Johnnie Taylor ('Sneakin' Sneakin' 1980) and several others.

'Open Your Eyes' is a marvellous tune and a future modern soul classic written by Girty & Walker, produced by Don Davis and arranged by Cecil Womack.

'Where's My Smile' is a Girty & Walker penned soulful ballad.


Details
Rating: 9
Genre/Style: Modern Soul 70s
Format: Single
Media: 7"
Label: North Broad St
Cat No: NBS004
BPM: 100
Value: £20

Arenita Walker


Arenita was a member of The Lollipops who released only two (known) singles, the first in 1966 on Harry Balk's Impact label which only ran from 1965-67 until it was bought, along with Balk's other label Inferno, by Motown. The A side 'Loving Good Feeling' was written by Duke Browner and is a storming Northern Soul tune. The mid-tempo flip side 'Step Aside Baby' was written by Walker. 

Their next release was on Motown's V.I.P. imprint in 1969. Curiously it was scheduled for release in July 1969 on Gordy G-7089, and demos exist of it, but it wasn't released on Gordy and was subsequently issued on V.I.P. in Nov. 1969. The top side 'Cheating, Is Telling On You' was co-written by Browner & Walker, it's another nice mid-tempo number. The flip side, written by Browner, is another mid-tempo tune which has hints of The Supremes.

An absolutely brilliant, previously unreleased, recording by them called 'Look What You Done Boy' appeared in the late 80s. It was found on an acetate (you can find a scan of it on Soul Source).  A few 'carvers' did the rounds with Kim Weston 'After The Rain' on the flip. I believe the first commercial relaese was on a CD compilation 'Motortown Uncovered Vol. 2' in 1992 on a rather dodgy looking label Motortown.

Another unreleased track 'Sweet Sweet Love' (co-written again by Browner & Walker) surfaced on 'A Cellarful Of Motown Vol. 3' in 2007.

She released an album in 1993.

Discography

1968/69 - Look What You Done Boy [Motown Unreleased]
1968/69 - Sweet Sweet Love [Motown Unreleased]
1993/2010 - Love Anonymous II [BTRL]

Cynthia Girty

Cynthia Girty was the lead singer with Cynthia & The Imaginations who released four singles, one on Ernest Burt's Magic City, two on Mercury subsidiary Blue Rock and one on Johnnie Mae Mathews Big Hit label as Cythina & The Imaginary Three which was a different group of backing singers, The Imaginations had four members.

During the 80 she also provided backing vocals for several artists including George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, David Peaston, Maceo Parker and R.J.'s Latest Arrival.

Discography


A: Lowrider - sweet soul harmony
B: Funky crossover
Both sides written by Leroy Luckett & Earnest Bert (owner of MagicCity)

1969 - Hey Boy (I Love You) / Love Is Real [Blue Rock #B-4074]

A: Lowrider - sweet soul harmony / crossover
This song was later recorded by (Emory &) The 4 Dynamics as 'Things That A Lady Ain't Supposed To Do' on William Bell's Peachtree label in 1970.
B: Mid-tempo Northern soul written by Leroy Luckett and Ernest Burt (owner of Magic City)


A: Class Northern Soul - written by Ernest Bert, Paul Williams (The Temptations) and Jake Hammond (aka Timmy Shaw  - Hammond was his real name)
B: Deep Soul Harmony

1970 - Many Mood (Of A Man) / That's What I Am (Without You) [Big Hit #TZ 110]

A: ?
B: Northern Soul / Crossover Written by Timmy Shaw, Paul Williams (The Temptations) and Johnnie Mae Mathews

Godmoma

Discography

1980 - Here [Elektra #5E-552]
It's no coincidence that the best tracks on the album (i.e. the none p-funk tracks) are co-written by Walker & Girty. Funk heavyweights Bootsy Collins (and his brother Phelps 'Catfish'), Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley were all involved on the album.
Taste of Magic 
I Like It

1981 - Taste Of Magic / Godmoma Here [Elektra #E-47209]
A: P-Funk
B: P-Funk

1982 - I Like It / Taste Of Magic [Elektra #E-47420]
A: Mellow
B: P-Funk

Barbara Mason [1966] - Hello Baby [Arctic #126]


A 1966 B side (and non-album track) of 'Poor Girl In Trouble' that didn't chart even on US R&B chart.

Barbara Mason released her first single in 1964 on Crusader,  sister label to Charger on which Dobie Gray released his three top tunes and an album and Mason also had a single released in 1965. Later that year she signed to Arctic, a label set up by Philadelphial DJ Jimmy Bishop which has a special place in the hearts on UK Northern Soul devotees, releasing many records played on the scene and the birthplace of The Trammps who were known on Arctic as The Volcanos.

Her first release was the label's second single. She didn't have to wait long for her first big hit which came with her third release in 1965 'Yes I'm Ready' which reached #2 R&B and #5 Hot 100, Sadly she never managed to follow-up the hit or better those chart positions, recording right up to 1984 releasing almost 50 singles, 15 of those on Arctic in the 60s.  She had a brief period at National General in 1970-71 (4 singles) before joining Buddah in 1972-75 (approx. 13 singles). In 1978 she released a couple of 45s on Prelude before joining WMOT in 1980 and finally West End in 1984. 

Chart positions mean nothing to soul aficionados and her 60s and 70s recordings (in particular) are still sought after by followers of NS and also much loved by the Lowrider scene.

A few others from her Arctic catalogue that are of interest include:

NS/Crossover:  'Don't Ever Want To Lose Your Love', 'Keep Him', 'Bobby Is My Baby' (which has the same backing as The Rotations  ('Put A Dime On) D-9' on sister label Frantic), 'Ain't Got Nobody', 'Don't Ever Go Away', 'Half A Love', 'You Better Stop It'

Lowriders: 'Is It Me', 'If You Don't (Love Me, Tell Me So)', 'Game Of Love', 'Oh, How It Hurts',  'I'm No Good For You', '(I Can Feel Your Love) Slipping Away', 'You Never Loved Me (At All)'

She was still performing up until 2016 and released a CD in 2007.

Arthur Willis & Soulful Dynamics [1972] - The Hurting Is Over [ Mars La Tour #MLT 2051A]


This record has just sold on John Manship's auction site this week for £10,020! It is very distinctive with a funky ska/reggae rhythm. It's a bit of a 'marmite' record where you either love it or hate it! I happen to like it as it is raw and honest and different.

Click image to expand

It was released on Mars La Tour, a label owned by Carl Queen in Marrietta, GA who set also up the Atteirram (town name reversed) label in 1971. There's no date listed for this release but from the other cat. no.s it would probably be around 1971/72.

There are only around 15 releases listed for the label, although there are gaps in the numbers which may suggest that there are others yet to be discovered. It wasn't solely a soul label, there were folk, country, pop and rock releases and even a gopel album. One of the releases by RickeyAndrews, has a similar feel to Arthur Willis and was reissued by Trammp in 2016.

It's an impossibly rare record and the group's only known release. John Manship stated in 2019 that he had only ever had one copy go through his hands in 50 years and that one sold to Soul Sam. I guess that this is the third (or possibly the same one three times?).

There are only two originals listed on Popsike, one sold in 2016 for £6,285, the other listing is 'confused' as it had a starting price of $8,000 and states it sold for $1,000 on the same day as start date - I suspect it may have been withdrawn? To highlight the demand for the record even bootlegs are selling for 3 figures - one as much as £210 ... crazy!


Details
Rating: 8.4
Genre/Style: Northern Soul
Format: Single
Media: 7"
Label: Mars La Tour
Cat No: MLT 2051A
Year: 1972
Value: £10,020

The Tom - Emmanuel & Ron Experience [2021] - Why (The Knower) / When You Lose Your Groove [Acid Jazz #AJX580S]


A record I posted last year is now being reissued on 4 May 2021 by Acid Jazz. As well as being released as a single [Golden Three #R-7000] it appears on an album by Emmanuel K Rahim & The Kahliqs 'Total Submission' on Cobblestone in 1972 titled 'Al-Alim (The Knower)' which is a different take. Emmanuel K Rahim was also known as Emmanuel Abdul Rahim.

The Tom - Emmanuel & Ron Experience [2021] - Why (The Knower) [Acid Jazz #AJX580S]


Emmanuel K Rahim & The Kahliqs [1972] - Al-Alim (The Knower) [Cobblestone #CST 9014]


The Tom - Emmanuel & Ron Experience [2021] - When You Lose Your Groove [Acid Jazz #AJX580S]


Details
Rating: 8
Genre/Style: Crossover
Format: Single
Media: 7"
Label: Acis Jazz
Cat No: AJX580S
Year: 2021
Key: N/A
BPM: N/A
Value: £9

Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band [2021] - If This Is Love [Outta Site ##BMV003]


A Northern Soul anthem recorded by Detroit's Precisions in 1967 on Drew. Another version was discovered in the 70s by a Jamaican artist Eddie Spencer who recorded a version on Canadian label Arc in 1968. It was reissued in the UK on Power Exchange in 1976 such was its popularity.

Geno Washington recorded it sometime between 1967-1972. It gets its first commercial release on 7 " vinyl by Outta Site soon (date not yet announced).

He is still perfroming live. I saw him a couple of years ago, but have to admit that he's past his best!

The flip side is a previously unknown and unreleased version of another  classic, Ray Pollard's 'The Drifter' by an unknown singer named UK Stuart Smith. This will be about the fifth known version of this song (I posted four of them last year here) and all four covers are by white British singers.


Geno's version of 'If This Is Love' was certainly known about at least 30 years ago as it featured on the Bretby 1st Anniversary giveaway LP in 1992. I understand that it was dubbed from a studio acetate owned then by Chris King.


It also appeared on a Castle compilation CD 'Foot Stompin' Soul' which I believe was first released in 1998 (although Discogs lists it as 2006).


The song was written by Cholly Bassoline, Marty Coleman and Mike Valvano and was The Precisions biggest hit reaching #26 R&B and #60 Hot 100 in 1967. 

Marty Coleman was a member of The Valadiers who released a few 45s on Gordy in the early 60s.

Mike Valvano was lead of Mike & The Modifiers who released one 45 on Gordy in 1962. He recorded couple of solo singles in the 70s and another as Mike & The Modifiers on Ian Levine's Motorcity label in the 90s. In 2010 Outta Site released a whole album by him titled Michael Valvano's Contours 'I'm A Winnner: The Albuquerque Sessions 1978-79'. The promo material states that Valvano was Motown's first white act and that he recorded two albums for them that were never released.

Other known versions:

The Precisions ‎[1967] - If This Is Love (I'd Rather Be Lonely) [Drew #D-1003] £40-£60

Eddie Spencer  [1968] - If This Is Love (I'd Rather Be Lonely) [Arc #A 1206] £230-£365

The B side is 'You're So Good To Me Baby' which, to these ears, has some similarities to Sam & Dave's 'Soul Man'.
Spencer recorded only three known singles, the other two were on another Canadian label Goodgroove and these appear to be the last two of only eight releases on the label. The first was 'Power Of Love' and a cover of UK group The Foundations debut single 'Baby, Now That I've Found You which was a UK #1 hit. 'Power Of Love was released as flip to the UK reissue of 'If This Is Love' in 1976. His last 45 was a Northern Soul rendition of Bobby Darin's 'Dream Lover' and a cover of The Moody Blues'  'A Whiter Shade Of Pale'

Jamie & The Numbers ‎[2019] - If This Is Love (I'd Rather Be Lonely) [ Deltaphonic #NZ-1875-001]
The follow-up single was 'Magic Touch' another cover of a NS favourite recorded originally by Melba Moore on Musicor on 1966 but was unreleased until it appeared on a 6Ts 100 Club 2nd Anniversary single by Kent in 1986. It's first commercial release was on Ady Croasdell's Horace's label in 1987.

UPDATE
Thanks to USMAN47 for leaving a comment stating that Billy Prince (who sang lead on this track for The Precisions) released a version on a live album released only in Spain in 2017.

Billy Prince Of The Precisions [2017] -  The Soulful Member Of The Precisions [Gure Gauza Records #GGLP 101]

I managed to find a clip on YT of him performing it live at the Southpaw in Brooklyn posted in 2010.


And another from Mojo Workin' festival in Spain 2016, which may be when the live recording was done?

Brenda Jones [1970] - My Heart Needs A Break / No More Hurt Or Pain [S.S.I. #1003]


This song was written by Sammy Turner who also recorded a version, with a slightly different title 'Give My Heart A Break', but it was never released but surfaced in 1993 on a Goldmine Soul Supply compilation CD 'Detroit Soul From The Vaults Vol. 1' GSCD 19.

Sammy (who's real name was Samuel Black) was working with George Kerr in the late sixties, who was producing Linda Jones at the time, and she released the 'definitive' version on Loma [2091] in 1968 as 'My Heart Needs A Break'.

In 1970 Brenda Jones (who I wonder may be the same singer as Brenda Lee Jones (of Dean & Jean) as the voice does sound similar) released an inferior version on S.S.I. Sammy Turner released a 45 on the label (same cat. no. in fact 1002) the same year. He, along with Robert Banks who co-produced Jones' version with George Kerr, was also involved in writing and/or production of four of the five known releases on the label, so I wonder if it was his label? This would explain why she recorded this tune.


Madeline Bell [1965] - I Can't Wait Until I See My Baby's Face [Philips (UK) #BF 1448]


Madeline Bell was from Newark NJ, but moved to UK in 1962 to perform in a gospel show. She then joined pop group Blue Mink who had six UK top 20 pop hits between 1969-73, 4 of them top 10, another just missed the top 20 at #26.

Bell's first and only solo hit was in 1968 with a cover of Dee Dee Warwick's 'I'm Gonna Make You Love Me' which went higher in the Hot 100 (#26) than Warwick's 1966 original which only reached #88. However, if you're like me, I always associate it with Diana Ross & The Supremes who had a #2 hit with it later that year. Bell never had a solo hit in the UK.

She had a few records played on the Northern Soul Scene, most of them are cover versions. Probably the best known is her version of Evie Sands' 'Picture Me Gone' released in 1967 on Philips (which I haven't listened to for years and forgot just how good it was until I watched the B&W video clip of her singing it).  An interesting piece of trivia, it was co-written by Al Gorgoni and Chip Taylor who is the brother of actor Jon Voight and uncle to Angelina Jolie. 

She did a cover of Jean Wells' (ABC Paramount 1965) 'Don't Come Running To Me' in 1966. Sissie (Cissy) Houston also did a version in 1967 on Kapp. The flip side was apparently a biggie at the Twisted Wheel 'I Really Got Carried Away'.

How coincidental is this? I've literally just posted a feature on Maxine Brown who recorded the next tune 'One Step At A Time' in 1965 on Wand. Bell covered it in 1967.

Another was from 1968 'What'm I Supposed To Do' which was the flip to her version of the Lennon & McCartney song 'Step Inside Love' which was a top 10 hit for Cilla Black earlier that year (which I have to admit I have a soft spot for - the song that is not Cilla! ... probably as it was ingrained in me as a child as Cilla had a TV show and sang it regularly).

Yet another cover, this time of a Van McCoy song originally recorded by Barbara Mercer on Golden World in 1965 'Doing Things Together With You' which Bell recorded in 1968.

One that probably isn't that well know, although the song tune may be, is an obscure 1968 Dutch only release of 'Help Yourself (To All Of My Lovin)' a hit for James & Bobby Purify in 1968 and also done by several others including Jay & The Techniques the same year.

Another one that seems only to have been released in the southern hemisphere (i.e New Zealand and South Africa) was yet another cover with her version of Shirley Ellis' 1967 outing on Columbia, 'Soul Time' in 1968.

A few album only tracks worth a mention include:

From 'Bell's A Poppin' 1967 'I Didn't Wanna Have To Do It' 
Written by John Sebastian of The Lovin' Spoonful who recorded it in 1966. Ralfi Pagan also did a really nice version in 1974. Mama Cass Elliot did an unreleased version with The Loving Spoonful in 1965 released on 'Here's A Song! (You Might Have Missed) Vol 13' in 2011. There are several other versions.

From 'This Is One Girl' 1976 : You've Got What It Takes and Love Is All


I've found another dozen versions of  'I Can't Wait Until I See My Baby's Face'.
1963 - Justine 'Baby' Washington [Sue]
1964 - Aretha Franklin [Columbia]
1964 - Pat Thomas [Verve]
1964 - Judi Johnson [HMV]
1967 - The Monticellos [Red Cap]
1967 - Spyder Turner [MGM] 'Stand By Me' album track
1967 - Dusty Springfield [Philips] 'Where Am I Going' album track
1969 - Sonji Clay [Songee] ... who was Mrs. Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) at the time
1975 - Dionne Warwick [Warner Bros.]
1990 - Carolyn Crawford [Motorcity] ... an Ian Levine production!
1996 - Dee Dee Warwick an unreleased 70s Atco recording
2019 - Aysha Loren [Peckings]