WILLIAM BELL
The Soul Of A Bell (Stax; CD)
A nicely and
faithfully packaged and reissue of William Bell's 1967 Stax
album, with the addition of extra stereo takes on 'You Don't
Miss Your Water' and 'Any Other Way'. The terrific stomper
'Eloise (Hang On In There)' and the aforementioned 'Water'
remain the best tracks here. Some great vocal performances
of course and you can never go wrong with the mighty MGs
in the background, but as with so many mid sixties Stax
LPs it's a passable mish mash of great moments and filler,
and proof that Stax didn't really do albums until Hot
Buttered Soul. One for collectors.
Slav Tabernacle
EDDIE & ERNIE
Lost Friends (Kent; CD)
This overdue anthology
of some of the finest male duo sung southern and deep soul
of the 60s was first mooted more than two years ago. Such
were the legal and other difficulties in tracing copyright
ownership and obtaining the licensing, that it has taken
this long to appear. It was worth the wait. Issued by Kent
as the first in a new series entitled Artistry In Soul,
'...a series of releases intended to spotlight quality soul
music regardless of whether it was commercially successful',
this is a fitting debut release under that banner. Eddie
(Edgar Campbell) died a good few years back and Ernie (Ernie
Johnson) was truly humbled to find that there was such a
contemporary reverence for their music. Their full story
is told by Dave Godin in the liner notes with his usual
deep insight and right on the money aesthetic sensitivity.
The compilers have forgone including Eddie & Ernie's
well known songs which have established their reputation
amongst southern soul fans as anyone who digs them it has
been reasoned, will already have them (not least on Dave
Godin's Deep Soul Treasures series of CDs, Vol.4
of which is due early in '03). So no 'I'm Going For Myself',
'Time Waits For No-One' or 'Hiding In The Shadows'. In taking
this decision it has allowed all their other known recordings
to be compiled on one disc and boy what a disc it is. From
their earliest solo recordings to their first coupled incarnation
as The New Bloods through to the solid soul sounds of their
Phoenix Express sides, this a roller coaster ride of emotion
and soul integrity of the highest order, right down to the
soulful rendition of Dylan's 'Lay Lady Lay' (recorded for
the UK market at Dave Godin's request back in the (old)
day(s). The previously unissued 'Bullets Don't Have Eyes'
is one cut amongst many that really so(u)ld me on listening
to this set, a great piece of social commentary and love
rat recrimination! Whoever they were recording for and whenever
it was in the 60s, their output and musicianship remained
consistently high. This CD contains some of the most precious
lost southern and deep soul gems from the classic period
and if you have any soul inclination at all, you must own
this CD if no other at all costs.
Paul Martin
SHUGGIE OTIS
In Session Information (RPM; CD)
In the wake of the re-discovered
cult status of Inspiration Information RPM have
leased, re-jiggled and added cuts to an American compilation
that features the session and production work that Shuggie
carried out in the mid-'70s; most recorded with vintage
bluesmen introduced to him by his legendary father, Johnny.
Sure, much is funky-ish, but absolutely none of this rates
alongside the unique stylings of Inspiration Information.
Of interest for completists and blues fans, but nothing
here really caters for the psychedelic seeking I.I.
fans. Tread carefully.
I. P. Freely
CARLA THOMAS
Gee Whiz (Ace; CD)
Oh man, this is SUCH
a chick album! It's like the musical equivalent of a Sandra
Dee film. It's like Pamela Des Barres' more violet-hued
prose moments (but innocent). What a revelation! The only
thing I was aware of about Carla Thomas prior to hearing
this is her status as 'daughter of Rufus' and 'first lady
of Stax'. Originator of 'B.A.B.Y.'. 'Tramp', duettist with
Otis Redding: queen of the mid/late 1960s southern soul
scene. But this, her first album from 1961, completely confounds
that image. It's lush, orchestral middle of the road pop
in the vein of The Drifters (a couple of whose hits she
covers here), solo Ben E King or Johnny Mathis - i.e. a
prime example of the kind of music made by black artists that
DID manage to cross over to the mainstream pop charts without
being butchered on the way by Pat Boone. Best known track
is the self-penned opener (and hit) 'Gee Whiz (Look At His
Eyes)', which is a just BEE-YOU-TI-FUL ode to the man of
one's dreams. And that sets the tone for the rest of the
record - it's LURVE, baby, and it's glorious!
Jane Farrell
VARIOUS ARTISTS
Hard Texas Funk 1968-1975: 21 Rare & Unreleased
Cuts (Jazzman CD/2LP)
The Jazzman label
clearly go in for labours of love in a big way. As with
northern soul, funk DJs are forever searching for the rare
groove. In this case there's a serving of 21 of them, all
from the lone-star state, all by different artists. The
liners are detailed and informed, all original labels are
illustrated in colour and the presentation in general is
impeccable. Not only that, but the artists get paid! As
for the tunes, these are a cross section of songs and instrumentals.
The only widely known number here is perhaps Latin Breed's
'I Turn You On'. Many of these numbers are the garage punk
45s of the old skool funk genre; hopelessly obscure 45s
pressed in less than a couple of hundred copies mainly for
promotion or selling of the stage at gigs, you know the
story. Also similarly to garage punk, there is a map of
Texas included and the presence or absence of funk in different
towns of the state discussed at length which is fascinating
in itself, that's before I'd heard the disc! The Vern Blaire
Debate, The Fabulous Mark III, Little Joe & The Latinaires,
Bobby & The Premiers, Timothy McNealy and Little Jr
Jesse & His Teardrops and The Tears amongst others ply
their rare wax trade across this disc with varying degrees
of aplomb. Some of the instros were not that special perhaps
in or of themselves, but as a collection and in historical
cultural context it is an important set and I can only urge
more power to Jazzman's elbow. Visit their online shop at
http://www.jazzmanrecords.co.uk/.
Paul Martin
VARIOUS ARTISTS
Living In The Streets (BGP/Ace; CD)
The third outing
of this usually gritty funk series takes a few major diversions
that add rather than hinder. Jamaican Carlos Malcolm's funky
instrumental 'Busting Out Of The Ghetto' opens the set in
a suitable manner followed by an equally up-tempo version
of 'I'm A Good Woman' by white garage band The Generation.
Led by the ex-folky Lydia Pense, who had served time with
the Pre-Powder Frost brothers in The Newcastle Five, The
Generation's soulful funk sound will certainly shock the
purists. Perhaps shocking for '60s/'70s funks fan will be
'Vicious Rap' from '79, claimed by many to be one of the
first rap records. It's interesting to hear, though will
not be the average Shindiggers bag! Spanky Wilson, Gary
Bartz and Pat Bowie with Charles McPherson all slow proceedings
down with some quality jazz sides, and obscuros Seeds of
Life turn in a hissy sounding, but fabulous lost treasure,
in the form of their latin-funker 'East LA Car Pool'; also
in the latin vein is Jade's 'Viva! (Viva Tirado)', the first
recorded version of the smash hit for El Chicano. Elsewhere
the funk is more of the standard chequered flared cloth
variety and a number of drug inspired anthems such as 'The
Truth Shall Make You Free' by the almighty Hannibal (grab
the full long player on Norton) and the hippy leaning of
'Peace Love, Not War' (The Fatback Band) will please all
fans of psych-soul.
This volume of the successful
series adds even more variety than usual, yet doesn't show
signs of lacking in quality control. Excellent!
Jon 'Mojo' Mills