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Showing posts with label Tony Rounce (Liner Notes). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Rounce (Liner Notes). Show all posts

Wednesday 5 January 2022

"Stop The War: Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America 1965-1974" by VARIOUS ARTISTS – Featuring Michael Lizzmore, Dionne Warwick, William Bell, Joe Medwick, Allen Orange, Jimmy Hughes, The Shirelles, The Emotions, Chairmen Of The Board, Marvin Gaye, Stu Gardner, The Staple Singers, R.B. Greaves and more (May 2021 UK Ace/Kent Soul CD Compilation of Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



 
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HIGHER GROUND 
70ts Soul, R'n'B, Funk, Jazz Fusion
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"...Say A Little Prayer..."
 
Another clever and timely compilation from Ace of the UK on their Kent Soul imprint with many tracks appearing on CD for the first time. And as Chairmen Of The Board worry and ache through "Men Are Getting Scarce" - you're reminded of the Hellishness of War and the USA's decade-plus fiasco in Vietnam (300,000 black soldiers went there, 8000 of them didn't come home).
 
Ace have touched on Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America twice before – November 2003 gave us "A Soldier's Sad Story" on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 226 covering 1966 -1973, while June 2005 offered "Does Anybody Know I'm Here?" on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 245 covering 1962-1972. The compilation "Stop The War..." is essentially 'Volume 3' in the Series (see list below for full details). There's a lot to decipher here, so let's get down with the lonely soldiers and their dirty duties...
 
UK released Friday, 28 May 2021 (June 2021 in the USA) - "Stop The War: Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America 1965-1974" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 474 (Barcode 029667087223) is a 23-Track CD Compilation of R&B, Soul and Pop Remasters that plays out as follows (79:46 minutes):
 
1. Promise That You'll Wait - MICHAEL LIZZMORE (November 1972 US 45-single on Capitol 3480, B-side of "Try A Little Tenderness")
 
2. I Say A Little Prayer - DIONNE WARWICK (October 1967 US 45-single in Scepter SCE-12203, A-side)
 
3. Lonely Soldier - WILLIAM BELL (July 1970 US 45-single on Stax STA-0070, A-side)
 
4. Letter To A Buddie - JOE MEDWICK (1966 US 45-single on Boogaloo 1002, A-side)
 
5. V.C. Blues - ALLEN ORANGE (October 1966 US 45-single on Sound Stage 7 45-2573, B-side of "Where The Lonely People Are")
 
6. Fighting For My Baby - DONALD JENKINS (June 1970 US 45-single on Thomas TH 806, B-side of "A New World Beautiful")
 
7. (Mama) My Soldier Is Coming Home - THE SHIRELLES (December 1965 US 45-single on Scepter SCE 12123, B-side of "Soldier Boy")
 
8. Uncle Sam - JIMMY HUGHES (November 1967 US 45-single on Atlantic 45-2454, B-side of "It Ain't What you Got")
 
9. Going On Strike - THE EMOTIONS (from the July 1969 US LP "So I Can Love" on Volt VOS-6008, September 1970 in the UK on Stax SXATS 1030)
 
10. Johnny - KING HANNIBAL (1973 Aware Records recording - PREVIOUSLY UNISSUED, 2021)
 
11. My Ship Is Coming In (Tomorrow) - THE PACE SETTERS (1966 US 45-single on Mica 503, A-side)
 
12. (The Two Wars Of) Old Black Joe - Dr. WILLIAM TRULY, Jr. (December 1970 US 45-single on House Of The Fox HOF-2, A-side)
 
13. Hymn No. 5 - THE MIGHTY HANNIBAL (October 1966 US 45-single on Josie 45-964, A-side)
 
14. I'll Be Home - ARTIE GOLDEN (1968 US 45-single on Bunky 7758, A-side)
 
15. Wish You Were Here With Me - THE FAWNS (June 1967 US 45-single on New Frontiers NF 4401, A-side - reissued October 1967 on Capcity 105, A-side)
 
16. Men Are Getting Scarce - CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD (November 1971 US 45-single on Invictus IS 9103, A-side - also on the 1972 US LP "Bittersweet" on Invictus ST-9801)
 
17. I Want To Come Home For Christmas - MARVIN GAYE (unissued 1972 Motown recording withdrawn at the time, finally issued in September 1990 on the 4CD US Box Set "The Marvin Gaye Collection" on Motown MOTD4-6311)
 
18. Stop The War - THE IMPRESSIONS (from the 1972 US LP "Times Have Changed" on Curtom CRS 8012 – 1972 in the UK on Buddah 2318059)
 
19. Leave Him Alone - STU GARDNER (from the 1974 US LP "And The Sanctified Sound" on Volt VOS 9503)
 
20. Glad To Be Home - CHARLES SMITH & JEFF COOPER (1971 US 45-single on Blue Dawn OCS-571, B-side of "My Great Loss (Ashes To Ashes)" - reissued August 1971 US on Seventy 7 Records 106, also as a B-side)
 
21. The War Is Over (My Brother) - THE SENSATIONAL SAINTS (1973 US 45-single on BOS Records B-024, A-side)
 
22. John Brown - THE STAPLE SINGERS (from the 1966 US LP "Pray On" on Epic BN 26237, a Bob Dylan cover)
 
23. Home To Stay - R.B. GREAVES (January 1970 US 45-single on Atco 45-6726, B-side of "Always Something There To Remind Me")
 
NOTES:
Tracks 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 20 are in MONO
Tracks 1, 2, 3, 7, 9, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22 and 23 are in STEREO - Track 10 is PREVIOUSLY UNISSUED
 
Longstanding Ace cohort TONY ROUNCE - a name I trust implicitly when it comes to details, annotates the 20-page booklet. Each song gets the usual thorough discussion packed with factoids that collectors love. There are rare US 45-single labels repro'd alongside album covers by The Impressions, Stu Gardner and The Staple Singers - the text peppered with Trade Adverts and cool black and white publicity photos of lesser seen artists like King Hannibal and The Emotions. Audio Mastering for Volume number 3 is by DUNCAN COWELL - a name I look for too - every track leaping out your speakers (12 are in glorious Stereo). To the tunes and the message...
 
First up I would have to say that the listen doesn’t always work (hence four stars instead of five), but many of these track choices are impressive and even cool (check out The Emotions for instance). "Stop The War..." opens with an impassioned 1972 cover version by Michael Lizzmore of "Promise That You'll Wait" - a B-side done by Skip Jackson and The Shantons on Dot-Mar Records in 1969. Lizzmore's vocals are guttural impressive, but it was a B-side, Capitol trying to plug the Otis Redding A-side of "Try A Little Tenderness" - so it got lost in the rush. Between it and Dionne Warwick's sweeter-than-sweet "I Say A Little Prayer" - you could be forgiven for asking 'where's the war' in any of this? More true to the compilation's concept is "Lonely Soldier" - William Bell's vocal capturing that ache and longing for normalcy. The terrible "Letter To A Buddie" by Joe Medwick is a spoken story piece with truly awful lyrics about how lucky the soldier was to be in Vietnam and not back home with Sally and the other cheating wives. Better is the over-here-in-Vietnam "V.C. Blues" where Allen Orange gives it some slow smooching Blues-Soul as he sings of the lady whose always on his mind as the bullets fly too close to the thing that's actually holding his brain in place.
 
"Fighting For My Baby" is a keyboard chugger where Donald Jenkins does the Elephant Walk in the Jungle (good groove) followed by the way-too-saccharin "(Mama) My Soldier Boy Is Coming Home" by The Shirelles - the kind of sappy sitting-home-every-night crooner that didn't ring true then and feels even more clunky now (gorgeous audio though). Way sharper is "Uncle Sam" where Jimmy Hughes uses his fabulous pleading voice to ask his government to look out for his family while he's gone. Coolsville comes in the shape of The Emotions and an album cut tucked away on their 1969 US Volt Records LP "So I Can Love" – a declaration of loyalty and monogamy to the man away on active duty. That's unfortunately followed by the hup-two-three-four plod of "Johnny" – an awkward Soul stab by King Hannibal and easy to see why it was unreleased at the time. Fighting to make a foreign land free – The Pace Setters go Soul marching in with their "My Ship Is Coming In (Tomorrow)" – a pleasant enough tune.
 
Sleeping in a ditch and eating out of a can, "(The Two Wars Of) Old Black Joe" is a funeral-paced dub from a 45 where a Purple Heart vet is shipped home only to find he can't be buried in a white cemetery. Despite its highly charged spoken content by Dr. William Truly, Jr. – for me it's the first occasion that this CD actually gets under the uncomfortable truth about Black People's treatment during that sickening conflict. Equally powerful is "Hymn No. 5" by The Mighty Hannibal - Page 11 of the booklet featuring a trade advert by Josie Records declaring that its slow Gospel preaching is 'the biggest R&B single in the country'. Lyrically it's impassioned and despite the deeply downbeat nature of the music, it leaves a mark. More in a Soul Ballad tradition, Artie Golden does well to get across the longing in "I'll Be Home" - a grunt with only months to go before he's shipped away from imminent death. The Fawns too talk of letters to their loves, temptations at home avoided, wishing their beaus were in their arms instead of a rain-soaked foxhole overseas.
 
No man wants to be seen as a coward, but a man's duty to his country and freedom is being ruthlessly tapped by the crooked men in Washington - and as a result the Chairmen Of The Board inform all women that "Men Are Getting Scarce" – wasted in the foolishness of War (a great Funk tune on Invictus). This is smartly followed by the soaring vocals of Marvin Gaye who wanted "I Want To Come For Christmas" to be a Seasonal 45 call for peace in 1972 – a 'get us home' ballad message, but Motown typically canned its contentious content. It's a gorgeous performance and you can hear his sincerity and a genuine highlight on here. Genius steps up to the plate with The Impressions who get seriously Funky with the CD's title track "Stop The War". Written by Curtis Mayfield and sung with dig-deep-passion by Fred Cash, Sam Gooden and LeRoy Hutson, it's another genuinely smart inclusion - a 6:23 minute Funkathon laced with Guitars, Strings and all manner of disgusts spoken and expressed in its last few minutes of the song. "Leave Him Alone" is a clavinet Funky too, Stu Gardner putting in an impressive vocal behind top musicians. And on it goes...
 
For sure, 'War' is hardly a subject matter that's conducive to a joyful Soul listening experience, but that doesn't stop this compilation from impressing more times than not. As Charles Smith sings on "Glad To Be Home" that some mother's son had died, you get a feel for the loss and especially the stupidity of that protracted conflict.
 
Putting medals on walls and walking tall in the community after their boy returns victorious from 'over there' is promised to Mom and Pop in the Bob Dylan song "John Brown", sung with guitar-jangling menace by an on-the-money Staple Singers in 1967. Well I'm glad Ace have documented that the reality was an unrecognizable face on return from Vietnam – a mind traumatized inside a young man who noticed that the person his country asked him to kill was a human being just like him. Impressive stuff again from Ace Records of the UK and well done to those involved...
 
Compilations in the Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America CD Series
 
1. A Sad Soldier's Story: Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America 1966-1973 - released November 2003 on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 225 (Barcode 029667222624)
 
2. Does Anybody Know I'm Here? Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America 1966-1972 - released June 2005 on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 245 (Barcode 029667224529)
 
3. Stop The War: Vietnam Through The Eyes Of Black America 1965-1974 - released May 2021 on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 474 (Barcode 029667087223)

Wednesday 7 July 2021

"Beef Ball Baby! The New Orleans R&B Sessions" by VARIOUS ARTISTS – 1947 to 1949 Recordings (Eight Previously Unreleased) featuring Eddie Gorman, Paul Gayten, Smiley Lewis, Cousin Joe and His Sextette, Jewel King, Dave Bartholomew and (Velma) Chubby "Hip Shakin'" Newsom (November 2015 UK Ace Records CD Compilation of Nick Robbins Remasters – Part of The King & Deluxe Acetate Series) - A Review by Mark Barry...




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RHYTHM 'n' BLUES and ROCK 'n' ROLL ON CD 
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"...When Me And My Baby Boogie Woogie... "

The kind of CD compilation that simply falls by the wayside no matter how good the reissue company's intentions, but this is one you shouldn't ignore. 

I know CDTOP 1435 says the dread word 'Acetate' on the sleeve (these recordings – many unissued - were done between 1947 and 1949), but frankly Frank you would be hard pressed to know it. There's a very real reason England's Ace Records states 'Stupendously rare and unissued New Orleans R&B and Blues in Incomparable sound quality' on the rear sleeve as a tagline - they mean it on all fronts. You get Blues, Rhythm and Blues and even Vocal Group crooner moments in amazing click-less audio quality. And the tunes are good too. To the Beef Balls and the Bedroom Blues of olde New Orleans... 

UK released 27 November 2015 - "Beef Ball Baby! The New Orleans R&B Sessions" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDTOP 1435 (Barcode 029667070829) is a 24-Track CD Compilation in The King & Deluxe Acetate Series that plays out as follows (65:19 minutes):

1. Answer To Chubby's Bedroom Blues - EDDIE GORMAN * 
2. Beef Ball Baby - EDDIE GORMAN 
3. Don't Worry 'Bout Nothin' - PAUL GAYTEN and His Band (Vocal Eddie Gorman) 
4. Hey Now - EDDIE GORMAN *
5. Telephone Blues (Alternate Take) - EDDIE GORMAN * 
6. Worrying About My Love - EDDIE GORMAN *
7. You Don't Move Me No More - EDDIE GORMAN *
8. Swimming Blues - SMILING LEWIS (Smiley Lewis) 
9. Turn On Your Volume, Baby - SMILING LEWIS (Smiley Lewis)
10. Here Comes Smiley - SMILING LEWIS (Smiley Lewis)
11. Love Is Like A Gamble - SMILING LEWIS (Smiley Lewis) 
12. Phoney Woman Blues - COUSIN JOE and His Sextette 
13. Little Woman Blues - COUSIN JOE and His Sextette 
14. It's Dangerous To Be A Husband - COUSIN JOE and His Sextette 
15. Give Me A Clue Baby - JEWEL KING *
16. Go Now - JEWEL KING *
17. Passion Blues - JEWEL KING * 
18. She's Got Great Big Eyes (And Great Big Thighs) - DAVE BARTHOLOMEW and His Sextette
19. Dave's Boogie Woogie - DAVE BARTHOLOMEW and His Sextette
20. Chubby's Confession - CHUBBY "Hip Shakin'" NEWSOM and Her Hip Shakers 
21. Back Bitin' Woman - CHUBBY "Hip Shakin'" NEWSOM and Her Hip Shakers
22. Bed Room Blues - CHUBBY "Hip Shakin'" NEWSOM and Her Hip Shakers 
23. Close To Train Time - CHUBBY "Hip Shakin'" NEWSOM and Her Hip Shakers 
24. New Orleans Lover Man - CHUBBY "Hip Shakin'" NEWSOM and Her Hip Shakers
* Tracks 1, 4 to 7 and 15 to 17 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED 

Amidst knowledgeable and affectionate liner notes by Soul and R&B expert TONY ROUNCE - the 12-page booklet pictures those super rare DeLuxe Records 78" labels - "Back Bitin' Woman" by Chubby "Hip Shakin'" Newsom on DeLuxe 3204 and "Turn On Your Volume, Baby" by Smiley Lewis (as Smiling Lewis) on DeLuxe 1099. There are also classy black and white publicity shots for Dave Bartholomew and a fetching Velma 'Chubby' Newsom looking a lot like a smiling LaVern Baker. The last couple of pages provide a Discography as to who plays on what - famous names like Saxophonist Joe Harris and Drummer Earl Palmer. Eight of the tracks are Previously Unreleased with the overall Audio masterfully handled by NICK ROBBINS. 

Faves include the raunchy title track "Beef Ball Baby!" where Eddie Gorman sings the praises of his effortlessly thrilling lady whereas by the time he's gotten to "Worrying About My Love" - the man is distraught at her over friendliness. The Smiley Lewis style of rolling Fats Domino R&B comes sailing out of "Swimming Blues" whilst I can only imagine Velma Newsom and Her 'Hip Shakers' tearing up a storm on any Chitlin Circuit Saturday night. 

Great fun and a disc I like playing a lot. "It's Dangerous To Be A Husband" Cousin Joe tells his Sextette - well it's lethal to have a debit card anywhere near Ace Records of the UK with releases like this...

Saturday 6 March 2021

"Precious: The Anthology 1963-1972" by LINDA JONES – Single and Album Tracks on Cub, Loma, Atco, Blue Cat, Warner Brothers, Neptune, Turbo and Stang Records - featuring The Whatnauts (November 2016 UK Ace/Kent Soul CD Compilation of Duncan Cowell Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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"...Do I Love You...I Do..."

Here's the odd thing. I know that of all the 24-cuts assembled on this comely CD compilation covering Linda Jones' criminally cut-short career (she died early 1972, aged only 27) - I'll probably only play maybe 10 of these songs. Yet despite that, I would still award this CD Anthology a full five-stars in a heartbeat, when it should really be three or four. Why? Because the goodies contained within are the absolute business in my Soul book – they really are. 

Stuff like her debut seven-inch single – a cover of Jackie Wilson's Brunswick hit "Lonely Teardrops" issued May 1963 on the obscure Cub is a starting point (she was only 19) - ok rather than ever rising above that. But once Linda Jones got into her stride - especially between 1967 and 1972 when she was handled by Loma, Neptune, Turbo and Warner Brothers Records and given better material - she was staggering. 

"I Do" from the obscure September 1972 US LP "Let It Be Me" on Turbo Records is a primo example - she wails, she pleads, she moans - it's like Etta James on some serious substances. I just love that abandon-passion, as I suspect many others do too. And don't get me started on the ball-busting "Hypnotized" from 1967 – we could be here for decades. 

Let's waste no more tears and get to one of the most beloved lady singers in the Soul genre and a typically classy homage to her musical legacy by England's Ace Records on their label imprint Kent Soul...

UK released 25 November 2016 (December 2016 in the USA) - "Precious: The Anthology 1963-1972" by LINDA JONES on Ace/Kent Soul CDTOP 458 (Barcode 029667078122) is a 24-Track CD Compilation of Remasters that plays out as follows (71:34 minutes):

1. Hypnotized (May 1967 US 45-single on Loma 2070, A-side)

2. Lonely Teardrops (May 1963 US Debut 45-single on Cub 9124, A-side, as Linda Lane – a Jackie Wilson cover)

3. I'm Taking Back My Love 
4. Take The Boy Out Of The Country (Tracks 4 and 3 [note playing order] are the A&B-sides of a May 1965 US 45-single on Atco 45-6344)

5. Fugitive From Love 
6. You Hit Me Like T.N.T. (Tracks 5 and 6 are the A&B-sides of a July 1966 US 45-single on Blue Cat BC 128)

7. Give My Love A Try (December 1967 US 45-single on Loma 2085, A-side)

8. A Last Minute Miracle (from the August 1967 US LP "Hypnotized" on Loma LS 5907 in Stereo)

9. What I've Done (To Make You Mad) (September 1967 US 45-single on Loma 2077, A-side)

10. My Heart Needs A Break (February 1968 US 45-single on Loma 2091, A-side)

11. That's When I'll Stop Loving You (October 1969 US 45-single on Neptune N-17, B-side to "I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow" - see Track 13 for A-side)

12. I Just Can't Live My Life (Without You Baby) (April 1969 US 45-single on Warner Brothers 7278, B-side of "My Heart (Will Understand)"

13. I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow  (October 1969 US 45-single on Neptune N-17, A-side - see Track 11 for B-side)

14. Can You Blame Me? 
15. Ooh Baby You Move Me (Tracks 15 and 14 [note order] are the A&B-sides of a May 1970 US 45-single on Neptune N26)

16. I Do 
17. If Only We Had Met Sooner (Tracks 16 and 17 from the September 1972 US LP "Let It Be Me" on Turbo Records TU-7008)

18. I Can't Make It All Alone (November 1971 US 45-single on Turbo TU 017, A-side)

19. Stay With Me Forever (May 1971 US 45-single on Turbo TU 012, A-side - for B-side see Track 23) 

20. Behold (from the May 1972 US LP "Your Precious Love" on Turbo TU-7007)

21. Not On The Outside (May 1972 US 45-single on Turbo TU 024, A-side)

22. I'm So Glad I Found You (Linda Jones & The Whatnauts) (June 1972 US 45-single on Stang 5039, A-side)

23. I've Given You The Best Years Of My Life (May 1971 US 45-single n Turbo TU 012, B-side to "Stay With Me Forever" - for A-side see Track 19)

24. Your Precious Love (February 1972 US 45-single on Turbo TU 021, A-side)

Tracks 1, 7, 8, 9, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 22 and 24 in STEREO
Tracks 2 to 6, 10 to 15, 18 and 23 in MONO   

Outside of three deep LP cuts from 1972, the remaining 23 entries are single sides, Ace cleverly choosing the lesser-trodden path of B-sides that to my knowledge have never been on CD before. You could argue that someone somewhere should really do a full-on Anthology for Linda Jones because again as far as I know in 2021, neither of the albums featured here on Turbo have ever been on CD anywhere in the world. So what do you get? 

The 16-page booklet is headed-up with TONY ROUNCE liner notes that acknowledges how her legend has grown amongst Deep Soul collectors in the last five decades – a sort female version of Chuck Jackson or Tommy Tate. All of those rare US 45-single labels for Loma, Warner Bros, Stang, Turbo, Atco, Blue Cat, Neptune and so on are pictured amongst the text and facts. The two Turbo LPs are here too as is the Loma "Hypnotized" album that actually charted in October 1967 eventually achieving an impressive No. 26 on the US R&B LP charts. "Your Precious Love" would hit the US LP charts in June 1972 (shortly after its release in May) and achieve a peak placing of No. 35. There are trade adverts for Loma Records and a French picture sleeve for the magical Northern Soul-ish "Hypnotized" graces the rear sleeve (tasty all around, as usual). Long-standing Audio Engineer for Ace Records DUNCAN COWELL has done the Remasters and they are lovely – pleasing for me to hear more Stereo than Mono – though both have punch and clarity. To the music...

"Precious: The Anthology..." opens on a barnstormer - the gorgeous melodrama of "Hypnotized". It hit the US R&B singles chart weeks after release in late June 1967 whereupon Loma 2070 rose to a deserved No. 4 position. Her first album by the same name would follow into the R&B LP charts. With its bells and brass and slow lurch - the all-it-took was just-one-little-look pleader sailed its way into Northern Soul hearts with a speeding bullet. 

Linda Jones has always been a fave of NS fans - in fact when WEA were assaulting the British marketplace in 2002, 2003, 2004 with volume after volume of single CD/2LP sets like "Funky Drops" and so on - their "After Hours...Northern Soul Masters" Series showcased Linda with "My Heart Needs A Break" on Volume 1, "Just Can't Live My Life" on Volume 2 and "A Last Minute Miracle" on Volume 3. Loma played it smart by following the breakthrough of "Hypnotized" with the equally beautiful "What've I Done (To Make You Mad)" - the ballad rewarding the Warner Brothers distributed label with a No. 8 hit single in October 1967 (Loma 2077). 

This set also features her other four US R&B chart entries - "Give My Love A Try" (Loma 2085, entered January 1968, peaked at No. 34), "That's When I'll Stop Loving You" (Neptune N-17, entered January 1970, peaked at No. 40), "Your Precious Love" (Turbo 021, entered February 1972, peaked at No. 15) and "Not On The Outside" (Turbo 024, entered June 1972 and peaked at No. 32). Another Northern Soul fave is "I Just Can't Live My Life (Without You Baby)" - the much-sought B-side of her only single on the Warner Brothers label "My Heart (Will Understand)". I also like her cover of The O'Jays "I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow (Than I Was Today)" - an early song for them in October 1967 on Bell 691. And on it goes...

Rounce quite rightly argues that had she lived to fulfil her potential, Linda Jones would be up there with more revered/famous names like Aretha Franklin, Dionne Warwick and Etta James - and he's right. But you have to say that once again Ace's Kent Soul have pulled off a CD winner to honour her tantalising and indeed hypnotising legacy. RIP you sweet lady...

Friday 19 February 2021

"That's It! The Complete Kent Recordings 1964-1968" by Z.Z. HILL – Including The 1967 US Stereo LP "A Whole Lot Of Soul", Over 30 US 45-Single Sides and Subsequently Released Period Outtakes Issued Between 1970 and 2000 (February 2018 UK Ace Records/Kent Soul 2CD Compilation of Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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"SOUL GALORE!" 
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"...Make Me Yours..."

It's become something of a cliché in collector's circles to praise Ace Records and their extraordinary back catalogue of reissues now stretching back 47 years to 1975. Those saintly sanctified Soul Men and their undoubtedly nubile minions over at Steele Road in London's NW10 have whomped us with more than a few digital-doosies in the 80ts to 20ts too. 

But this Z.Z. Hill Southern Soul 2-CD Anthology from 2018 on their imprint Kent Soul is just the absolute dog's dangly bits and dingbat's wing nuts. It may also (in my book anyway) be up there in the Top 10 'Best Soul and R&B Reissues' ever made. 

Sometimes, bluntly, reissue companies of real distinction like say Ace, Bear Family, Esoteric, Light In The Attic, Rhino etc (to name but a few) just get it so damn right. And this is one of those. There's a whole lot of soul and vocal classiness to wade through here (never mind miles of pain), so let's have at one of the finest voices Texas had to offer, Mr. Arzell Hill...

UK released 23 February 2018 (March 2018 in the USA) - "That's It! The Complete Kent Recordings 1964-1968" by Z.Z. HILL on Ace Records/Kent Soul CDTOP2 476 (Barcode 029667087629) is a 49-Track 2CD Anthology of Remasters that plays out as follows: 

CD1 "The Kent Singles 1964-1968" (75:39 minutes, all MONO):
1. You Don't Love Me
2. If I Could Do It All Over (Tracks 1&2 are the A&B-sides of Kent 404, 1964)

3. Someone To Love Me
4. Have Mercy Someone (Tracks 3&4 are the A&B-sides of Kent 406, 1965 - "Have Mercy Someone" also used as the B-side to "You Got What I Need" on Kent 494 in September 1968 - see Track 25 on Disc 1)

5. Hey Little Girl 
6. Oh Darlin' (Tracks 5&6 are the A&B-sides of Kent 427, 1965 - "Oh Darlin'" also used as the B-side to "Greatest Love" on Kent 460 in February 1967 - see Track 16 on Disc 1)

7. What More
8. That's It (Tracks 7&8 are the A&B-sides of Kent 432, 1965)

9. Happiness Is All I Need 
10. Everybody Has To Cry (Tracks 9&10 are the A&B-sides of Kent 439, 1965 - "Everybody Has To Cry" was also used as the B-side to "Nothing Can Change This Love (I Have For You)" on Kent K 4577 in 1974 - that 70ts version of "Nothing... is not on this 2CD set)

11. No More Doggin' 
12. The Kind Of Love I Want (Tracks 11&12 are the A&B-sides of Kent 444, 1966)

13. I Found Love (Track 13 is the A-side of Kent 449, 1966 - it's B-side was "Set Your Sights Higher" - see Track 27 on Disc 1)

14. You Can't Hide A Heartache
15. Gimme Gimme (Tracks 14&15 are the A&B-sides of Kent 453, 1966)

16. Greatest Love (Track 16 is the A-side of Kent 460 - it's B-side was "Oh Darlin'" - see Track 6 on Disc 1)

17. Where She Att
18. Baby I'm Sorry (Tracks 17&18 are the A&B-sides of Kent 464, 1967 - A-side is spelt "Att", probably in error)

19. Everybody Needs Somebody 
20. You Just Cheat And Lie (Tracks 19&20 are the A&B-sides of Kent 469, 1967)

21. What Am I Living For 
22. You're Gonna Need My Lovin' (Tracks 21&22 are the A&B-sides of Kent 478, 1967)

23. Nothing Can Change The Love I Have For You 
24. Steal Away (Tracks 23&24 are the A&B-sides of Kent 481, 1968)

25. You Got What I Need (Track 25 is the A-side of Kent 494, 1968 – B-side was "Have Mercy Someone" – see Track 4 n Disc 1)

26. Don't Make Promises (You Can't Keep) 
27. Set Your Sights Higher (Tracks 26&27 are the A&B-sides of Kent 502 - "Set Your Sights Higher" was also the B-side of "I Found Love" on Kent 449 – see Track 13 on Disc 1)

NOTE: From Disc 1 you will also be able to sequence his 1965 debut album "The Soul Stirring Z.Z. Hill" on Kent KLP 5018 in MONO using the following tracks: 
Side 1: Tracks 9, 5, 3, 1, 2 and 10
Side 2: Tracks 8, 7, 6, 4, 13 and 27 

CD2 "A Whole Lot of Soul" 1967 US Kent LP Plus Bonuses 
(62:42 minutes, all STEREO except 13-17 and 21 Mono):
1. When Something Is Wrong With My Baby [Side1]
2. What Am I Living For 
3. Nothing Takes The Place Of You 
4. Knock On Wood 
5. Steal Away 
6. You Gonna Make Me Cry 
7. You Send Me [Side 2]
8. Midnight Hour 
9. When A Man Loves A Woman 
10. Make Me Yours 
11. Nothing Can Change The Love I Have For You 
12. Greatest Love 
Tracks 1 to 12 are the album "A Whole Lot Of Soul" - released June 1967 in the USA on Kent Records KLP 5028 in Mono and KST 528 in Stereo - the STEREO Mix is used here. 

PLUS: 
13. You Won't Hurt No More (first issued 1992 on the UK CD compilation "The Down Home Soul Of Z.Z. Hill" on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEN 099)

14. You Got Me Chained To Your Love (first issued 2000 on the UK CD compilation "Southern Soul Brothers" shared with Clay Hammond on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 188)

15. I'm Gonna Love You 
16. Please Take Me Back (Tracks 15 and 16 first issued 1984 on the US compilation LP "Final Appearance" on Kent KLP 2026)

17. My Girl Has Gone Away (first issued 2000 on the UK CD compilation "Southern Soul Brothers" shared with Clay Hammond on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 188)

18. I Need Someone (To Love Me) (with strings) - A-side of a May 1971 US 45-single on Kent KS 4547

19. You Don't Love Me (with strings) - A-side of a July 1971 US 45-single on Kent KS 4550

20. If I Could Do It All Over (with strings) 

21. You Won't Hurt No More (with strings) - Tracks 20&21 are the A&B-sides of a 1972 US 45-single on Kent KS 4560

22. Nothing Can Change This Love (I Have For You) (with strings) - A-side of a 1973 US 45-single on Kent K 4577

The 16-page booklet features typically info-packed details from long-standing Soul expert TONY ROUNCE – his text peppered with illustrations of US trade adverts, two pages with nine Kent 45 labels on each, a Portuguese picture sleeve for the Tim Hardin cover of "Don't Make Promises" and the uber-rare/seriously desirable British pic sleeve for the "Gimme Gimme" Sue Records EP (IEP-711) – a 1966 zero-sales 4-Track artefact that regularly lists for £300 or more (if you can find one). There is 1964 to 1968 'Session Details' listing studio locations that are given letters from 'A' to 'O'. This will allow aficionados to find out that "Everybody Has To Cry" from 1965 for instance was recorded at 'E' - Western Recorders in May 1965 - arranged and conducted by Maxwell Davis. The US album artwork for the Stereo versions of "The Soul Stirring Z.Z. Hill" (Kent KST 518, 1965) and "A Whole Lot Of Soul" (Kent KST 528, 1967) are here as is other period pieces like adverts from Cash Box, a British 45 on Action (and so on) – many of the cool images supplied by another compilation stalwart to Ace Records – ADY CROASDEL. 

Long-standing Audio Engineer NICK ROBBINS has handled the master tapes – Mono on CD1 and (mostly) Stereo on CD2 - including the unfinished overdubbed stuff Kent issued in the 70ts (credited on Disc 2 as 'with strings') and it all sounds just stunning. There is a sense of pride to this release – a good company doing the great man's legacy right. To the music...

A 27-track Disc 1 will allow fans to sequence the A&B-sides of 19 American 45s (with some flip-sides duplicated of course) and a very tasty haul through Sixties Soul and R&B it is too. Even now it's astonishing to think that quality swayers like the Gospel-organ lurch of "Nothing Can Change The Love I Have For You" (a Sam Cooke cover), the misery march of "Someone To Love Me" (one of his own) or "You Can't Hide A Heartache" (a Fred Hughes tune) didn't dent the US R&B charts (none of his Kent sides did). And he was no slouch when it came to boppers - as far back as the legendary second album in the Kent Soul LP series "For Dancers Also" from 1983 - Ace featured "You Just Cheat And Lie". 

The strings and guitar shuffle of "You Don't Love Me" is the kind of 'hold me' 'love me' 'I just want to talk about it' bawler that Northern Soul fans love, while the blasting brass and backing-singing girls joy in "Where She At" has tears in poor Z.Z.'s bloodshot eyes. Southern Soul Man hero Allen Toussaint (long associated with The Meters) supplied "Gimme Gimme" and its fun Soul Bop should have made dents too on the R&B charts. She-done-me-wrong misery is never far away here – Z.Z. loving to get his teeth into a moaner. The if not for you "What Am I Living For" crawl or the Jimmy Holiday smoocher "Everybody Needs Somebody" are two such highlights - hands across your chest as you distribute the talcum powder on the dancefloor into scuff-patterns of pain. Even the upbeat Arthur Adams feel-so-bad dancer "You Got What I Need" (with great audio) failed to breach the charts. 

Disc 2 is primarily STEREO and what a fantastic thing to hear the legendary "A Whole Lot Of Soul" LP swirling around your speakers like this. Although very top heavy with covers - "When Something Is Wrong With My Baby" from Sam & Dave, "You Send Me” from Sam Cook, "In The Midnight Hour" from the wicked Pickett and Eddie Floyd with his "Knock On Wood” – they suit Hill and his gravel-one-minute silk-the-next voice. "Make Me Yours" by Bettye Swann and the echoed-guitar of "Steal Away" by Jimmy Hughes is manna to me. And I even like the "with strings" slurry of titles from 1971, 1972 and 1973. 

He would eventually find US chart success with Mankind Records, United Artists and Columbia in the Seventies and a renewed recognition from the lovely Malaco album "Down Home Blues" in 1981 – letting his hair down on the title track while her bad ways in "Cheating In The Next Room" became a compilation fave. But this is where Z.Z. Hill cut those teeth. 

Such a great reissue and since his loss in February 1984 to a car-crash – a worthy reminder of what Z.Z. Hill gave us and what we lost. Tops for CDTOP2 476...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order