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Thursday, 21 May 2020

"It's All About" by SPOOKY TOOTH - July 1968 UK Debut LP on Island Records in Stereo – featuring Mike Harrison, Gary Wright, Luther Grosvenor, Greg Ridley and Mike Kellie with Production and Song Co-Writes by Jimmy Miller (September 2016 UK Universal UMC/Island Expanded Edition CD Reissue with Ten Bonuses – Paschal Byrne and Ben Wiseman Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...

 




"...Love Really Changed Me..."

Underrated debuts, there's a shed load of them - and you can add July 1968's "It's All About" by SPOOKY TOOTH to that list.

Principal band member and lead vocalist Mike Harrison had come up through the 60ts R&B ranks with The V.I.P.'s in 1963 through to the Psych sounds of ART on Island Records (they made one revered album called "Supernatural Fairy Tales" in 1967) before forming Spooky Tooth with Keyboardist and Lead Vocalist Gary Wright, Lead Guitarist Luther Grosvenor, Bassist Greg Ridley and Drummer Mike Kellie (later 70ts ranks of the band would feature Mick Jones of Foreigner).

Between 1968 and 1974 Spooky Tooth popped out seven accomplished albums all of which have been Remastered and Reissued for these exemplary CD series (September and October 2016 releases). Their debut was actually issued in three configurations in the UK and America (different artwork too) and this CD reissue will allow punters to sequence all three. It's all about a roundabout indeed, to the rainbow details...

UK released 30 September 2016 - "It's All About" by SPOOKY TOOTH on Universal UMC/Island 570 547-1 (Barcode 602557054712) offers their 1968 debut album in Stereo in an 'Expanded Edition' CD Reissue and Remaster with 10 Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (72:01 minutes):

1. Society's Child [Side 1]
2. Love Really Changed Me
3. Here I Lived So Well
4. Too Much Of Nothing
5. Sunshine Help Me
6. It's All About A Roundabout [Side 2]
7. Tobacco Road
8. It Hurts You So
9. Forget It, I Got It
10. Bubbles
Tracks 1 to 10 are their debut album "It's All About" - released July 1968 in the UK on Island ILPS 9080 in Stereo and September 1969 in the USA as "Spooky Tooth" on Bell Records BELL 6019 with the tracks in a different running order. Produced by JIMMY MILLER (of Rolling Stones fame) - it didn't chart in either country.
To sequence that American LP use the following:
Side A: 1. It's All About A Roundabout 2. Tobacco Road 3. It Hurts You So 4. Forget It, I Got It 5. Bubbles
Side B: 1. Society's Child 2. Love Really Changed Me 3. Here I Lived So Well 4. Too Much Of Nothing 5. Sunshine Help Me
The American LP was reissued again in June 1971 on A&M Records SP-4300 with different artwork but with the original 1968 British album line up of songs (Tracks 1 to 10 above). The only difference being that "Too Much Of Nothing" was replaced as Track 4 on Side 1 with a cover version of The Band classic "The Weight" (Track 13 in the Bonuses).

BONUS TRACKS:
11. Sunshine Help Me (Original Version, Recorded 13 October 1967)
12. Weird (January 1968 UK 7" single on Island WIP 6022, non-album B-side to "Sunshine Help Me")
13. The Weight (September 1968 UK 7" single on Island WIP 6046, A, non-album track, cover of The Band classic)
14. Do Right People  (September 1968 UK 7" single on Island WIP 6046, B-side of "The Weight", non-album track)
15. Love Really Changed Me (Single Version) (June 1968 UK 7" single on Island WIP 6037, A)
16. Luger's Groove (June 1968 UK 7" single on Island WIP 6037, B-side of "Love Really Changed Me", non-album track)
17. It Hurts You So (Mono Mix)
18. Sunshine Help Me
19. Too Much Of Nothing (Tracks 18 and 19 are from a BBC Radio One "Top Gear" Session recorded 21 February 1968)
20. The Weight (Track 20 is from a BBC Radio One "Top Gear" Session recorded 30 September 1968)

The 12-page booklet is a pleasingly fact-filled affair although it could have featured the different US artwork for the "Tobacco Road" version of the album that also has the song "The Weight" substituted for "Too Much Of Nothing" – but alas. What you do get is new liner notes from MARK POWELL of Esoteric Recordings that features interviews with two of the band’s principal players – Mike Harrison and Gary Wright – both reminiscing with affection of their time with the eclectic Rock Band. There are also colour photos from the album cover shoot of the boys amidst the vegetation, other period snaps, a rare foreign picture sleeve for "Bubbles" and the usual musician/reissue credits.

Two of Universal’s leading Audio Engineers BEN WISEMAN and PASCHAL BYRNE have handled the analogue to digital transfers, mixes and Remasters – and this sucker boogies. Spooky Tooth always made somewhat of a chaotic and cluttered racket with moments of Psych and Rock Funk punctuating the guitars and keyboards and this Remaster handles the lot with admirable aplomb.

Their debut opens with a cover of Janis Ian's "Society Child" which like their version of Loudermilk's oft-copied "Tobacco Road" further on in the album is a radically reworked thing. But for me the album really opens with one of their own - the Luther Grosvenor, Jimmy Miller and Gary Wright composition "Love Really Changed Me" where they get piano funky on the intro only to go into 'save me' vocals towards the melodramatic end. Spooky Tooth had a certain sound that felt like a mash-up of Traffic, Moby Grape and Procol Harum - a sort of Soulful Rock meets art-house Psych - evidenced on the slow and trippy "Here I Lived So Well" (gorgeous Remaster on those etherial vocals and punchy bass).

Another cover gets Toothed - Bob Dylan's "Too Much Of Nothing" first aired by Peter, Paul & Mary in 1967 - bending guitar notes soon start going into a high-vocal Rock boogie - like Uriah Heap having too much fun. One of the album's best tracks, the Harpsichord opening and funky 'crazy dreams' "Sunshine Help Me" feels like Prog Rock Donovan meets Blood, Sweat & Tears (the single version is one of the bonus tracks). The short two minutes of "It's All About A Roundabout" opened the American LP on Side 1 and you can hear why - a poppy hippy moment that maybe Radio or DJs might hook into to. But my faves are two Jimmy Miller and Gary Wright songs - the hide and seek "It Hurts You So" and the brilliant "Forget It, I Got It" - a sort of Joe Cocker "Feelin' Alright" piano bopper that at times feels like Marriott and The Small Faces having an Immediate Records whig-out. Of the Bonuses, a real digital winner is the rarely heard B-side "Do Right People" – a Funky Rock charmer that could easily have been on the album. Speaking of those who like their 60ts on a funky tip – the 21 June 1968 45 on Island WIP 6037 has a winner non-LP B-side instrumental called "Luger's Groove" - Spooky Tooth having a sort of Santana goof off moment – speedy guitar soloing anchored by piano rolls – very cool indeed.

Mike Harrison did three solo albums on Island and Good Ear Records between 1971 and 1975 (see my review of those on Beat Goes On CDs), Luther Grosvenor joined Stealers Wheel for a brief stint in 1972, then changed his name to Ariel Bender and joined Mott The Hoople for their seventh album "The Hoople" in 1974. Gary Wright later had two huge No. 2 US hit singles with the Yacht Rock of "Dream Weaver" and "Love Is Alive" in 1976 – both from his 1975 platinum Warner Brothers album "The Dream Weaver".

For sure July 1968's "It's All About" is something of an acquired taste in May 2020 – but it sounds good to me and those ten bonuses make it taste a whole lot better too...

SPOOKY TOOTH
September and October 2016 
Universal/Island CD Expanded Edition Remaster Series:

1. It's All About (1968 Debut) - 30 Sep 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-1 (Barcode 602557054712) with 10 Bonus Tracks
2. Spooky Two (1969 2nd LP) - 7 Oct 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-3 (Barcode 602557054736) with 9 Bonus Tracks
3. Ceremony: An Electronic Mass (1969 3rd LP with Pierre Henry) - 7 Oct 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-0 (Barcode 602557054705) with 6 Bonus Tracks
4. The Last Puff (1970 4th LP) - 7 Oct 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-5 (Barcode 602557054750) with 6 Bonus Tracks
5. You Broke My Heart...So I Busted Your Jaw (1973 5th LP) - 30 Sep 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-8 (Barcode 602557054781)
6. Witness (1973 6th LP) - 30 Sep 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-7 (Barcode 602557054774) with 1 Bonus Track
7. The Mirror (1974 7th LP) - 30 Sep 2016 CD release on Universal/Island 570 547-6 (Barcode 602557054767)

Wednesday, 20 May 2020

"1968 - VOODOO CHILE" - Your All-Genres Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters - A SOUNDS GOOD MUSIC BOOK by Mark Barry...

The SOUNDS GOOD MUSIC BOOKS Series...

1968
VOODOO CHILE

Your All-Genres Guide To
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters 
Classic Albums, Compilations, 45s
258 In-Depth Reviews
Huge 2,330 E-Pages of Information from the discs themselves...





* 2,330 E-pages, in-depth information, CD reissues from all genres, March 2024 Version
* 258 Entries featuring 1968 Albums and Rare Singles by a wide range of artists 
* Formats included - CD, SACD [Super Audio CD], HDCD [High Density Compatible Digital], Japan SHM-CD and Japan Platinum SHM-CD  [Super High Materials]
* Major Label Box Set Retrospectives from – EMI, Sony/Legacy, Universal and WEA
* Best Independent Reissue Labels highlighted...
– Ace, Audio Fidelity, Bear Family, Beats Goes On, Big Break Records (BBR), Cherry Red, Earth, Edsel, Esoteric Recordings, Grapefruit, Hip-O Select, Lemon, Light In The Attic, Mobile Fidelity, Raven, Repertoire, Rev-Ola, Rhino, Salvo, Soul Music Records, Sundazed and Panegyric
* Technical data from the discs themselves (total playing times and more)
* Release Date, Catalogue No and Barcode to locate the correct issue
* CD Track lists and Details on Bonus material (if any)
* VINYL Discographies referencing CD Box sets (track numbers to sequence singles and albums from the discs – huge number of record labels covered
* UK and US catalogue numbers and release dates for original vinyl albums, 7” singles and EPs within each review
* Remaster/Tape Transfer Engineers highlighted
* Packaging descriptions, size of booklets, what’s contained within, who wrote the liner notes, repro artwork explained
* Reference to the Audio Quality of the CD - analysis of songs
* Guest Musicians highlighted – Cover Versions noted

Having worked for RECKLESS RECORDS in London for over 20 years as one of their principal Vinyl and CD buyers (one of the best secondhand record shops in the West End) and having been an Amazon 'Hall Of Fame' Reviewer Six Times - as you can imagine - I did and still do come across a huge number of reissues - some far more worthy than others.

To that end I've collated together these SOUNDS GOOD MUSIC BOOKS as guides to Exceptional CD Remasters offering up in-depth reviews on a wide range of titles. And it doesn’t have to cost the earth to Sound Good either – you just need to know which CD is the right issue to buy. Many entries in this large and unique book cost less than £10 while others are under a fiver. And even if some Box Sets/Deletions have acquired a price tag - because they’re the best I’ve included them along with artists and titles that deserve your attention

Enjoy the reads - MARK BARRY (March 2024)

"The Complete Motown Singles Vol. 8: 1968" by VARIOUS ARTISTS – featuring Four Tops, Marvin Gaye, Isley Brothers, Gladys Knight & The Pips, Shorty Long, The Marvelettes, Martha Reeves & The Vandellas, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, Diana Ross & The Supremes, Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers, The Temptations, Jr. Walker & The All Stars, Stevie Wonder, Barbara McNair, The Spinners, Abdullah, Marv Johnson, The Fantastic Four, The Detroit Wheels, Jimmy Ruffin, Edwin Starr, Blinky and more (October 2007 US Hip-O Select/Motown 6CD Compilation - Book Set With Front-Cover Attached 45 Single – A Non-Numbered Limited Edition of 6000 Copies – CD Volumes Nos. 38 to 43 in the Series - Ellen Fitton Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...







This Review Along With Nearly 195 Others Is Available in my
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites

"SOUL GALORE!" 
60ts Soul, R&B, Northern Soul
Mod, New Breed, Funk, Rare Grooves
Atlantic, Chess, Motown, Stax Labels and many more...
 
Your Guide To The Best CD Reissues and Remasters 
Thousands of E-Pages
All Details and In-Depth Reviews From Discs 
(No Cut and Paste Crap)
 
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"...The Real Thing..."

I've made mistakes in life. Selling state secrets to the Russians, trusting my horoscope to conspiracy theorist David Icke, not sleeping with Scarlet Johansson when I had the chance but instead canoodling with ugly farmyard animals that looked pretty good after a few kegs of Scrumpy - and then, just recently - trusting a haircut to my wife and her DIY scissors techniques in a Coronavirus lockdown. You know, the usual growing pains of a record shop employee.

But the biggest mistake I ever made was not buying Volume 6 of "The Complete Motown Singles" which covered the year 1966. Man that was a doozy. I diligently collected all of the other 13 Volumes from 1 to 12B (see list below), but for some reason put 1966 on the long finger, and now of course it regularly clocks in at £250 to £350 depending on the source. So when I win the Lottery (or hear back from Moscow about that Cayman Island account and their really good face surgeon, called, oddly enough, Shorter Long) – I'll snap it up.

Which brings me to this gorgeous reissue – the kind of thing that actually is worth standing up Scarlett for (well maybe). Let's hear it from the grapevine...

US released October 2007 - "The Complete Motown Singles Vol. 8: 1968" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Hip-O Select/Motown B0009708-02 (Barcode 602517431775) is a 6CD Book Set with Front-Cover Attached 45 (a repro of the US single "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" by Marvin Gaye) – A Non-Numbered Limited Edition of 6000 Copies (CDs are Volumes 38 to 43) that plays out as follows:

CD1, Disc 38, 67:48 minutes (25 Tracks)
The A&B-sides (see NOTE) of 13 US singles by Rita Wright, Shorty Long, Four Tops, Gladys Knight & The Pips, Chuck Jackson, Debbie Dean, Billy Eckstine, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, Chris Clark, Jimmy Ruffin, Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers, Diana Ross & The Supremes, The Isley Brothers
(NOTE: Chris Clark and Diana Ross & The Supremes, A-sides only).

CD2, Disc 39, 65:43 minutes (24 Tracks)
The A&B-sides (see NOTE) of 13 singles by Stevie Wonder, Edwin Starr, Barbara McNair, Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, The Monitors, Martha Reeves & The Vandellas, R. Dean Taylor, Four Tops, The Temptations, The Detroit Wheels, The Marvelettes, Shorty Long, The Volumes,
(NOTE: Barbara McNair, The Monitors, A-sides only)

CD3, Disc 40, 65:02 minutes (24 Tracks)
The A&B-sides (see NOTE) of 13 singles by Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, Gladys Night & The Pips, Diana Ross & The Supremes, Jimmy Ruffin, Stevie Wonder, Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers, Four Tops, Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, The Temptations, Jr. Walker & The All-Stars, Martha Reeves & The Vandellas 
(NOTE: Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, A-sides only)

CD4, Disc 41, 65:38 minutes (22 Tracks)
The A&B-sides (see NOTE) of 12 singles by Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, Paul Petersen, Gladys Knight & The Pips, Billy Eckstein, Barbara Randolph, Marvin Gaye, The Ones, The Monitors, Elvets Rednow (Stevie Wonder spelt backwards), The Marvelettes, The Detroit Wheels, Marvin Gaye [A] with Gladys Knight & The Pips [B],
(NOTE: Barbara Randolph, Marvin Gaye, A-sides only)

CD5, Disc 42, 69:12 minutes (24 Tracks)
The A&B-sides of 11 singles by Four Tops, The Fantastic Four, Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell, Diana Ross & The Supremes, Barbara McNair, Marv Johnson, Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers, Martha Reeves & The Vandellas, Stevie Wonder, Abdullah, The Spinners

CD6, Disc 43, 73:53 minutes (25 Tracks)
The A&B-sides of 12 singles by The Temptations, Edwin Starr, The Isley Brothers, Blinky, Jimmy Ruffin, Diana Ross & The Supremes & The Temptations, Marvin Gaye, Tammi Terrell, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, Jr. Walker & The All Stars, The Marvelettes

As you can see from the lists above, the first four CDs in this 6-disc set contain tracks by Barbara McNair, Diana Ross & The Supremes and Smokey Robinson & The Miracles that have only the A-side – this will be because the flip will have been on Volume 7 for 1967 or Volume 6 for 1966 and so on. The liner notes tell where to find the B. Also, if you take CD6, you notice that it has 25 tracks for 12 singles (24 sides) – that’s because the Diana Ross & The Supremes & The Temptations ensemble song "The Impossible Dream" on Motown M 1137 had two different B-sides – both are included.

You have to talk about the presentation of these things - that in every case will have a Soul/Motown fan weak at the knees. I have bought and reviewed a lot of tasty Hip-O Select reissues – Muddy Waters, Jimmy Cliff, Emitt Rhodes, Tammi Terrell, Howlin’ Wolf, The 15-Disc Chess Story, Stephen Bishop, Buddy Miles and so on. But these Motown Volumes are the best they ever did – a profoundly fab project that eventually stretched out from 1959 to 1972 with 75 CDs and 1847 Tracks. All transfers were taken from original tapes and included the Single Mono Mixes, Stereo Versions if on Promo 45s, Previously Unreleased Variants and full annotation for every single song. You get catalogue numbers, musician personnel, Producers, overdub details, Billboard R&B and Pop chart placements (if any) and long paragraphs on the recording and its history.

As the packaging has to fit a 45 single on the front cover – the 132 pages of text are large inside the hardback book – allowing full-page colour plates that are genuinely some of the most beautifully rendered photos of Soul Artists that I’ve ever seen. The six discs are housed in individual card leaves at the back with three indexes preceding them – By Artist, By Title and By Label. This allows collectors a way of tracking what they need – very thorough. The only minor miscall for UK fans would be that every catalogue number is American – if you want their British equivalents – I cannot recommend enough a book I reviewed a good few years ago now called “TAMLA MOTOWN: The Stories Behind The UK Singles” by TERRY WILSON - a tall paperback with over 710 pages published by Cherry Red Books. It provides both the US and UK details and is the very best reference source on TM you can get.

The Audio comes via an Engineer I’ve sung the praises of before – ELLEN FITTON – one of Universal’s top Remaster types. Across a total of 144 tracks, you get 71 singles and there are just so many great discoveries in here – the sexy sway of Blinky, the kick-ass motion of The Detroit Wheels and the unsung heroines of Motown Barbara Randolph and Chris Clark tackling tunes like "Can I Get A Witness" (made famous by Marvin) and the lesser heard Holland-Dozier-Holland sweetie "Whisper You Love Me Boy". And of course you get to return to absolute classics, as you would have heard them on the radio of the day - "Cloud Nine" by The Temptations, "For Once In My LIfe" by Stevie Wonder and what many rate as the greatest Soul single (ever) – the mighty "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" by Marvin Gaye – an album afterthought that quickly became his signature tune.

If you can't afford the physical product in 2020 (which ranges from £80 to over £100) - the MP3 version of 1968 is available from Amazon as a Download for £39.99 (individual tracks are usually 99p). Spend the money, man!  I did, and am a well happy bunny because of it. Stunning...

"The Complete Motown Singles" Series by Hip-O Select 
(14 Releases as of May 2020)
75 x CD Volumes, 1847 CD Tracks Plus 28 Tracks On 14 x 7" Vinyl Singles:

1.    Volume 1: 1959-1961, Released January 2005, Catalogue No. Hip-O Select B-0003631-02 (Barcode 602517643310), 6CDs, Ltd Edition of 5000 (Non-Numbered), 155 Tracks, CDs are Volumes 1 to 6

2.    Volume 2: 1962, May 2005, 4CDs, B-00004402-02 (Barcode 602517807552), Ltd Edition of 8000 (Non Numbered), 112 Tracks, Volumes 7 to 10

3.    Volume 3: 1963, October 2005, B-0005352-02 (Barcode 602517845691), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 7500 (Non-Numbered), 119 Tracks, Volumes 11 to 15

4.    Volume 4: 1964, February 2006, B-0005945-02 (Barcode 602517882443), 6CDs, Ltd Edition of 8000 (Non-Numbered), 163 Tracks, Volumes 16 to 21

5.    Volume 5: 1965, August 2006, B-0006775-02 (Barcode 602517789414), 6CDs, Ltd Edition of 8000 (Non-Numbered), 166 Tracks, Volumes 22 to 27

6.    Volume 6: 1966, November 2006, B-0007872-02 (Barcode 602517092761), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 6000 (Non-Numbered), 125 Tracks, Volumes 28 to 32

7.    Volume 7: 1967, May 2007, B-0008993-02 (Barcode 602517341906), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 6000 (Non-Numbered), 120 Tracks, Volumes 33 to 37

8.    Volume 8: 1968, October 2007, B-0009708-02 (Barcode 602517431775), 6CDs, Ltd Edition of 6000 (Non-Numbered), 144 Tracks, Volumes 38 to 43

9.    Volume 9: 1969, December 2007, B-0010270-02 (Barcode 602517507722), 6CDs, Ltd Edition of 6000 (Non-Numbered), 148 Tracks, Volumes 44 to 49

10. Volume 10: 1970, June 2008, B-0011056-02 (Barcode 602517659209), 6CDs, Ltd Edition of 8000 (Non-Numbered), 144 Tracks, Volumes 50 to 55

11. Volume 11A: 1971, February 2009, B-0011579-02 (Barcode 602517776555), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 8000 (Non-Numbered), 119 Tracks, Volumes 56 to 60

12. Volume 11B: 1971, January 2010, B-0012227-02 (Barcode 602517876903), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 8000 (Non Numbered), 120 Tracks, Volumes 61 to 65

13. Volume 12A: 1972, May 2013, B-0012935-02 (Barcode 602527044453)), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 7500 (Non Numbered), 117 Tracks, Volumes 66 to 70

14. Volume 12B: 1972, December 2013, B-0019213-02 (Barcode 602537532193), 5CDs, Ltd Edition of 7500 (Non Numbered), 100 Tracks, Volumes 71 to 75

Tuesday, 19 May 2020

"A Man Needs A Woman" by JAMES CARR – September 1968 US Second Studio LP on Goldwax Records in Stereo, January 1969 UK LP on Bell Records in Stereo - features Duet Vocals with Betty Harris On One Song (March 2003 UK Ace/Kent Soul 'Expanded Edition' 24-Track CD Reissue – Rob Keyloch and Duncan Cowell Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





This Review Along With Nearly 200 Others Is Available in my
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites

"SOUL GALORE!" 
60ts Soul, R&B, Northern Soul
Mod, New Breed, Funk, Jazz Dancers, Rare Grooves
Atlantic, Chess, Motown, Stax Labels and many more... 
 
Your Guide To The Best CD Reissues and Remasters 
Thousands of E-Pages
All Details and In-Depth Reviews From Discs 
(No Cut and Paste Crap)
 
<iframe sandbox="allow-popups allow-scripts allow-modals allow-forms allow-same-origin" style="width:120px;height:240px;" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" src="//ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?ServiceVersion=20070822&OneJS=1&Operation=GetAdHtml&MarketPlace=GB&source=ss&ref=as_ss_li_til&ad_type=product_link&tracking_id=mabasreofcdbl-21&language=en_GB&marketplace=amazon&region=GB&placement=B08YS58MPX&asins=B08YS58MPX&linkId=3962ed6fb1283b3f93519653796b8ade&show_border=true&link_opens_in_new_window=true"></iframe>
 

"...Hurt So Good..."

This typically fabulous Kent Soul CD takes the second and last proper 60ts album of Soul Hero James Carr (the 11-track "A Man Needs A Woman" was issued September 1968 in the States on Goldwax Records in Stereo) and adds on a further 13 Bonus Cuts to make up a 24-Track 'Expanded Edition' CD.

The five extra songs that appeared on the UK 16-track LP issued by Bell Records in January 1969 are represented here by Tracks 12 to 16 - another seven here are from Japanese reissue LPs and US CD compilations originally issued between 1977 and 1995 (Tracks 17 to 23) - and it even throws in a new Previously Unreleased Goldwax Recording for 2003 – a cover version of the Johnny Cash monster "Ring Of Fire" in Stereo.

March 2003's CDKEND 215 actually more than doubles the original American 11-Track LP - and all of it dripping with Southern Soul class (hurt so good indeed). Soul boys and girls love their heroes and this third installment for Ace Records of James Carr's joyous output is clearly a labour of love for them - Tony Rounce's stunning liner notes all but popping out a prayer mat at the end of every paragraph. And truly, with this man's effortlessly soulful renditions - it's easy to hear why. Let's get down with the man who many reckoned always got the best take on the first take...

UK released 31 March 2003 - "A Man Needs A Woman" by JAMES CARR on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 215 (Barcode 029667221528) offers his second studio album from 1968 (USA) in a Remastered Expanded Edition form and plays out as follows (61:22 minutes):

1. A Man Needs A Woman [Side 1 US and UK LP]
2. Stronger Than Love
3. More Love
4. You Didn't Know It But You Had Me
5. A Woman Is A Man's Best Friend
6. I'm A Fool For You
7. Life Turned That Way [Side 2 US and UK LP]
8. Gonna Send You Back To Georgia
9. The Dark End Of The Street
10. I Sowed Love And Reaped A Heartache
11. You've Got My Mind Messed Up
Tracks 1 to 11 are his second studio album "A Man Needs A Woman" - released September 1968 in the USA on Goldwax GW-3002 in Stereo as an 11-Track LP (see 12 to 16 below for the British LP). Track 6 "I'm A Fool For You" is a duet with BETTY HARRIS

12. A Losing Game
13. A Message To Young Lovers
14. Let It Happen
15. You Gotta Have Soul
16. You Hurt So Good
Tracks 12 and 13 are the last two tracks on Side 1 of the 16-track British LP for "A Man Needs A Woman" - released January 1969 in the UK on Bell Records MBLL 113 (Mono) and Bell Records SBLL 113 (Stereo) - the STEREO mixes are used for all 16 tracks on this CD except Track 7 which is in MONO. Tracks 14, 15 and 16 appeared on Side 2 of the British LP after "I Sowed Love And Reaped A Heartache" and with "You Got My Mind Messed Up" as the last song on Side 2.

17. I Can't Turn You Loose
18. Let's Face Facts
19. Who's Been Warming My Oven
20. Please Your Woman
21. Your Love Made A U-Turn
22. The Lifetime Of A Man
23. Tell Me My Lying Eyes Are Wrong
24. Ring Of Fire
Tracks 17, 18 and 22 first appeared on the 1977 Japanese LP "Freedom Train" on Vivid Sound VG 3006
Tracks 19 and 20 first appeared on the 1991 Japanese Expanded CD reissue for "You Messed My Mind Up" on Vivid Sound VGCD-002
Tracks 21 and 23 first appeared on the 1995 US CD "The Complete James Carr, Volume II" on Goldwax GWX 47776
Track 24 is PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED in STEREO (2003)
All tracks in STEREO except Tracks 7 and 17 to 23 in MONO

SINGLES:
Ten of these 24 cuts were also issued as US 45s (in Mono) as follows:

You Got My Mind Messed Up b/w That's What I Want To Know
February 1966 US 45 Single on Goldwax 302
Only the A-side is here, Track 11

The Dark End Of The Street b/w Lovable Girl
December 1966 US 45 Single on Goldwax 317
Only the A-side is here, Track 9

Let It Happen b/w A Losing Game
May 1967 US 45 Single on Goldwax 323
Tracks 14 and 12

Gonna Send You Back To Georgia b/w I'm A Fool For You
August 1967 US 45 Single on Goldwax 328
Tracks 8 and 6

A Man Needs A Woman b/w Stronger Than Love
December 1967 US 45 Single on Goldwax 332
Tracks 1 and 2

Life Turned Her That Way b/w A Message To Young Lovers
July 1968 US 45 Single on Goldwax 335
Tracks 7 and 13

The 16-page booklet features new liner notes from COLIN DILNOT (penned February 2003) with further 'project' notes from TONY ROUNCE - a name every Soul lover trusts. There are some colour repro shots of those uber-desirable Goldwax US 45 labels (323, 328, 332 and 335), a 1967 Otis Redding headlining poster with James Carr on the bill and some colour photos of the classy Soul Man in May 1996 doing live shows with guitarist Johnny Rawls. The Audio comes from ROB KEYLOCH transfers and remixes with DUNCAN COWELL Remasters and kicking is the only word to use.

Carr could boogie with the best of them (Wilson Pickett and Clarence Carter over on Atlantic), a fantastic funky groove in cuts like "A Losing Game" and "Stronger Than Love" - but its the torch ballads that he reaches the heights of Otis and Solomon Burke - storming renditions of the classic "The Dark End Of The Street" and the piano church crawl of "A Woman Is A Man's Best Friend" where the brass fills ache alongside his shimmering performance.

Ace's Trevor Churchill worked at Bell Records in 1968 and 1969 and it was he UK Soul fans can thank for the 16-track British LP. Clever Trev stuck on five bonus cuts – including killers like the 'break your little heart' of "A Message To Young Lovers", the looky-here guitar-and-horns bopper of "You Gotta Have Soul" and the mid-tempo 'I keep hanging around when I know I should go' smooch misery of "You Hurt So Good" (we hear you brother). Amongst the various compilations tracks are goodies too like a cover of Otis Redding's "I Can't Turn You Loose" – a pleader in the shape of the 'you got to be strong' "Let's Face Facts" and a jaunty "Tell Me My Lying Eyes Are Wrong" where our hero drops into a bar on the way home only to find his woman in a dress that invites more than appreciative advances from another man (oh dear). The unreleased Stereo cover of the Johnny Cash classic "Ring Of Fire" is probably the weirdest and worst cut on here. But even if its obvious as to why it was left in the can – it's a small glitch in an otherwise faultless compilation.

James Carr passed in January 2001 – dogged by Bi-Polar problems and demons – a man who should have a huge star. Well with quality reissue labels like Ace and their Kent Soul imprint – the man and his musical legacy carries on. Beautiful stuff and how…

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order