70ts Soul, R 'n' B, Funk, Jazz Fusion
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
Here in the spring of 2024 - this unassuming and admittedly rather naff-looking Soul CD compilation from Rhino and Warner Platinum has been in the UK and EUROPEAN budget-priced marketplace for almost the guts of 20-years. Issued back in March 2006 as Volume 8 of 8 – it was/is a bit-part showcase for the mighty Atlantic Records and their staggering Black Music Legacy.
In fact - none of the eight cheap-and-cheerful "Atlantic Rhythm And Blues 1947-1974" reissue volumes look like much – garish big-lettered front cover art with a piddly gatefold-inlay inside that barely lists titles and artists and not much else. But man oh man the music is fabulous. However, to understand what you have in hand and the journey as to how it got here requires some serious investigative history that is worth explaining (including the photos provided above. So, here goes…
The Seven x Double-Albums VINYL BOX SET for "Atlantic Rhythm And Blues 1947-1974" was first issued in the USA in December 1985 on Atlantic 7-81620-1 and belatedly in the UK in April 1987 on Atlantic 781 620-1. Housed in distinctive black and red packaging (like their Fifties labels) - the individual 2LP sets inside each had unique artwork, extensive liner notes and were also issued as stand-alone 2LP sets.
It then transpired that unspecified tracks across the whole seven-volume kaboodle had the wrong takes used. Atlantic USA decided to rectify this and reissue the entire box set again but with more tracks and only on CD. So in October 1991 "Atlantic Rhythm And Blues 1947-1974" was relaunched on Atlantic 7 82305-2 in the USA (Barcode 075678230523) - but this time as an 8CD 12" x 12" box set with 203 tracks (17 extra). The individual booklets that came with the original 7CDs were taken out (replaced with a simple gatefold track list inlays that used the old arywork) and expanded into a full-sized 36-page booklet. The reissue also used the distinctive black and red packaging of the 1985 vinyl box on the front, and the artwork style remained the same for each CD on the inside (collage photos). It also admitted that mistaken masters had been used on the original set but were now all correct. It was ONLY issued as an 8CD Box Set and ONLY in America.
In March 2006 in the UK and Europe however, these 8 Volumes were reissued as stand-alone CDs for the first time (no vinyl), but with different artwork (I have pictured both). They were also released without the booklets that accompanied the 1987 issues or the 1991 reissue box - just basic inlays.
Atlantic Rhythm & Blues 1947-1974 Volume 8: 1970-1974
UK/Europe released 20 March 2006 on Rhino/Atlantic/Warner Platinum 8122-77583-2 (Barcode 081227758325) – 20 Tracks, 73:26 minutes, 5 Bonuses:
1. Don't Play That Song (You Lied) – ARETHA FRANKLIN (2:57 minutes)
US 45: July 1970, Atlantic 45-2751, A-side
UK 45: August 1970, UK Atlantic 2091 027, A-side
US LP: "Spirit In The Dark", August 1970 on Atlantic SD 8265
UK LP: "Don't Play That Song", September 1970 on Atlantic 2400 021
US 45: August 1970, Atlantic 45-2681, B-side of "Willpower"
UK 45: February 1971, Atlantic 2091 054, A-side with "Willpower" as the B
US LP: "Sweet Charlie Babe", 1973 on Atlantic SD 7285
UK LP: "Sweet Charlie Babe", 1973 on Atlantic K 40544
LP also contains "Willpower"
US 45: September 1970, Chimneyville CH-435, B-side of "What Our Love Needs" – US DJs played the flipside "Groove Me" and it then became the dominant hit
UK 45: Jan 1971, Atlantic 2091 051, A-side
US LP: "King Floyd", May 1971 on Cotillion SD 9047
UK LP: "King Floyd", 1971 on Atlantic 2466014
US 45: July 1970, Atlantic 45-2748, A-side
UK 45: September 1970, Atlantic 2091 030, A-side
US LP: "Patches", October 1970 on Atlantic SD-8267
UK LP: "Patches", November 1970 on Atlantic 2400 027
US 45: April 1971, Atlantic 45-2797, A-side
UK 45: July 1971, Atlantic 2091 124, A-side
US LP: "Don't Knock My Love", December 1971 on Atlantic SD 8300
UK LP: "Don't Knock My Love", December 1971 on Atlantic K 40319
US 45: March 1971, Alston 4595, A&B-sides
UK 45: July 1971, Atlantic 2091 097, A&B-sides
US LP: "Funky Nassau", 1971 on Alston SD 33-379
UK LP: "Funky Nassau", 1974 on Atlantic K 40304
US 45: July 1971, Atco 45-6822, A-side
UK 45: November 1971, Debut on Atlantic 2091 164, A-side
US LP: "Thin Line Between Love And Hate", 1972 on Win Or Lose SD 33-387
UK LP: "Thin Line Between Love And Hate", 1972 on Atlantic K 40370
US 45: October 1971, Atlantic 45-2838, A-side
UK 45: November 1971, Atlantic 2091 168, A-side
US 45: February 1972, Atlantic 45-2866, A-side
UK 45: March 1972, UK Atlantic K 10154, A-side
Tracks 8 and 9
US LP: "Young, Gifted & Black", January 1972 on Atlantic SD 7213
UK LP: "Young, Gifted & Black", January 1972 on Atlantic K 40323
US 45: May 1971, Atlantic 45-2808, A-side
UK 45: June 1971, Atlantic 2091 116, A-side
A Carole King cover version (from her February 1971 LP "Tapestry"; also a hit for James Taylor from his April 1971 LP "Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon")
US LP: "Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway", May 1972 on Atlantic SD 7216
UK LP: "Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway", June 1972 on Atlantic K 40380
US 45: November 1971, Alston A-4601, A-side
UK 45: March 1972, Atlantic K 10143, A-side
US LP: "I Love The Way You Love", February 1972 on Alston SD 33-388
UK LP: "I Love The Way You Love", March 1972 on Atlantic K 40364
US 45: December 1972, Atlantic 45-2927, A-side
UK 45: April 1973, Atlantic K 10283, A-side as The Detroit Spinners
US LP: "Spinners", March 1973 on Atlantic SD 7256
UK LP: "The Detroit Spinners", May 1973 on Atlantic K 40477
US 45: January 1973, Atlantic 45-2940, A-side
UK 45: February 1973, Atlantic K 10282, A-side
US 45: April 1972, Atlantic 45-2879, A-side
UK 45: July 1972, UK Atlantic K 10202, A-side
US LP: "Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway", May 1972 on Atlantic SD 7216
UK LP: "Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway", June 1972 on Atlantic K 40380
US 45: July 1972, Atlantic 45-2904, B-side of "How Could I Let You Get Away"
UK 45: September 1972, Atlantic K 10243, B-side of "How Could I Let You Get Away" – credited as The Spinners in both the USA and UK - although they were known as THE DETROIT SPINNERS in the UK. Sometime in September or October 1972, the British 45 was then flipped and reissued with "I'll Be Around" listed as the A-side and the band finally credited as The Detroit Spinners. The backing band was essentially MFSB – Norman Harris on Guitar, Ronnie Baker on Bass and Earl Young on Drums
US LP: "Spinners", March 1973 on Atlantic SD 7256
UK LP: "The Detroit Spinners", March 1973 on Atlantic K 40477
US 45: July 1974, Atlantic 45-3203, A-side
UK 45: June 1974, Atlantic K 10467, A-side
US 45: April 1973, Atlantic 45-2962, A-side
UK 45: July 1973, Atlantic K 10311, A-side, credited as The Detroit Spinners
US LP: "Spinners", March 1973 on Atlantic SD 7256
UK LP: "The Detroit Spinners", March 1973 on Atlantic K 40477
US 45: March 1974, Atco 45-6961, A-side
UK 45: August 1974, Atlantic K 10494. A-side
US 45: January 1974, Atlantic 45-3006, A-side
UK 45: March 1974, Atlantic K 10416, A-side, credited as The Detroit Spinners
NOTE: The playing time is mistakenly noted on the rear and in the inlay as 3:19 minutes but it plays the Full LP version at 4:55 minutes; the 4:55 minutes playing time was noted correctly as such on the 1991 US Box Set issue
US 45: February 1975, Atlantic 45-3248, A-side
UK 45: July 1975, UK Atlantic K 10585, A-side
* Tracks 2, 5, 9, 17 and 18 are five 1991 Bonus Tracks not on the 1985 US 7 x 2LP Vinyl Box Set or the individual 1987 UK 7 x CD versions
Some had complained about the sound quality on the original 1987 CDs - as well as wrong versions of songs being used (personally I found the audio quality of the VINYL doubles to be superlative). So Atlantic made efforts with the 1991 CD reissue which is what these 2006 Euro issues are based on. That 1991 Box Set told us that all tracks were "digitally remastered from mono and true stereo originals" and that "in this edition, the proper tracks have been used in all cases" (these 2006 quote the same). BOBBY WARNER and JIMMY DOUGLAS carried out the Digital Transfers while ZAL SCHREIBER and STEVE INNOCENZI did the mastering. The quality on these CDs is shockingly good - full of life and clarity. Each is a joy to listen to. Sure in the decades since there have been reissues (by Bear Family especially) that knock spots off the 1991 sound (try their "Joe Turner Rocks" or their "Sweet Soul Music" volumes 1961 to 1975 – I have reviewed all of them). But what you do get is fantastic all the way to the finish. To the tunes…
The Aretha opener "Don't Play That Song (You Lied)" has never been one of my faves, but even on an average day - The Queen of Soul rocked and her vocal in the tune is fabulous. Dealing in dirt and looking at love as a two-way street - Jackie Moore stumps up Volume 8's first genuine classic and a largely forgotten sexy groove - her "Precious Precious" - a fantastic groover presented here in gloriously clear audio. Speaking of hey-there-sugar-dumpling - King Floyd struck B-side gold with his own "Groove Me" - all sock-it-to-me-mama Seventies Funk that still sounds so contemporary. Legend has it that blind Soul Singer and Songwriter Clarence Carter hated doing "Patches" and I can understand why - singing its truths must have felt both hick and hurtful at one and the same time. I can understand why it was a chart stormer back in the day, but in 2024 its 'washed all the crops away' story telling is something I don't want to ever hear.
In 2024 and despite being technically deleted, you can get Volume 8 of 8 of Atlantic Rhythm & Blues 1947-1974 (or any of the others) individually on popular auction sites often for less than four quid. There was even a flimsy card wrap version in March 2006 that put all eight together as an all-in budget-priced package – usually available for about £30 to £35.