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Friday 5 March 2021

"Big New York Soul: Wand Records 1961-1966" by CHUCK JACKSON – Previously Unreleased Material (including a duet with Dionne Warwick), Alternate Versions, Rare Wand 45s, LP Cuts and Originally Unissued 60ts Wand and Scepter Recordings Previously Only Available On Vinyl and CD Compilations from the 1980s and 1990s (September 2017 UK Ace/Kent Soul CD Compilation – Duncan Cowell Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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"...All About You..."

A heady if not entirely unsuccessful stew of eight previously unreleased 60ts tracks, alternate variants of popular back catalogue hits, two deep LP cuts and ten lesser-heard Wand Records 45s into the bargain. Top that lot off with four vinyl-only compilation tracks from long deleted 80ts LPs/90s CDs and an unheard duet with Dionne Warwick from 1963 and you're set. 

Although I will confess to not loving obvious filler like his (not surprisingly) unreleased cover of the spy theme "The Silencer" (originally done by Vikki Carr) - this is still a typically classy Kent Soul release for the Mod-beloved Chuck Jackson from England's Ace Records. Let's not waste a second and have at the Manhattan Soul from "Big New York..." 

UK released 29 September 2017 - "Big New York Soul: Wand Records 1961-1966" by CHUCK JACKSON on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 465 (Barcode 029667083027) is a 24-Track CD compilation of Remasters that plays out as follows (64:05 minutes): 

1. Things Just Ain't Right (2017, Previously Unissued 28 March 1965 Wand recording)

2. Little By Little (Originally Unissued 28 October 1965 Wand recording, first appeared on the September 1987 UK CJ compilation LP "A Powerful Soul" on Kent KENT 073 - see also Track 16)

3. Hand It Over (February 1964 US 45-single on Wand 149, A-side)

4. Big New York (September 1963 US 45-single on Wand 141, A-side - Ed Townsend song)

5. King Of The Mountain (from the 1963 "Encore!" LP on Wand LP 655 in Mono)

6. Another Day (from the 1963 "Encore!" LP on Wand LP 655 in Mono)

7. Need To Belong (2017, Previously Unissued 28 October 1965 Wand recording)

8. For All Time (May 1964 US 45-single on Wand 154, Second Issue B-side of "Beg Me" - see also Track 15)

9. If I Didn't Love You (July 1965 US 45-single on Wand 188, A-side)

10. The Same Old Story (March 1961 US 45-single on Wand 108, B-side of "(It Never Happens) In Real Life"

11. Why Some People Don't Like Me (2017, Previously Unissued 21 May 1964 Wand recording)

12. What You Gonna' Say (January 1962 US 45-single on Wand 119, A-side)

13. I've Got To Be Strong (October 1966 US 45-single on Wand WN-1142, A-side)

14. The Silencer (Originally unissued 1965-6 recording, first issued May 1992 on the Various Artists US 3CD Compilation "Capricorn Records Presents The Scepter Records Story" on Capricorn 9 42003 2 - a Vikki Carr cover version)

15.  This Broken Heart (That You Gave Me) (May 1964 US 45-single on Wand 154, First Issue B-side of "Beg Me" - see also Track 10 for second issue B-side)

16. Forget About Me (Originally Unissued 28 October 1965 Wand recording, first appeared on the September 1987 UK CJ compilation LP "A Powerful Soul" on Kent KENT 073 - see also Track 2)

17. Meet Me Half Way (2017, Previously Unissued 1962 recording)

18. And That's Saying A Lot (April 1966 US 45-single on Wand WN-1119, B-side of "All In My Mind")

19. Through My Tears (2017, Previously Unissued 1962 recording)

20. Getting Ready For The Heartbreak (October 1962 US 45-single on Wand 128, A-side)

21. In Between Tears (2017, Previous Unissued version of Wand 128 B-side (A-side is Track 20). First appeared on the August 1986 UK compilation LP "The Magic Touch" on Kent KENT 057)

22. All About You (2017, Previously Unissued 1962-3 recording)

23. Anymore [Duet with DIONNE WARWICK] (2017, Previously Unissued 1963-4 recording)

24. Why, Why, Why (2017, Previously Unissued 28 October 1965 Wand recording)

All Tracks in MONO except Track 1 in STEREO
Tracks 1, 7, 11, 17, 19, 22, 23 and 24 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

Ace/Kent Soul really does the biz-schnizz by these jam-packed booklets, and this 20-page info/pic-fest is no different. ADY CROASDELL has compiled and done the comprehensive liner notes - his text peppered with Wand Records trade adverts and period promotional material, concert posters in colour, Cash Box magazine issues repro'd, photos of Chuck with his Scepter Records ladies in crime The Shirelles and an ultra-rare acetate of the "Little By Little" track. They have even given a page over to a gorgeous 1966 Japanese picture sleeve for the "I've Got To Be Strong" 45 – something I've never seen in all my years in rarities. 

Long-standing Audio Engineer DUNCAN COWELL has done the deed by the tapes and transfers - most all of it in punchy Mono - sounding fresh and alive. To the tunes...

Over the top strings and brass greet you for the common-man tune "King Of The Mountain" and strangulated Egyptian shakers on "Another Day" - but while his vocals are great - I could personally live without these sub-Coasters tunes. Closing up all of his windows so no one can see, Chuck sobs as he informs of his totally innocent behaviour. Why, 'cause he's "Getting Ready For The Heartbreak" (gorgeous audio on those girly vocals, guitars and organ). 

Mod lovers go for his "Beg Me" big time - a sought-after stop-start-rhythm dancer with a fantastic wild chorus - Ace featured it on their May 2016 CD compilation "Modernism". Say you need my arms, he pleads in the frantic "Hand It Over" and I'd forgotten the sheer melodrama of "Forget About Me" - certainly the version hidden on KENT 073 all these decades. A man of very few words, you have to love the full-on I'm-gonna-die melodrama in "And That's Saying A Lot" – a forgotten 45 side presented here with great audio. 

The unreleased stuff is a very mixed bag of good and just plain crap. Although the vocals are a little too far back in the mix, "Need To Belong" is a lovely find – a slow sexy melody. You can so hear though why "In Broken Tears" and "Why Some People Don't Like Me" remained in the can – starting out slow and then going into a beat that is just plain awkward and confused – both would have died on radio. "Things Just Ain't Right" opens the CD in startling Stereo while the thought-you-loved-me-too of "Little By Little" is an excellent boohoo moaner, presented here in top-class audio. The big disappointment is the Dionne Warwick duet "Anymore" where her lead vocal (followed by him a few verses later) is somehow lost way back in the mix. It makes for a pleasant Bacharach/David Pop-Soul moment, but also feels like unfinished business few wanted to actually complete. At least the CD ends on "Why, Why, Why" – a nice slice on Northern Soul-ish melodrama. 

There are other Chuck Jackson CDs (loads in fact) that cover the eight or so albums he put out on Wand, never mind his stint with Motown and that Bacharach/David monster "Any Day Now". But "Big New York Soul" goes deeper than most into the singles and rarities (there are B-sides here I'm quite sure you can't find anywhere else) and I for one like this off-the-beaten track compilation for just that. 

Chuck Jackson's "Big New York Soul: Wand Records 1961-1966" is not all genius by any stretch, but there is enough to keep devotees faithful. And when you hear that voice, you know why they loved him in the first place...

Thursday 4 March 2021

"Atlantic Vocal Groups {1951-1963}" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (June 2008 US Rhino Handmade 4CD 82-Track LP-Sized Box Set – Limited Numbered Edition of 3000 Copies - Billy Vera Compiled Selections – Bill Inglot and Dan Hersch Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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"…Since I Fell For You…"

A sister box to "Atlantic Blues {1949-1970}" released Stateside in September 2007 - "Atlantic Vocal Groups {1951-1963}" by VARIOUS ARTISTS followed in June 2008 on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7738 (Barcode 603497773824). The third themed set was "Atlantic Soul {1959-1975}" – see list provided below.

It's pretty to look at for sure - all three themed sets are. You get 4CDs and 82-Tracks in 4 x 5" picture card sleeves housed in die-cut lipped hollows inside a 12" x 12" Silk Screen Printed Box Set. The 32-page LP-Sized booklet inside is numbered to 3000 (on the last page) and it all breaks down as follows:

Disc 1, "Jumpin' & Bluesy", THE CLOVERS pictured, 21 tracks, 55:31 minutes:
1. Hey Miss Fannie - THE CLOVERS (1952, Atlantic 977, B-side of "I Played The Fool")
2. One Mint Julep - THE CLOVERS (1951, Atlantic 963, A)
3. Yes It's You - THE CLOVERS (1952, Atlantic 989, B-side of "Crawlin'")
4. Bip Bam - CLYDE McPHATTER and THE DRIFTERS (1953, Atlantic 1043, A)
5. I Confess - THE CLOVERS (1953, Atlantic 1045, A)
6. Don't Dog Me - THE DRIFTERS (1953, Atlantic 2049, A)
7. The Feeling is So Good - THE CLOVERS (1953. Atlantic 1046, A)
8. Ooh I - CARMEN TAYLOR & THE BOLEROS 1954. Atlantic 1041, A)
9. Whatcha Gonna Do  - CLYDE McPHATTER & THE DRIFTERS (1954, Atlantic 1055, A)
10. Sh-Boom - THE CHORDS (1954, Cat 104, A)
11. Cross Over The Bridge - THE CHORDS (1954, Cat 104, B)
12. Your Cash Ain't Nothin' But Trash - THE CLOVERS (1954, Atlantic 1035, A)
13. Tell Me (Are You Really Mine) - THE PLAYBOYS (1954, Cat 108, A)
14. Zippity Zum (I'm In Love) - THE CHORDS (1954, Cat 109, A)
15. Got The Water Boiling - THE REGALS (1955, Atlantic 1062, A)
16. Good Golly Miss Molly - THE PLAYBOYS (1954, Cat 115, A)
17. Walk That Walk - THE SHEIKS (9154, Cat 116, A)
18. Could It Be - THE SH-BOOMS (1954, Cat 117, A)
19. You Tickle Me Baby - THE ROYAL JOKERS (1955, Atlantic 6052, A)
20. Nip Sip - THE CLOVERS (1955, Atlantic 1073, A)
21. Come Back My Love - THE CARDINALS (1955, Atlantic 1067, A)

Disc 2, "Slow & Dreamy", THE CARDINALS pictured, 20 tracks, 57:16 minutes:
1. Skylark - THE CLOVERS (1951, Atlantic 934, B-side of "Don't You Know I Love You")
2. Needless - THE CLOVERS (1951, Atlantic 944, B-side of "Fool, Fool, Fool")
3. I'll Always Love You - THE CARDINALS (1951, Atlantic 952, A)
4. I Played The Fool - THE CLOVERS (1952, Atlantic 977, A)
5. Under A Blanket Of Blue - THE CARDINALS (1954, Atlantic 1025, B-side of "Please Baby")
6. A Beggar For Your Kisses - THE DIAMONDS  (1952, Atlantic 981, A)
7. The Way I Feel - CLYDE McPHATTER and THE DRIFTERS (1953, Atlantic 1006, A)
8. You Are My Only Love - THE CARDINALS (1953, Atlantic 995, B-side of "Lovie Darlin'")
9. Two Loves Have I - THE DIAMONDS (1952, Atlantic 1003, B-side of "I'll Live Again")
10. Here Goes A Fool - THE CLOVERS (1953, Atlantic 1000, B-side of "Good Lovin'")
11. Bless You (For Being An Angel) - THE CHORDS (1954, Cat 109, A)
12. Cherry - THE DIAMONDS  (1953, Atlantic 1017, B-side of "Romance In The Dark")
13. The Bells Of St. Mary's - THE DRIFTERS featuring Clyde McPhatter (1954, Atlantic 1048, B-side of "White Christmas")
14. Blue Velvet - THE CLOVERS (1954, Atlantic 1052, A)
15. A Girl To Love - THE CHORDETTES (1955, Cat 112, A)
16. The Door Is Still Open - THE CARDINALS (1955, Atlantic 1054, A)
17. Adorable - THE DRIFTERS (1955, Atlantic 1078, A)
18. Sympathy - THE SENSATIONS featuring TOMMY WICKS (1955, Atco 6056, B-side of "Yes Sir, That's My Baby")
19. Devil Or Angel - THE CLOVERS (1955, Atlantic 1083, A)
20. Your Promise To Be Mine - THE DRIFTERS 1955, Atlantic 1089, B-side of "Ruby Baby")

Disc 3 "The Rock 'n' Roll Era", THE DRIFTERS pictured, 20 tracks, 49:30 minutes:
1. Ruby Baby - THE DRIFTERS (1955, Atlantic 1089, A)
2. Please Mr. Disc Jockey - THE SENSATIONS featuring YVONNE MILLS (1956, Atlantic 6067, A)
3. Shadows Of Love - THE PEARLS (1955, Atco 6057, A)
4. Brazil - THE COASTERS (1956, Atco 6073, B-side of "One Kiss Lead To Another")
5. Drifting Away From You - THE DRIFTERS (1957, Atlantic 1141, B-side of "Hypnotized")
6. Mr. Lee - THE BOBETTES (1956, Atlantic 1144, A)
7. Bells Of Love - THE PEARLS (1955, Atco 6066, A)
8. Hey Baby Baby - THE CASTELLES (1956, Atlantic 6069, B-side of "Happy And Gay")
9. Cry Baby Cry - THE SENSATIONS featuring YVONNE MILLS (1956, Atlantic 6075, A)
10. Finders Keepers - THJE CRESENDOS (1956, Atlantic 1109, B-side of "Sweet Dreams")
11. Fools Fall In Love - THE DRIFTERS (1956, Atlantic 1123, A)
12. My Only Desire - THE FLYERS (1956, Atco 6088, B-side of "On Bended Knee")
13. Lone Lonely Nights - CLYDE McPHATTER (1957, Atlantic 1149, A)
14. It's Good To Me (You Don't Know And I Don't Know) - THE OSPREYS with Reggie Obrecht Orchestra (1957, East West 110, A)
15. Pledge Of Love - THE PENGUINS (1957, Atlantic 1132, A)
16.  The Girl I Love - THE GLOWTONES (1957, East West 101, A and Atlantic 1156, A)
17. Drip Drop - THE DRIFTERS (1958, Atlantic 1187, A)
18. Can't You Understand - THE KING BEES/LLOYD PRICE ORCHESTRA (1957, KRC 302, A)
19. Down In The Alley - THE CLOVERS (1957, Atlantic 1152, A)
20. I Know - THE DRIFTERS (1957, Atlantic 1161, A)

Disc 4, "Group Revival", THE ROMEOS pictured, 21 tracks, 51:18 minutes:
1. I Shot Mr. Lee - THE BOBETTES (1959, Atlantic 2069, A)
2. Lady Love - THE DEL-LARKS (1958, East West 116, A)
3. Dance! - THE COASTERS (1958, Atco 6111, A)
4. Remember The Night - THE DEL-LARKS (B-side of 2)
5. Nosey Neighbors - THE VIBRA-HARPS (1958, Atlantic 6134, A)
6. I'll Be Seeing You - THE CRESCENDOS (1956, Atlantic 2014, A)
7. Lost Love - THE SUPERIORS (1957, Atco 6106, A)
8. Romance In The Dark - THE SENSATIONS featuring YVONNE MILLS (1957, Atco 6115, A)
9. Moments To Remember You By - THE ROMEOS (1957, Atco 6107, A)
10. Zing Went The Strings Of My Heart - THE COASTERS (1958, Atco 6116, A)
11. Bila - THE VERSATONES (1963, Atlantic 2211, A)
12. Since I Fell For You - THE SKYLINERS (1963, Atlantic 6270, A)
13. Blue Moon - THE SH-BOOMS 1960,Atlantic 2074, A)
14. Dear One - BILLY STORM (1961, Atlantic 2098, A)
15. Short Skirts - THE SH-BOOMS (B-side of 13)
16. Tight Skirt And Sweater - THE VERSATONES (1963, Atlantic 2211, A)
17. When You Dance - BILLY STORM (B-side of 14, Both Sides Supervised by PHIL SPECTOR)
18. Twist And Shout - THE TOP NOTES (1961, Atlantic 2115, A)
19. Hearts Of Stone - THE TOP NOTES (1961, Atlantic 2097, A)
20. Pretty Pretty Girl (The New Beat) - THE TIME TONES (1961, Atco 6201, A)
21. A Kiss From Your Lips - BILLY STORM (1961, Atlantic 2112, B-side of "Honey Love", Supervised by PHIL SPECTOR)





CONTENT and PRESENTATION:
Taking a look at the paltry playing times provided above - the first disappointment is the scrimping of song inclusions. Less than fifty minutes on Disc 3 for God's sake. A box like this should have had at least 25 sides a disc and more. Three sides of the ultra-rare DIAMONDS trio of 45s are featured when there was plenty of room for their 3 flips. And while the booklet is genuinely lovely to look at - it's short at 32 pages. There's other annoying discrepancies - none of the individual entries tell you whether the song is an A or B (I've put in the info myself) - singles are credited as THE DRIFTERS featuring Clyde McPhatter when it's the other way around (even though they've actually pictured the offending entry) - THE CARDINALS "Under A Blanket Of Blue" is credited as 1951 when its 1954. The BILLY VERA liner notes are typically informative and entertaining - but there's precious little of them. For a box set aimed firmly at die-hard collectors - some of it seems a tad sloppy and even lazy for a company with such a quality reputation. But at least all that's rectified by the actually play of each CD...

SOUND:
Long-standing tape engineers BILL INGLOT and DAN HERSCH have done a wonderful job with the remastering despite the age of these recordings. Another cool side to this set is hearing tracks that have remained in obscurity for decades - even if they're dubbed from discs or worn tapes (which only a tiny minority are). "Yes It's You" is the first track to show slight distortion but it's a fabulous B-side and worthy of inclusion as is "Cross Over The Bridge" by THE CHORDS on Cat Records. Other rarities include THE DIAMONDS "A Beggar For Your Kisses" (listed at over $1,500) and THE CLOVERS B-side "Skylark" (listed at a paltry $1,000). Another nugget is "Could It Be" by THE SH-BOOMS sounding like seaside Vocal R'n'B with its organ and boppin' beat. "You Tickle Me Baby" by THE ROYAL JOKERS is the most fun with one of the group giggling hysterically throughout.  

The audio quality on THE CARDINALS jaunty "Come Back My Love" is fabulous - what a gem (in the vein of The Clovers and McPhatter's Drifters). Disc 2 pours on the pleading and smoochers ("You Are My Only Love") while Disc 3 boogies it with cool dancers like "Fools Fall In Love" and "Drip Drop". Disc 4 gives a lesser beaten-track - the Vocal Group revivals in the Sixties - even throwing in some rare Phil Spector tie-ins (see Billy Storm). Great stuff and makes me wish there was a Volume 2. 

Despite its shortcomings (playing time especially) - this is a gorgeous Box Set to behold and listen to. And because it's the magical Atlantic label - I had to own it. I suggest you do too...

RHINO Handmade Series of Themed Atlantic Records Box Sets
Numbered Limited Editions of 3000 Copies
Compiled by BILLY VERA – DAN HERSCH and BILL INGLOT Remasters
All Reviewed...

1. "Atlantic Blues {1949-1970}" - September 2007 USA on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7737 (Barcode 603497773725) - it contains 4CDs/80-Tracks in 5" picture card sleeves housed in die-cut hollows in a 12" x 12" Silk Screen Printed Box Set. Inside is a 36-page full-sized booklet, numbered to 3000 on the last page.

2. "Atlantic Soul {1959-1975}" – October 2007 USA on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7739 (Barcode 603497773923) – it contains 4CDs/82-Tracks in 5" picture card sleeves housed in die-cut hollows in a 12" x 12" Silk Screen Printed Box Set. Inside is a 36-page full-sized booklet, numbered to 3000 on the last page.

3. "Atlantic Vocal Groups {1951-1963}" - June 2008 USA on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7738 (Barcode 603497773824) – it contains 4CDs/82-Tracks in 5" picture card sleeves are housed in hollows inside a 12" x 12" Silk Screen Printed Box Set. Inside is a 32-page full-sized booklet, numbered to 3000 on the last page.

Peanut Butter Falcon (The) - A Review of the 2019 Film Starring Shia LeBeouf, Zak Gottsagen, Dakota Johnson, Bruce Dern, Thomas Haden-Church, John Hawkes and Yelawolf - A Review by Mark Barry...


"...All Of My Wishes..."

The Peanut Butter Falcon – Film Review  

I know we've been to this territory before and as the weary father of a 30-year old son with severe Autism - this film would have a lot of triggers for me that are too painful to even think about.

Based in North Carolina, the barely surviving fishing town and inappropriate care home settings where Tyler and Zak live are scenic yet sparse and peopled with believable characters who are just as broke as our heroes (Shia LeBeouf and Zak Gottsagen in the lead roles as Tyler and Zak). 

In lonely flashbacks, Tyler dreams of his bigger brother Mark and their beer nights, laughs by the fish pots, nets and traps – an obvious anchor in his aimless life (Jon Bernthal making a huge impression even if he does get little to say). But then just one-step away from yet another confrontational kicking, fate trusts a chubby young man at Tyler with a pudding-bowl haircut, stunted speech, white underpants and not a lot else to his name. Tyler can either leave him this obviously ill protected person by the wooden quayside or take him on-board, a reluctant decision at first that will eventually change him – and for the better.

The naive Zak and turmoil-inside Tyler are both almost childishly headstrong, their confront-or-die way of living often bringing them more grief than satisfaction – constantly in the face of authorities that are either too despondent or tired to care. Other times people chase our duo with guns and could indeed use them (the multi-tattooed Yelawolf and John Hawkes). The simple-talking Zak is easily led too, so vulnerable and open to abuse by rednecks - while Tyler just wishes he could rise above the filth of his teeshirt and baseball cap sometimes.

As they walk miles on foot through heat and flies and tall fields, traverse dangerous rivers and float on makeshift rafts through glades and light fires and catch fish on beaches where they can sleep free and dream - their car-crash lives somehow melt into an unlikely friendship - one escaping past mistakes – the other seeking a wrestling coach he has seen on video tapes (Thomas Haden Church). Tyler just wants to get one thing right, and doing right by this unguarded and wound-exposed young man could be it.

The casting is extraordinarily good, with top actors who you suspect know they're working on a wee gem. And the two leads - Shia LeBeouf and Zak Gottsagen - knock it out of the ballpark so many times as their characters move begrudgingly towards each other.

Added into the stew, the beautiful Dakota Johnson plays Eleanor - a young lady carer for this vulnerable Downs Syndrome man who is at the mercy of the system. It was maybe her trusting fault that let Zak free in the first place and now her boss wants him found regardless. Zak has no back-up family to route for him and after escape could be considered a flight risk. As she goes door to door in her neatly sprayed care-home van, Eleanor knows that Zak could be sent someplace much worse. Helped all of this along the way – we also get the gruff real-world charms of Bruce Dern, Thomas Haden-Church and John Hawkes - actors who lift anything up that they lend a hand to.

"The Peanut Butter Falcon" is a little film with a big heart and traversing such dangerous waters as 'special needs' and highly unlikely bonds while on the run - it still managed to move me, made me laugh and occasionally had dialogue between the two lost souls that made blubb.

As they float on their makeshift raft into an unknown and maybe even hostile future – simple Zak notices Tyler is lost in another head-down low moment. So putting his arm around his bearded gruff new buddy, Zak helpfully offers - "...I am going to give you all my wishes for my birthday..." (a big deal for him). My equally worn-out missus cried at dialogue like this - a genuinely beautiful moment.

"The Peanut Butter Falcon" is a hopeful tale of humanity winning in a world too often lacking either. Well done to all involved...

Wednesday 3 March 2021

"Atlantic Soul {1959-1975}" by VARIOUS ARTISTS – Single and Album Tracks from Ray Charles, LaVern Baker, The Ohio Untouchables, Solomon Burke, Patti Labelle, Doris Troy, Carla Thomas, Tommy Hunt, Aretha Franklin, Ben E. King, Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Walter Jackson, Judy Clay, The Dynamics, The Sweet Inspirations, Howard Tate, Donny Hathaway, Jackie Moore, King Floyd, The Spinners, Sam & Dave, Baby Washington, The Persuaders, Hall & Oates and more (October 2007 USA Rhino Handmade 4CD 82-Track LP-Sized Box Set – Billy Vera Compiled Selection - Bill Inglot and Dan Hersch Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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"…Come See About Me…"

Given the label – Atlantic Records – and the reputation/legend of the reissue company involved – Rhino and the hugely sought-after releases of their Mail-Order division Rhino Handmade Records – then 2007's "Atlantic Soul {1959-1975}" should have been a shoe-in for masterpiece with a bullet. 

But – and this is a genuine surprise to me - the actual listen and its slightly jarring presentation go against it way more than a fan would like. Rarities often don't make for good plays – they're just rare. And this Box Set all too often includes the obscure over the joyous. Rhino Handmade would argue that that's what they were all about – providing for the deep dive collector. I just wish that in this case, the playback would elicit the excitement in me the title of the set does. 

Rhino Handmade issued three Box Sets in this BILLY VERA-compiled LP-Sized series - each 4CD set with a generic silk-screened sepia-look, a 32 to 36-Page LP-Sized Booklet (Limited Numbered Edition on the last page, 3000 copies), silk-screen look Picture Card Sleeves inside lipped die-cut trays and new Remasters courtesy of long-time Audio Engineers for Rhino and WEA – BILL INGLOT and DAN HERSCH. But the best way to explain is to go into details. Let's have at them...

USA released 31 October 2007 – "Atlantic Soul {1959-1975}" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7739 (Barcode 603497773923) is a 4CD 82-Track LP-Sized Themed Box Set of Remasters that breaks down as follows (all catalogue numbers are either US 45-singles or LPs unless otherwise stated):

CD1 (from 1959 to 1964, 49:28 minutes, 20 tracks, Solomon Burke pictured):
1. Come Rain Or Shine - RAY CHARLES (November 1960, Atlantic 45-2084, A-side)
2. You're The Boss - LaVERN BAKER & JIMMY RICKS (December 1960, Atlantic 45-2090, A-side)
3. On The Horizon - BEN E. KING (April 1961, Atco 45-6194, B-side of "Stand By Me")
4. Your Old Lady - THE ISLEY BROTHERS (July 1961, Atlantic 45-2110, B-side of "Write To Me")
5. I'm Blue (The Gong-Gong Song) - THE IKETTES (November 1961, Atco 45-6212, A-side)
6. Daddy Rollin' Stone - JIMMY RICKS & THE RAVES (March 1962, Atco 6220, B-side of "Homesick")
7. Darling - THE FALCONS (June 1962, Atlantic 2153, A-side - features WILSON PICKETT on Lead Vocals)
8. Stupidity - SOLOMON BURKE (July 1963, Atlantic 45-2196, B-side of "Can't Nobody Love You")
9. My Man - He's A Lovin' Man - BETTY LaVETT (September 1962, Atlantic 45-2160, A-side)
10. Take This Love I've Got - THE FALCONS (February 1963, Atlantic 45-2179, A-side - features WILSON PICKETT)
11. Just One Look - DORIS TROY (April 1963, Atlantic 45-2188, A-side)
12. Love Is Amazing - OHIO UNTOUCHABLES (May 1963, Lu Pine L-1010, B-side of "Forgive Me Darling")
13. (Do The) Mashed Potatoes - Part 1 - NAT KENDRICKS & THE SWANS (1963, Dade 45-5004, A-side)
14. He'll Have To Go - SOLOMON BURKE (January 1964, Atlantic 45-2218, A-side)
15. My Girl Sloopy - THE VIBRATIONS (February 1964, Atlantic 45-2221, A-side)
16. I'm Tired - OHIO UNTOUCHABLES (February 1964, Lu Pine L-1011, A-side)
17. Mojo Hannah - LITTLE ESTHER PHILLIPS (May 1964, Atlantic 45-2229, A-side)
18. Baby I'm Coming Home - MACK RICE (March 1964, Lu Pine L-1019, B-side of "My Baby")
19. I'm Gonna Cry - WILSON PICKETT (June 1964, Atlantic 45-2233, A-side)
20. I've Got No Time To Lose - CARLA THOMAS (July 1964, Atlantic 45-2238, A-side)

CD2 (from 1964 to 1967, 57:37 minutes, 21 tracks, Ben E. King pictured):
1. Come See About Me - DON COVAY (from the 1964 US LP "Mercy" on Atlantic 8104 in Mono)
2. I Found A Love Oh What A Love - JO ANN & TROY (October 1964, Atlantic 45-2256, A-side - Jo Ann Campbell and Troy Seals)
3. I'm Gonna Run Away From you - TAMI LYNN (March 1965, Atco 45-6342, A-side)
4. Some Things You Never Get Used To - LITTLE ESTHER PHILLIPS (December 1964, Atlantic 45-2265, A-side)
5. I Don't Want To Lose You - TOMMY HUNT (February 1965, Atlantic 45-2278, A-side)
6. Thank You John - WILLIE TEE (May 1965, Atlantic 45-2287, A-side)
7. Let's Go Get Stoned - THE COASTERS (May 1965, Atco 45-6356, B-side of "Money Honey")
8. Let Me Know When It's Over - ESTHER PHILLIPS (September 1965, Atlantic 45-2304, A-side)
9. Have You Ever Been Disappointed – THE ISLEY BROTHERS (September 1965, Atlantic 45-2303, B-side of "Move Over And Let Me Dance")
10. Groovy Kind Of Love – PATTI LaBELLE & THE BLUEBELLES (January 1966, Atlantic 45-2318, B-side of "Over The Rainbow" - A-side is Track 13 on CD2)
11. Dear Lover - MARY WELLS (December 1965, Atco 45-6392, B-side of "Can't You See (You're Losing Me)")
12. Sookie Sookie - DON COVAY and THE GOODTIMERS (February 1966, Atlantic 45-2323, B-side of "Watching The Late Late Show")
13. Over The Rainbow - PATTI LaBELLE & THE BLUEBELLES (January 1966, Atlantic 45-2318, A-side - B-side is "Groovy Kind Of Love" - Track 10 on CD2)
14. Where's The Girl - BEN E. KING (July 1968, Atco 45-6596, B-side of "It's Amazing")
15. Iron Out The Rough Spots - DON COVAY & THE GOODTIMERS (June 1966, Atlantic 45-2340, B-side of "You Put Something On Me")
16. Make Me Belong To You - BARBARA LEWIS (July 1966, Atlantic 45-2346, A-side)
17. Some Kind Of Wonderful - SOUL BROTHERS SIX (May 1967, Atlantic 45-2406, A-side)
18. Why (Am I Treated So Bad) - THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS (May 1967, Atlantic 45-2410, A-side)
19. Storybook Children - BILLY VERA & JUDY CLAY (October 1967, Atlantic 45-2445, A-side)
20. It Ain't What You Got - JIMMY HUGHES (November 1967, Atlantic 45-2454, A-side)
21. A Change Is Gonna Come - ARETHA FRANKLIN (from the 1967 US LP "I Never Loved A Man The Way I Love You" on Atlantic 8139)

CD3 (from 1967 to 1969, 61:00 minutes, 21 tracks, Aretha Franklin pictured):
1. Get Down – HARVEY SCALES & THE 7 SOUNDS (September 1967, Magic Touch 2007, A-side)
2. Looking For A Fox – CLARENCE CARTER (December 1967, Atlantic 45-2461, A-side)
3. What Can You Do When You Ain’t Got Nobody – SOUL BROTHERS SIX (November 1967, Atlantic 45-2456, B-side to "You Better Check Yourself")
4. Baby Don't You Do It - ALVIN ROBINSON (May 1968, Atco 45-6581, A-side - cover of a Marvin Gaye 1964 single)
5. I Found A True Love - WILSON PICKETT (September 1958, Atlantic 45-2558, A-side)
6. I Wish I Knew (How It Would Feel To Be Free) - SOLOMON BURKE (April 1968, Atlantic 45-2507, A-side) 
7. I've Come A Long Way - WILSON PICKETT (February 1968, Atlantic 45-2484, B-side of "Jealous Love")
8. My Song - ARETHA FRANKLIN (November 1968, Atlantic 45-2574, B-side of "See Saw")
9. Hard To Handle - OTIS REDDING (June 1968, Atlantic 45-6592, A-side)
10. I Say A Little Prayer - ARETHA FRANKLIN (August 1968, Atlantic 45-2546, B-side of "The House That Jack Built")
11. Too Weak To Fight – CLARENCE CARTER (October 1968, Atlantic 45-2569, A-side)
12. Soul Sister, Brown Sugar – SAM & DAVE (December 1968, Atlantic 45-2590, A-side)
13. Ice Cream Song – THE DYNAMICS (January 1969, Cotillion 44021, A-side)
14. You Are The Circus – C And THE SHELLS (March 1969, Cotillion 44024, A-side)
15. Crying In The Rain - THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS (March 1969, Atlantic 45-2620, A-side)
16. Kind Woman - PERCY SLEDGE (July 1969, Atlantic 45-2646, A-side)
17. I Don't Know – BABY WASHINGTON (August 1969, Cotillion 45-44047, A-side)
18. Reaching For The Moon – BILLY VERA & JUDY CLAY (July 1969, Atlantic 45-2654, A-side)
19. Anyway That You Want Me – WALTER JACKSON (October 1969, Cotillion 45-44053, A-side)
20. Greatest Love – JUDY CLAY (December 1969, Atlantic 45-2697, A-side)
21. Don't Let Me Lose This Dream – BABY WASHINGTON (August 1970, Cotillion 45-44086, A-side)

CD4 (from 1969 to 1975, 71:24 minutes, 20 tracks, Donny Hathaway pictured):
1. Sister Pitiful - JUDY CLAY (September 1969, Atlantic 45-2669, A-side - answer song to Otis Redding's "Mr. Pitiful")
2. Breakfast In Bed - BABY WASHINGTON (November 1969, Cotillion 45-44055, A-side - Gamble & Huff song)
3. (Gotta Find) A Brand New Lover, Part 1 - THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS (December 1969, Atlantic 45-2686, A-side)
4. God Gave Me A Song - INTERDENOMINATIONAL YOUTH CHOIR of WASHINGTON, D.C. & MARYLAND (February 1970, Cotillion 45-44062, A-side)
5. That's The Way My Baby Is - THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS (March 1970, Atlantic 45-2720, B-side of "At Last I Found A Love")
6. Precious, Precious - JACKIE MOORE (October 1970, Atlantic 45-2681, B-side of "Willpower")
7. Groove Me - KING FLOYD (September 1970, Atlantic 45-435, B-side of "What Our Love Needs")
8. Plain And Simple Girl - GARLAND GREEN (January 1971, Cotillion 45-44098, A-side)
9. Hold On - JAMES CARR (July 1971, Atlantic 45-2803, A-side - Tommy Tate cover)
10. Thin Line Between Love And Hate - THE PERSUADERS (July 1971, Atco 45-6822, A-side) 
11. A Song For You - DONNY HATHAWAY (from the April 1971 album "Donny Hathaway" on Atlantic SD-360 in Stereo)
12. She's A Burglar - HOWARD TATE (February 1972, Atlantic 45-2860, A-side, for B-side, see 14)
13. Victim Of A Foolish Heart - BETTYE SWANN (April 1972, Atlantic 45-2869, A-side)
14. You Don't Know Nothing About Love - HOWARD TATE (February 1972, Atlantic 45-2860, B-side, for A, see 12)
15. Giving Up - DONNY HATHAWAY (from the April 1971 album "Donny Hathaway" on Atlantic SD-360 in Stereo)
16. How Could I Let You Get Away - THE SPINNERS (July 1972, Atlantic 45-2904, A-side)
17. I Can Understand It, Part 1 - VALENTINOS (March 1973, Clean CN-60005, A-side - Bobby Womack cover)
18. Some Guys Have All The Luck - THE PERSUADERS (September 1973, Atco 45-6943, A-side)
19. She's Gone - DARYL HALL & JOAN OATES (November 1973, Atlantic 45-2803, A-side, 3:24 minutes edit, reissued November 1976 on Atlantic 45-3332, A-side - charted again)
20. Hooked For Life - THE TRAMMPS (August 1975, Atlantic 45-3286, A-side)





The LP-sized booklet has some amazing rare photos, Soul Brothers Six with their instruments get all of Page 24, Don Covay and Atlantic Records supremo Jerry Wexler wave at us from Page 21 (with snaps of the Tami Lynn and Jo Ann & Troy 45 labels to the left) and there's a very tasty full-colour plate given over to Donny Hathaway on Page 30 sat at a piano live in concert - his trademark tweed beret on. At the beginning of the book are some beautifully reproduced trade adverts for Barbara Lewis, the Betty LaVett B-side "My Man - He's A Lovin' Man" while Baby Washington gets a colour publicity photo. A lot of the time it feels like the images are taking up space where words and critique could have been, but I have to say it's nice to see artists outside of Atlantic's more famous roster (Aretha, wilson, Otis etc) get pride of place.  

The Audio is a very mixed bag despite BILL INGLOT and DAN HERSCH transfers and remastering - especially on the rarer stuff on Discs 1 and 2. I felt a lot of it sounded well Mono-rough, but once you get past 1964, the production values go up accordingly and by the time you're playing Howard Tate or The Persuaders on Disc 4 - the Audio is properly gorgeous. It's also nice to see this set dip into Lu Pine, Clean, Chimneyville and other off-shoot Atlantic labels. Niggles: small but worth noting, wrong catalogue number for The Isley Brothers and Howard Tate's "She's A Burglar" is misspelt, the whole sepia thing is both lovely and ever so slightly irritating, the card sleeves fly about inside the box die-cuts and can easily buckle (the tracks lists are almost unreadable on them too) and the first three CDs really should have had more tracks (the playing time on CD1 is a joke). To the tunes... 

Disc 1 leads superbly with the gorgeous "Come Rain Or Shine" by Ray Charles – an early R&B ballad with Soul at its core and a brilliant opening gambit for a compilation like this. But then CD1 kind of gets lost, filled up with R&B New Breed tunes like "You're The Boss" by LaVern Baker and "Daddy Rollin' Stone" by Jimmy Ricks (of The Ravens) - and good as they may be to some people, its not until we get to "Darling" by The Falcons (Track 7) do we get anything that actually approximates Soul as we know it (Wilson Pickett and his distinctive rasp, a Mack Rice and Eddie Floyd-penned ballad). Both of the B-sides by Ben E. King and The Isley Brothers feel like they're searching for some kind of commercial groove and not finding it. Pickett and The Falcons provide a Disc One shouting Soul dancer later on in the shape of "Take This Love I've Got" – a rarity worth showcasing. Rough but clean sound on the equally rare Nat Kendricks & The Swans dance-craze chugger "(Do The) Mashed Potatoes". 

Doris Troy rescues the situation with the classic "Just One Look" but the impossibly rare "Love Is Amazing" by The Ohio Untouchables feels more novelty than Soul (their "I'm Tired" – Track 16 – is far better). Little Esther Phillips is taking a lock of her man's hair and a five dollar bill to a woman called "Mojo Hannah" down in Louisiana – gonna work that thing to get her chap back home real soon (good bopper). Solomon Burke's cover of "He'll Have To Go" is excellent (what a voice and that Ben E. King shuffle in the song), but again the novelty element creeps in with the mock-live frat party take of "My Girl Sloppy" by The Vibrations – a forgettable answer tune to The McCoys 1965 mega-hit "Hang On Sloopy". It ends well though on the torch Soul of "I've Got No Time To Lose" by Carla Thomas and a rare New Breed dancer B-side from Mack Rice in "Baby I'm Coming Home" - down on his knees - begging to wherever his baby is. 

Things pick up immeasurably on Disc 2 with the likes of Don Covay going to the doctor only to realise that his baby's love is the only medicine he needs - "Come See About Me". The goodies continue with a Jeanie Allen tune "I Found A Love Oh What A Love" - Jo Ann Campbell and Troy Seals duetting on a ballad that rises above its soppy lyrics. But given there was room on CD2 to put their B-side cover of Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love" in here too - I think a rarity trick was missed on that one. The two Patti LaBelle covers of "Groovy Kind Of Love" and "Over The Rainbow" come across as cringe-worthy cheese. Little Esther can't believe that she and her squeeze are through in the melodrama Soul of "Some Things You Never Get Used To". 

That is trounced however by the gorgeous smoocher "I Don't Want To Lose You" from Pittsburgh's golden-throated Tommy Hunt - a huge tune amongst British collectors who are liable to go into Northern Soul seizures at the mere though of it. Shufflers don't come much better than the summer breeze of "Thank You John" - a strangely happy song about a man who doesn't do right by his gal either physically or monetarily - Willie Tee assuring her that everything will be alright. And while both Esther Phillips and The Isley Brothers acquit themselves admirably in pleader-ballads "Let Me Know When It's Over" and "Have You Ever Been Disappointed" - the "Money Honey" B-side "Let's Go Get Stoned" by The Coasters feels plain out-of-place to me. 

But Disc 2 picks up again with Don Covay's fantastic neck-jerker "Sookie Sookie" - an obscure B-side that hairy-assed John Kay led Steppenwolf would of course almost make their own in 1968 when they rocked that mother on their fab self-titled debut album on ABC/Dunhill. Organist Booker T. Jones, Guitarist Steve Cropper and singer David Porter of Stax fame gifted Don Covay a second groove winner on here in the shape of the seldom-heard "Iron Out The Rough Spots". Another sexy hip-shaker is "It Ain't What You Got" – Jimmy Hughes eating up that Rick Hall Fame Studios production and Fame Gang backing band. CD2 goes out with the scent of social change in the air when The Sweet Inspirations put their hurting ladies touch on the Pops Staples song "Why (Am I Treated So Bad)" followed by Aretha taking the beautiful Sam Cooke plea in "A Change Is Gonna Come" into a virtual national anthem.  

CD3 brings us a brand new dance from the Mid West where Harvey Scales & The 7 Sounds want to sock it to that girl out there in her bad dress – the frantic feel-so-good "Get Down" surely the kind of tune that will show up in the sequel movie "Baby Driver 2: Driven Again". The very cool neck jerkers continue with Clarence Carter and his fantastic hah-hah-hah "Looking For A Fox" - while Sam & Dave get sweeter than the honey bees make in "Soul Sister, Brown Sugar". Hadn't heard "Ice Cream Man" by The Dynamics – a pretty two-stepper – and even better is "I Don't Know" by Baby Washington, unable to tell us when her man is coming home. Speaking of pretty (perhaps a little too soppy) is The Sweet Inspirations with their "That's The Way My Baby Is" and there's a live-in-a-hall vibe to the obscure "God Gave Me A Song" – a holy roller that's rare but too far for me. And on it goes to the superb doggone funk of "Groove Me" by King Floyd and domestic heartache captured in “Thin Line Between Love And Hate" – The Persuaders and their moment of glory. 

Sat in 2021, you could argue that many of these rarities have been put out by diligent reissue companies in the 14 years since this box set first appeared – so their exclusive inclusion here might not be as relevant as it once was. But like so much on Rhino and Rhino Handmade, I love this label and I had to own it. Just try to get one for a decent price. Onwards and upwards peeps...

RHINO Handmade (USA) Themed Series of 
Atlantic Records 4CD Box Sets
Compiled by BILLY VERA – DAN HERSCH and BILL INGLOT Remasters

1. "Atlantic Blues {1949-1970}" - September 2007 USA on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7737 (Barcode 603497773725) 4CDs, 80-Tracks in 5" picture card sleeves housed in die-cut hollows in a 12" x 12" Silk Screen Printed Box Set. Inside is a 36-page full-sized booklet, numbered to 3000 on the last page.

2. "Atlantic Soul {1959-1975}" – October 2007 USA on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7739 (Barcode 603497773923) - 4CDs, 82-Tracks, 36-page full-sized booklet, numbered to 3000 on the last page.

3. "Atlantic Vocal Groups {1951-1963}" - June 2008 USA on Rhino Handmade RHM2 7738 (Barcode 603497773824) - 4CDs, 82-Track, 32-page full-sized booklet, numbered to 3000 on the last page.

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order