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VA – The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records, vol. 2 (1928-1932) (2014)

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Paramount RecordsIn 2103, Jack White’s Third Man Records teamed with the late John Fahey’s Revenant Records to release The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records, vol. 1. Housed in an oak cabinet, the expensive object was an elaborate and comprehensive history lesson about the Paramount label, a Wisconsin company that issued early jazz and blues records.
The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records, Volume 2 chronicles the period between 1928 and 1932, during which the Mississippi Delta blues genre was born. It features music by Skip James, Charley Patton, Son House, the Mississippi Sheiks, Tommy Johnson, Geeshie Wiley, Willie Brown, King Solomon Hill, and more spread over six LPs and a “sculpted metal” USB drive.
In all, it contains 800 tracks from 175 artists.

320 kbps | 5.48 GB  UL | HF | UP

Money, you might have noticed, is on the mind of many musicians. As music consumption continues to shift toward digital methods of distribution, from illegal downloads that pay the artist nothing to authorized streams that pay very little, some makers are wondering just how they’ll continue to make. If the consumer isn’t willing to foot the bill with a sliver of their own income, how can the product exist?

Though the circumstances have changed in most every respect during the 80 years since the Paramount Records empire crumbled, this core question hasn’t: How do you keep putting music out when you’re no longer pulling money in? The success of Paramount Records, a loss-leader meant to move the music-playing furniture made by the Wisconsin Chair Company as World War I came to a close, was a surprise for the business’ leaders. The shoddily recorded and haphazardly manufactured shellac discs became a rather big boon as the ’20s roared. Hired in 1923, J. Mayo Williams, an ambitious talent scout who had headed north from Arkansas, led the pivotal Paramount charge. He assembled and managed a roster of uncontested originals, from Blind Lemon Jefferson and Ma Rainey to Blind Blake and Jelly Roll Morton. But in 1927, Williams left the label following a series of injuries and insults from the company’s white owners and officers. That’s where the first volume of The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records—a massive two-set collaboration between Jack White’s Third Man, John Fahey’s revived Revenant and a fleet of researchers, writers, graphic designers, fabricators, builders, archivists, printers and collectors—closes.

Williams’ departure, though, isn’t the end of Paramount’s rise, even if it might denote the start of the fall. The second volume of The Rise & Fall is instead a catalogue brimming with genius, no matter that the label’s scouts in fields and offices alike didn’t carry the same historical clout as Williams. Charley Patton and Son House, Lottie Kimbrough and Dock Boggs, Geeshie Wiley and Skip James, Thomas Dorsey and Emry Arthur: Those are only some of the names that arrive for this set, which stretches from 1928 until the label’s unceremonious end in the wake of the Great Depression in 1932. That’s when the money ran out for music.

The talent had not stopped shipping into Grafton’s record-pressing plant during that time of widespread financial woe. In fact, the 800 remastered tracks offered in Volume Two document the roots of gospel and swing and the intensification of blues and jazz through the efforts of some of American music’s formative musical minds. You can hear the earliest echoes of bluegrass, which would be born a dozen years after Paramount closed, and antediluvian traces of rock’n’roll, hot on its heels with added electricity.

The funds, however, just weren’t what they used to be. “Despite many of the great talents he helps bring to Grafton, you can’t sell the records if no one has money to buy them,” writes Scott Blackwood of the pale, bespectacled and pivotal Paramount recruiter Art Laibly. “Likely, out on the road or riding the rails across the South, Art Laibly’s anxieties about the future would sometimes get the best of him. The Crash. The poor getting poorer. A part of him knowing the days of the Race Records business were numbered.” At least they kept it going long enough to firm up the foundation for their rather young country’s recording pedigree.

You can examine that foundation for yourself on Volume Two. You can ponder the existential strangeness of Patton’s still-singular approach to the blues and his divisive belief in both religion and the bottle. (His “Prayer of Death” tunes as Elder J.J. Hadley are essential.) You can sway to the woozy, wobbly string-band fare of the Mississippi Sheiks. You can nod and shake to the delirious a cappella spirituals of the Famous Blue Jay Singers of Birmingham, particularly the delirious and pulsing “Clanka-A-Lanka (Sleep on Mother)”. Skip James’ inescapable “Hard Time Killin’ Floor Blues” is here, as are two versions of Dock Boggs’ “Will Sweethearts Know Each Other” and Geeshie Wiley’s continually magnetic and tragic “Last Kind Words Blues”. Had the unlikely and uncanny venture of Paramount never thrived, and had these songs never been captured, it’s easy to imagine the next several decades of music taking very different turns.

Not everything here changed the world, of course, and some of Paramount’s hidden gems arrive through its most obscure oddities. Brother Fullbosom’s “A Sermon on a Silver Dollar” is a racially and religiously irreverent faux testimonial to the power of that most almighty ducat. “Wicked Treatin’ Blues”, a duet for despondent harmonica and vocals that seem delivered from a deathbed, hypnotizes with sadness. George Hamilton’s “Chimes Blues” offers a delightful piano jaunt. Ollie Hess’ parlor-ready “Mammy’s Lullaby” combines arching, urbane vocals and simply picked guitar—country, meet cosmopolitan. Two of the best and most truly haunting songs in the entire Paramount oeuvre belong to Rube Lacy, a little-known blues moaner who only recorded these two cuts as far as anyone can tell. In its waning days, without Williams in command, Paramount was grasping for anything to sell. Many of these didn’t do that, but thanks be to Paramount for thinking they might—they are wonderful, ponderous relics. The worst that can be said about any of these songs is that they’re simply curious; the best is that they’re landmarks.

The first volume of The Rise & Fall came housed in an impressive chestnut box, lined with green felt and accessorized with metallic emblems. Its six LPs lived in a wooden record book, and the marbled brown vinyl looked as though it had been cut from the cross-section of some grand old oak. An accompanying USB drive—a “Jobber-Luxe”, Third Man likes to call it—contained the central trove of songs and graphics in a tarnished brass device that seemed pulled from a steampunk’s wildest pipe dream. Both the design and the text were nominated for Grammys in early December, and deservedly so.

You can expect much the same for Volume Two, which steps into the machine age through an aluminum replication of RCA Victor’s beautiful Special Model K portable record player. When the outside latches are unlocked, sets of rivets on either half unscrew to reveal the contents—on one side, a packet of promotional Paramount reproductions and six alabaster white records that sparkle with holograms when lit; on the other, two dense books that detail what’s known about all the musicians involved on these tracks and Blackwood’s romantic history of the second Paramount era. A second USB drive sits lodged in this volume’s navy blue felt. It’s the Paramount eagle, wings up and cast in bright aluminum. The Streamline Moderne approach intends to pull the music from a past of rural antiquity and toward urban modernity. “The machine was the source of America’s might and standing in the world,” Blackwood told Wired in October, “our capacity as an industrial power that connected the vast plains of our country.”

Still, it’s hard to see these sets as more than museum pieces, or, at best, fetishist collector items that lock vital research, history, and context away in a private vault with actual latches. Taken together, volumes one and two of The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records are mighty resources for understanding how the near-century of music that has followed first moved. But it’s a shame that such indispensable history remains so relatively unobtainable. Issued in editions of 5,000, these bulky boxes cost $400 each; tellingly, the first volume is still available through Third Man, more than a year after its release.

The price, believe it or not, is worth it. Given the work that went into each package, it’s hard to imagine that White is building his own private railroad with the profits. The treasures in the sets are staggering and sprawling, capable of inducing laughter, heartache, belief, and disbelief. There is bedrock and bedlam alike. But as Blackwood himself writes of a different but not entirely separate era, “You can’t sell the records if no one has money to buy them.” It’s hard to believe that most people have an extra mortgage payment sitting around for this history lesson, however great it may be.

And that’s a shame, because this music still moves. Not only do many of these songs maintain a vibrancy and a spirit that function even now, but they’re part of a still-incomplete story. Paramount was infamously terrible at record-keeping and accounting, so researchers like archivist Alex van der Tuuk are still finding facts and chasing myths to build a more complete label history. “Sun to Sun”, a steady-swerving Blind Blake tune recorded in November 1931, hadn’t been heard by modern ears until a copy was found in a steamer trunk in Raleigh, North Carolina, by the collector Marshall Wyatt in 2007. And Willie Brown, who contributes some of the best blues guitar to either set, remains something of a ghost, despite his relationships with the more famous House and Patton. “No conclusive evidence has been found to prove that this is indeed the real Willie Brown,” van der Tuuk writes of Brown’s believed burial site.

Such mysteries sit close to the core of Pitchfork contributor Amanda Petrusich’s 2014 book, Do Not Sell at Any Price. “There is even a vague fear that rare-record collecting could one day become analogous to fine-art collecting,” Petrusich writes early in her book, “the obligation of wealthy aristocrats whose consumption of art is more a statement of status than a function of love or even understanding.” It’s unfortunate, then, that in an age of infinite digital replication, where media need not be scarce, these archival releases have intentionally realized those fears by turning this music into artifacts for only those who can afford it. The new Jobber-Luxe contains an application that plays all of these tracks in specific orders or at random. If these boxes ever sell out, let’s hope Third Man considers its money made and puts that player online, so that more listeners can know exactly where they came from.


VA – Songs of Anarchy, Vol. 4 (2015)

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Songs of Anarchy 4The fourth volume of music from the iconic TV series is easily its most diverse. House band the Forest Rangers, who will be familiar to fans of the series, back a variety of singers including Billy Valentine, Franky Perez (Apocalyptica), Audra Mae, White Buffalo, Ed Sheeran, Katey Sagal (who played Gemma Teller Morrow), Joshua James, and Gabe Witcher. The set is primarily comprised of classic rock and pop covers. The set opener is an audacious, ragged but right version of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” with White Buffalo, Valentine, and Perez all taking turns out front. Other unusual readings include pop standards such as “Never My Love” and “Age of Aquarius/Let the Sun Shine In,” with Joshua James joining Valentine as frontman of the Forest Rangers on the latter).

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Sagal offers a haunting read of the traditional “Greensleeves.” The dark, bluesy “Make It Rain” was written by Irish singer/songwriter Foy Vance and is performed passionately by his friend Sheeran. Valentine’s delivery of Dillon O’Brien’s and Bob Thiele, Jr.’s retro soul tune “Blue Angel” sounds like it came straight from Muscle Shoals and could have been recorded by Eddie Hinton; it’s the best vocal performance on the album. Perez delivers a punk rock version of “I Can’t Help Falling in Love with You” that derives more from the Lick the Tins read than Elvis’. Amos Lee leads the Forest Rangers on an atmospheric reading of Bob Dylan’s “Boots of Spanish Leather” that could have been produced by Daniel Lanois. The best gets saved for last, however. “Come Join the Murder” was co-written by White Buffalo (Jake Smith) with Kurt Sutter and Bob Thiele, Jr. It’s a fitting send-off for not just this volume, but for the Shakespearean series. With its dark lyrics and striking production, it offers solace and acceptance for life’s misfits and outcasts. The song is so fine it belongs on a White Buffalo album. — AMG

VA – Putumayo Presents Australia (2014)

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AustraliaAustralia features exceptional musicians whose songs reflect the broad diversity of cultures and international music that have influenced the country.
Putumayo Presents: Australia is a compilation of evocative folk, blues, and world music from the land down under. Through the music of singer/ songwriters like Archie Roach and Men at Work’s Colin Hay and the aboriginal-influenced sounds of Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu and Outback, the popular record label provides a general overview of the country’s representative native sounds. This diverse collection shows that there is more to Australia’s musical heritage than just the didgeridoo. The compositions on this collection represent some of the cultural songlines connecting the people of Australia and the rest of the world.

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1. The Beautiful Girls – Spanish Town [02:35]
2. Seaman Dan – T.I. Blues [04:14]
3. The Waifs – The Waitress [02:18]
4. Outback – Desert Rain [02:55]
5. Colin Hay – Down Under (Acoustic Version) [03:30]
6. Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu – Marwurrumburr [03:08]
7. Bobby Alu – Changes, Changes [02:44]
8. Xavier Rudd – Hope That You’ll Stay [04:05]
9. The Lucky Wonders – Home [03:25]
10. Colin Buchanan with Lee Kernaghan & Sara Storer – Song of Australia [03:56]
11. Archie Roach with Paul Kelly – We Won’t Cry [03:34]

VA – The Mike Maurro Peak Hour Remixes (2015)

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Layout 1East Coast, U.S.A., 2014 and the remix culture elite squad are alive, well and continuing the spirit and heritage first created by Tom Moulton some 34 years ago, when he created the both the remix and then the 12 single in a totally organic act of nature. This is a very private club where the currency and terms of membership are measured by access to 2” multi-track tapes and, hence, the opportunity to access the full original recording and remix it. Where these multi-tracks came from and how they fell into the possession of the East Coast elite is a whole other set of stories. Many of the names in the club are familiar – Tom Moulton aka the godfather, John Morales, Danny Krivit, Paul Simpson, Victor Rosado to name a handful…

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…– all East Coast veterans through and through. It’s a difficult club to join and outsiders don’t get in. But somewhere around 2008 a new name entered the ring, some guy from Brooklyn called Mike Maurro. First there were 2 state-of-the-art Spinners remixes that got people talking and then the incredible opus that is Ashford & Simpson’s “Tried, Tested and Found True” and suddenly everybody wanted to know this guy from Brooklyn.

However, here are 21 state-of-the-art remixes of some of the greatest dance music classics of all-time, all from the original multi-track tapes by a guy who is just seeped in dance music culture and a fierce collector of multiple formats of the recordings. This collection puts Mike Maurro firmly in the tradition of the great East Coast remixers and introduces a fresh new sensibility to the art of the classic remix. — demonmusicgroup

CD1
1. The Spinners – I’ll Be Around (Mike Maurro 10″ Acetate Remix) (7:10)
2. Harold Melvin & Blue Notes – The Love I Lost (Mike Maurro Lost In Philly Remix) (11:52)
3. Blue Magic – Side Show (Mike Maurro Extended Magic Remix) (7:47)
4. Harold Melvin & Blue Notes – Bad Luck (Mike Maurro Tribute To Sigma Remix) (13:36)
5. Johnny Hammond – Los Conquistadores Chocolates (Mike Maurro Hot Chocolates Remix) (8:59)
6. Loleatta Holloway – Dreamin’ (Mike Maurro Unreleased Test Pressing 12″ Remix) (13:09)
7. Double Exposure – Ten Percent (Mike Maurro Mixed With Love Remix) (10:11)

CD2
1. Candi Staton – Young Hearts Run Free (Mike Maurro 1976 12″ Disco Remix) (6:38)
2. Evelyn ‘Champagne’ King – Shame (Mike Maurro Shameful Peak-Hour Extended Remix) (9:58)
3. New Birth – Deeper (Mike Maurro Deeper Down Extended Remix) (8:44)
4. The Trammps – The Night The Lights Went Out (Mike Maurro Summer Of 77 Remix) (10:05)
5. Ashford & Simpson – Tried, Tested And Found True (Mike Maurro Tried & Tested Remix) (12:33)
6. First Choice – Doctor Love (Mike Maurro Extended Love Remix) (10:38)
7. Candi Staton – Victim (Mike Maurro Victimized Extended Remix) (12:52)

CD3
1. Phreek – Weekend (Mike Maurro Peak Hour Garage Remix) (14:23)
2. Dan Hartman – Vertigo / Relight My Fire (Mike Maurro Extended Fire Remix) (13:28)
3. George Duke – I Want You For Myself (Mike Maurro Selfish Extended Remix) (8:45)
4. Ashford & Simpson – Stay Free (Mike Maurro Tribute To Nick Ashford Groove Remix) (6:22)
5. Change – Searching (Mike Maurro White Label Extended Remix) (10:11)
6. Slave – Watching You (Mike Maurro Energy Flowin’ Remix) (9:53)
7. Imagination – Burnin’ Up (Mike Maurro Burnin’ Hot Reprise Remix) (9:17)

VA – BBC Introducing Presents… Volume 1 (2015)

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BBCBBC Introducing Presents… Volume 1 is a double compilation album celebrating the biggest success stories from the award winning BBC Introducing platform. The album serves as a definitive guide to some of the best new music of the past 7 years. All of the tracks on the album were recorded live at BBC Introducing events around the UK including Maida Vale sessions and Introducing festival stages.
Volume 1 features hit tracks from hugely successful acts who were all given a boost from the platform including: Bombay Bicycle Club, Rizzle Kicks, Twin Atlantic and Jake Bugg as well as some of the most exciting new and emerging acts in the UK today.
Cited as one of the best places for discovering new music, BBC Introducing prides itself on supporting unsigned, undiscovered and under the radar…

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…musicians. Big name artists including Royal Blood, Wretch 32, Ed Sheeran and George Ezra all received BBC Introducing support at the start of their careers.

CD1

    1. James Bay – ‘Hold Back the River’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    2. Catfish and the Bottlemen – ‘Kathleen’ (BBC Music Awards)
    3. Rae Morris – ‘Closer’ (Live At Reading Festival)
    4. Jack Garratt – ‘Worry’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    5. Låpsley – ‘Falling Short’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    6. Sunset Sons – ‘Remember’ (Live at Reading Festival)
    7. Slaves – ‘Where’s Your Car Debbie?’ (BBC Radio 1 Rock Week)
    8. Coasts – ‘A Rush of Blood’ (Radio 1 Big Weekend)
    9. Prides – ‘Out of the Blue’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    10. Rhodes – ‘Your Soul’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    11. Bondax – ‘Gold’ (BBC Maida Vale Session
    12. Saint Raymond – ‘Fall at Your Feet’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    13. JUCE – ‘Call You Out’ (Live at Radio 1 Big Weekend )
    14. Aquilo – ‘You There’ (Live at Glastonbury)
    15. Indiana – ‘Solo Dancing’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
    16. Moko – ‘Hand On Heart’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)

CD2

  1. Ed Sheeran – ‘The A Team’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  2. George Ezra – ‘Budapest’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  3. Rizzle Kicks – ‘Down with the Trumpets’ (Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend)
  4. Jake Bugg – ‘Taste It’ (Radio 1’s Big Weekend)
  5. Wretch 32 – ‘Traktor’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  6. Twin Atlantic – ‘Free’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  7. Lonely The Brave – ‘Backroads’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  8. Gabrielle Aplin – ‘Home’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  9. Marina and the Diamonds – ‘I Am Not a Robot’ (BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge)
  10. Everything Everything – ‘Cough Cough’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  11. The Temper Trap – ‘Sweet Disposition’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  12. Bombay Bicycle Club – ‘Shuffle’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  13. Jack Peñate – ‘Torn On the Platform’ (Live at Bestival)
  14. Two Door Cinema Club – ‘What You Know’ (Live at Reading Festival)
  15. Pulled Apart By Horses – ‘High Five, Swan Dive, Nose Dive’ (BBC Maida Vale Session)
  16. White Lies – ‘To Lose My Life’ (BBC Radio 6 Music Session)

VA – Next Stop Soweto 4: Zulu Rock, Afro Disco & Mbaqanga 1975-1985 (2015)

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Next Stop SowetoLondon-based label Strut Records releases the latest edition of their ‘Next Stop Soweto’ series with Next Stop Soweto 4: Zulu Rock, Afro-Disco, & Mbaqanga 1975-1985. According to Strut, this era of South Africa’s musical history saw such genres as funk and soul being played by bands even as apartheid firmly gripped the country’s music culture. It was a time in which energetic American bands like War and Yes, along with SA’s own malombo type of music, spurred homegrown groups like Kabana and Harari to incorporate soul and rock into their sound along with Zulu lyrics.
Even though South African music was burgeoning in these years, there were parallel difficulties. Bands would still perform, for instance, but curfews, along with their songs receiving little airplay,…

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…made it very hard for these groups to survive professionally. By the 1990s, though, the music of this period paved the way for SA acts like Ladysmith Black Mambazo gaining international popularity. Featuring standouts “Kokro-Ko (Hide and Seek)” by The Actions and “The Things We Do in Soweto” by Almon Memela, this new compilation is a testimony to the triumphant spirit of the many SA artists from the 1970s and ’80s.

VA – The Rough Guide to Latin Rare Groove, vol. 2 (2015)

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Latin Rare GroovePablo E Yglesias’ excellent sleeve notes to Latin Rare Groove Volume 2 evoke a subterranean world of obsessive record collectors seeking out funky, tropical dance music, with a breed of über-fans from around the world trawling through record fairs and auctions to obtain that elusive piece of Latin vinyl. It’s questionable whether this world crosses- over into the rigorous environs of a high-energy Zumba exercise class or the sequins and glitter of “Strictly Come Dancing”, where Latin music is at its most prevalent for gringos, but consider the possibility of a slightly over-weight record-collecting hipster decked out in lycra, wiggling his fleshy backside to the strains of the latest Latin cross-over hit every Saturday morning, just to keep vaguely in shape. Yes, we are all in our own…

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…way fearsome strange mutants, and Latin Rare Groove Volume 2 is perhaps proof of the pudding.

Yglesias (who also put together this compilation) points out that there is a long tradition of “super-fandom” and “intrepid scholarly connoisseurship” in Latin music as with any other genre, and just because “rare groove” owes its name to the ‘80s London club scene, which focussed on obscure soul, funk and jazz, doesn’t necessarily mean the movement, or this record, is just some passing fad. The album traverses time (from the ‘60s to more recent times) as well as continents (Europe by way of Britain and Amsterdam, North America through New York, and of course South America). This is indeed world music, but not because it is “ethnic”; it’s likely that the desire to shake one’s tosh to a stonking beat is universal. Ricardo Ray & Bobby Cruz’s “El Cencerro Shingaling” is, as the title suggests, a raucous mess of excitement; Papo Y Su Combo’s “Papa Boogaloo” and Peliroja’s “Ciudad De Nadie” must be floor-fillers in the right kind of clubs. Carlos Hayre Y Su Orquestra’s “Mi Chica Se Vuelve Loca” has some awesome big band orchestration and percussion.

However, this is not merely dance music as the album could equally serve as a soundtrack to the spicy life you lead in your head or as your own version of reality. The New Mastersounds’ “The Tin Drum” comes across all Starsky and Hutch and Los Kenya’s “Un Clavel, Una Tarjeta Y Un Lapiz” is pure ‘70s kitsch. Los Belking’s “Sabata” has grooves that will make the hipster levitate with joy, Conjunto Papa Upa conjure up a smoking Western with “Camuri Chico” and Nelson Y Sus Estrellas’ “Fantasia Latina (Guaguanco)” has the hectic rhythm of a hot city life in the tropics.

The last five tracks are made up from today’s crop of Latin bands; Aillacara 2743, Quantic, Jungle Fire, Systema Solar and Rene Lopez. They all merit inclusion, particularly the hip-hop cross-over of Systema Solar’s “Vo Voy Ganao” and Rene Lopez’s romantic “Steal Your Love”, but it’s difficult not to come to the conclusion that the older tracks have more depth and character. It may be a trick of the mind to consider that things were better in the past, but it does seem like more fun was had in the old days.

The stand-out track is pleasingly a true rarity, by an obscure ‘70s NYC Salsa orchestra, Conjunto Alayon, which never finished its debut album. Somehow, the previously unreleased “Ha Llegada La Hora” was found for this album, complete with a superb trombone solo by Jimmy Bosch. As for much of the record, if you don’t want to get up and dance to this, you must either have rocks in your head or a heart made of stone. If this is the case, please don’t approach me at parties. Life is too short not to participate.

VA – Disco Dildar (2015)

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Disco DildarNever one to merely scrape the surface of a niche genre the Finders Keepers bloodhound digs deeper still into the core of the Indian subcontinent exhuming a concise party pack of opulent, off-centre Pakistani party targets driven by the pounding drum box rhythms of some of Lollywood pops most notorious studio scientists.
Disco Dildar features rare plugged-in proxy pop from some of the country’s lesser-known teen flicks spanning the late 1970s and 80s featuring drum heavy disco guesstimates built around multilingual lyrics celebrating Saturday nights, Disco Dildars and Hindustani Hogmanays.
These original synth-dripped 45 EPs are not from the front of the pile, nor the quirky result of some token musical tourism. The music found here…

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…once soundtracked rebellious all-nighters and hotel bar rendezvous from films of which your parents might have not approved hence their scarce obtainability. Again the Sounds of Wonder team who bought you Thai Dai, Life Is Dance, Ilectro, Bollywood Bloodbath and others share equal doses of the excitement, wonderment and bewilderment that comes when first needle-dropping these elusive gems.

Featuring the cut and paste, electronics and fuzz tones of flightless super heroes such as Tafo, Ashraf, Rana and Ahmed, whilst voiced by Mehnaz, Runa Laila and Queen Noor Jehan, it is plain to hear why the work of these DIY cosmic composers have eclipsed the collectable desirability of filmic fruits igniting dance floors and providing sample fodder of the wider continent for Wu-Tangular producers in their stride. This workshop funk redefines both DIY and disco revealing a whole new side to world music and marks Pakistani pop cultures transformation from disposable and indefinable to indispensable.


VA – A Fine Selection of Independent Disco, Modern Soul and Boogie 1978-82 (2014)

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Independent DiscoA Fine Selection of Independent Disco, Modern Soul and Boogie 1978-82 is an amazing collection of rare and independent tracks from disco’s halcyon period expertly compiled by Disco Patrick. Blurring the musical lines between disco, modern soul and boogie, this double album features many exclusive and hard to find records from the era.
Included here are in-demand classics such as The Fantastic Aleems featuring Leroy Burgess, Stwange Poweple, rare Patrick Adams and Peter Brown productions, Retta Young, Sugar Bear Johnson, Chemistry, Cordial and much more.
This album is released to coincide with the massive new 360-page deluxe hardback book ‘Disco: An Encyclopedic Guide to the Cover Art of Disco’, featuring over 2,000 album cover designs…

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…as well as over 700 12” sleeves, including sections on roller disco, disco instruction albums and more.

1. The Fantastic Aleems featuring Calebur – Hooked On Your Love (John Morales Mix)
2. Superfunk – Superfunk
3. Jessie G – That’s Hot
4. Jupiter Beyond – The River Drive
5. The Sunburst Band – The Easton Assassin
6. John Gibbs and The U.S. Steel Orchestra – Trinidad (Special Disco Mix)
7. Sparkle – Disco Madness
8. Chain Reaction – Sweet Lady (Dance With Me)
9. Wayne Ford – Dance To The Beat Freakout
10. Sympho-State – You Know What I Like
11. The Fantastic Aleems featuring Corky Hodges – Movin’ To The Beat
12. Something Extra – Sexy Lady
13. Stwange Poweple – Get Up (Let’s Rock)
14. Chemistry – Skateboard
15. Cirt Gill and The Jam-A-Ditty Band – Turn This Disco Out
16. Sugar Bear Johnson – When Your Jones Come Down
17. Retta Young – My Man Is On His Way
18. The Imperials – Fast Freddie The Roller Disco King
19. Cordial – Wave

VA – Mojo Presents: Modern Life Is Rubbish (2015)

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Modern Life 1. Carl Barat & the Jackals – Glory Days
2. The Amazing Snakeheads – Where Is My Knife?
3. Fat White Family – Cream of the Young
4. Nadine Shah – Stealing Cars
5. Kate Tempest – Marshall Law
6. Ghostpoet – Off Peak Dreams
7. Kode9 & the Space Ape – Devil Is a Liar
8. Lonelady – Bunkerpop
9. Young Fathers – Rain or Shine
10. The Pop Group – Citizen Zombie
11. Sleaford Mods – Under the Plastic & N.C.T.
12. The Bohicas – To Die For
13. Crushed Beaks – Rising Sign
14. Menace Beach – Tastes Like Medicine
15. Half Man Half Biscuit – Westward Hol Massive Let Down

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15 tracks of everyday British angst, starring The Pop Group, Sleaford Mods, Young Fathers, Half Man Half Biscuit, Kate Tempest, Ghostpoet, Fat White Family, Carl Barât and The Jackals, Kode9 & The Spaceape and more…

VA – Sherwood at the Controls, Volume 1: 1979-1984 (2015)

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Sherwood at the ControlsCompilation of early tracks produced or remixed by the legendary Adrian Sherwood; a pioneering blend of post-punk, mutant disco, dub, funk and electro. Features The Slits, Prince Far I, The Fall and Mark Stewart. Includes 6 tracks that have never been reissued in any format, and 2 completely unreleased tracks from the On-U vaults.
Sherwood is a name most commonly associated with dub reggae, particularly his own leftfield version of the sound that he developed over the 80s and 90s, having been mentored by the likes of Prince Far I, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry and Dennis Bovell.
This compilation seeks to highlight another side of the story: in his capacity as a DJ and live sound engineer Sherwood also connected with the likes of The Clash, Public Image Limited and…

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…The Pop Group, and went on to work with a wide variety of artists including Depeche Mode, Nine Inch Nails, Primal Scream and Blur. The tracks on this album show how Sherwood blended a dubwise approach to versioning tracks with a desire to experiment in the studio and push musical boundaries.

01. Medium Medium – Hungry, So Angry (1981)
02. Maximum Joy – Let It Take You There (1982)
03. Nadjma – Some Day My Caliph Will Come (1984)
04. Mark Stewart + The Maffia – Learning to Cope with Cowardice (flexi version) (1983)
05. The Fall – Middle Mass (1981)
06. Gardening By Moonlight – Strange Clues (1983)
07. Shriekback – Mistah Linn He Dead (1984)
08. Voice Of Authority ft. Congo Ashanti Roy – Running (Feeling Wild) (1984)
09. The Slits – Man Next Door (1979)
10. Annie Anxiety (aka Little Annie) – Third Gear Kills (1984)
11. Prince Far I – Nuclear Weapon (1983)
12. Singers & Players – Reaching the Bad Man (1981)
13. African Head Charge – In a Trap (1982)
14. Vivien Goldman – Private Armies Dub (1981)
15. Deadly Headley – Liberty City Dub (Japan bonus track)

VA – The Odyssey: A Northern Soul Capsule 1968-2014 (2015)

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Hot on the heels of the 2014 release of the film Northern Soul and its soundtrack, Demon Music Group’s Harmless Records imprint is celebrating the R&B subgenre with what’s likely its most exhaustive chronicle ever: the 8-CD box set The Odyssey: A Northern Soul Time Capsule. This massive set has been co-compiled by Harmless’ chief and 1970s Northern Soul DJ Ian Dewhirst, and features diverse tracks from artists including The Spinners, Chuck Jackson, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Bunny Sigler, Paul Anka, The Pointer Sisters, Timi Yuro, Joanie Sommers, The Drifters, and Daryl Hall (with The Temptones).
What is northern soul? The late journalist Dave Godin is credited with coining the phrase, which he used to describe music in the mid-1960s soul vein preferred by enthusiasts in the northern part of England. Godin told Mojo in 2002 that he had first devised the term in 1968, to help employees at his Soul City record shop differentiate the rapidly-proliferating funk style of RandB from the smoother, Motown-influenced soul of just a few years earlier. (In The Soul Stylists, renowned DJ Ady Croasdell described the prototypical Northern Soul song as The Four Tops’ “I Can’t Help Myself…

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…(Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)” although the song was too mainstream to achieve much popularity in the Northern Soul scene.) The movement championed lesser-known tracks over big hits, and it soon spread, with clubs popping up throughout the north and midlands of England. More than 45 years after Godin first coined the term, the movement has experienced a spike in popularity thanks to the success of the Northern Soul film and soundtrack.

The contributors to The Odyssey include co-compiler Tim Brown of Anglo-American, Manifesto publisher Mike Ritson, and journalist-broadcaster Simon White, who oversaw the numerous interviews included on the set’s DVDs. Richard Searling interviews John Anderson, described as “the world’s longest-standing and most enigmatic record dealer,” and also pays a visit to Philadelphia International Records co-founder Kenny Gamble, who is filmed perusing Searling’s record collection and discovering many of his own U.K. releases for the first time! (Gamble is heard on the set with his 1966 single “The Joke’s on You.”)

A 150-page book designed by Glen Gunton accompanies the set; the overall package has been designed by the single-named Jaffa. Per Harmless, “the music follows the evolvement of Northern Soul, from its early beginnings at Manchester’s Twisted Wheel club in 1968, through to The Golden Torch, Blackpool Mecca, Wigan Casino and Cleethorpes Pier in the 1970s, Stafford Top Of The World and The 100 Club in the 1980s and the huge dearth of Soul weekenders and the 100 Club again from the 1990s to the present day.” This story is told via 222 tracks, all of which have been licensed from current rights holder and newly remastered.

CD 1: The Twisted Wheel
1. Open the Door to Your Heart – Darrell Banks
2. Walking Up a One Way Street – Willie Tee
3. I Dig Your Act – The O’Jays
4. I Feel So Bad – Jackie Edwards
5. 60 Minutes of Your Love – Homer Banks
6. I Spy (for the FBI) – Jamo Thomas and His Party Brothers Orchestra
7. Barefootin’ – Robert Parker
8. She Blew a Good Thing – The Poets
9. First I Look at the Purse – The Contours
10. I’m Gonna Run Away from You – Tami Lynn
11. (At the) Discotheque – Chubby Checker
12. I’ll Always Love You – The Spinners
13. Looking for You – Garnet Mimms
14. The Boogaloo Party – The Flamingos
15. I’m Gonna Miss You – The Artistics
16. There’s Nothing Else to Say – The Incredibles
17. Baby Do the Philly Dog – The Olympics
18. That Beatin’ Rhythm – Richard Temple
19. Love Love Love – Bobby Hebb
20. You’ve Been Cheatin’ – The Impressions
21. Investigate – Major Lance
22. Just Walk in My Shoes – Gladys Knight & The Pips
23. Ain’t No Soul (In These Old Shoes) – Major Lance
24. A ‘Lil Lovin’ Sometimes – Alexander Patton
25. The Right Track – Billy Butler
26. Baby Reconsider – Leon Haywood
27. Cigarette Ashes – Jimmy Conwell
28. Wear It On Our Face – The Dells
29. Seven Days Too Long – Chuck Wood
30. These Chains of Love (Are Breaking Me Down) – Chuck Jackson
31. Long After Tonight Is All Over – Jimmy Radcliffe

CD 2: The Twisted Wheel to the Golden Torch
1. Here I Go Again – Archie Bell & The Drells
2. You’re Gonna Make Me Love You – Sandi Sheldon
3. The Same Old Thing – The Olympics
4. Hit & Run – Rose Batiste
5. Quick Change Artist – The Soul Twins
6. You Just Don’t Know – Chubby Checker
7. You Get Your Kicks – Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
8. Sliced Tomatoes – The Just Brothers
9. Keep On Keeping On – N.F. Porter
10. Exus Trek – The Luther Ingram Orchestra
11. Psychedelic Soul Pt 1 – Saxie Russell
12. ‘Cause You’re Mine – The Vibrations
13. Honest To Goodness – Herb Ward
14. My Dear Heart – Shawn Robinson
15. Festival Time – The San Remo Golden Strings
16. Groovin’ At The Go-Go – The Four Larks
17. Cracking Up Over You – Roy Hamilton
18. Love On A Mountain Top – Robert Knight
19. I’m Satisfied With You – The Furys
20. I Can’t Get Away – Bobby Garrett
21. Head and Shoulders (Above The Rest) – Patti Young
22. Somebody (Somewhere) Needs You – Darrell Banks
23. You Don’t Want Me No More – Major Lance
24. What Would I Do – The Tymes
25. Shing-A-Ling – The Cooperettes
26. This Beautiful Day – Levi Jackson
27. Everything’s Gonna Be Alright – P.P. Arnold
28. Baby Boy – Fred Hughes
29. Purple Haze – Johnny Jones & The King Casuals
30. Thumb A Ride – Earl Wright & His Orchestra

CD 3: The Golden Torch to Blackpool Mecca
1. If You Ask Me (Because I Love You) – Jerry Williams
2. Skiing In The Snow – The Invitations
3. The Girl Across The Street – Moses Smith
4. Blowing My Mind To Pieces – Bob Relf
5. Our Love Is In The Pocket – J.J. Barnes
6. I Got To Find Me Somebody – The Vel-Vets
7. I Hurt On The Other Side – Jerry Cook
8. I’m Gonna Love You – Edward Hamilton
9. Let Her Go – Otis Smith
10. She’s Puttin’ You On – United Four
11. Psychedelic Soul Pt 2 – Saxie Russell
12. Breakaway Pt 2 – The Steve Karmen Big Band
13. Get It Baby – Stanley Mitchell
14. Please Operator – Tony & Tyrone
15. I Really Love You – The Tomangoes
16. Crazy Baby – The Coasters
17. Stick By Me Baby – The Salvadors
18. You Hit Me (Right Where It Hurt Me) – Alice Clark
19. Baby Don’t You Weep – Edward Hamilton & The Arabians
20. I Can’t Hold On – Lorraine Chandler
21. Satisfied – Ben Aitken
22. There’s A Ghost In My House – R. Dean Taylor
23. They’ll Never Know Why – Freddie Chavez
24. I Just Can’t Live My Life (Without You Babe) – Linda Jones
25. Can’t Help Loving That Man Of Mine – Ila Vann
26. Seven Day Lover – James Fountain
27. She’ll Come Running Back – Mel Britt
28. It Really Hurts Me Girl – The Carstairs
29. California Montage – Young Holt Unlimited

CD 4: Blackpool Mecca to Wigan Casino
1. Breakaway Pt 1 – The Steve Karmen Big Band ft Jimmy Radcliffe
2. You Don’t Know Where Your Interest Lies – Dana Valery
3. Night Owl – Bobby Paris
4. Help Me – Al Wilson
5. Afternoon Of The Rhino – The Mike Post Coalition
6. Tainted Love – Gloria Jones
7. I’ll Always Need You – Dean Courtney
8. Serving A Sentence Of Life – Carl Douglas
9. Dance Dance Dance – The Casualeers
10. The Night – Frankie Valli And The Four Seasons
11. You’ve Got Your Mind On Other Things – Beverly Ann
12. Interplay – Derek & Ray
13. Born A Loser – Don Ray
14. When We Get There – Paul Anka
15. As Long As You Love Me (I’ll Stay) – Ronnie & Robin
16. Bari Track – Doni Burdick
17. (It’s Against) The Laws Of Love – The Volcanoes
18. Heartaches Away My Boy – Christine Cooper
19. Don’t Take It Out On This World – Adam’s Apples
20. All Of My Life – Detroit Soul
21. You Didn’t Say A Word – Yvonne Baker
22. Baby Hit And Run – The Contours
23. Do I Love You (Indeed I Do) – Frank Wilson
24. Double Cookin’ – The Checkerboard Squares
25. Country Girl – Vickie Baines
26. Girl, Don’t Make Me Wait – Bunny Sigler
27. You Don’t Love Me Anymore – Johnny Caswell
28. I’m On My Way – Dean Parrish

CD 5: More Wigan Casino
1. Turning My Heartbeat Up – The MVP’s
2. You Don’t Love Me – Epitome Of Sound
3. Burning Sensation – Robby Lawson
4. Baby Without You – Danny Monday
5. I Was Born To Love You – Herbert Hunter
6. I Lost A True Love -Danny Wagner & The Kindred Soul
7. I Wanna Know – John E Paul
8. Tear Stained Face – Don Varner
9. She’s Wanted (In Three States) – Larry Clinton
10. Where I’m Not Wanted – Eddie Holman
11. This Gets To Me – Pookie Hudson
12. I Don’t Like To Lose – The Group featuring Cecil Washington
13. It’s Better To Cry – The Appreciations
14. Please Stay – The Ivorys
15. Happiness Is Here – Tobi Lark
16. Love Slipped Through My Fingers – Sam Williams
17. Cool Off – Detroit Executives
18. Love Factory – Eloise Laws
19. Sad Girl -Carol Anderson
20. Strange Change – Herb Ward
21. I Am Nothing – Al Williams
22. The Jokes On You – Kenny Gamble
23. I Really Love You – Jimmy Burns
24. That’s No Way To Treat A Girl – Marie Knight
25. A Changed Man – The Rotations
26. This Won’t Change – Lester Tipton
27. Gone With The Wind Is My Love – Rita & The Tiaras

CD 6: Wigan Casino to Cleethorpes Pier
1. Elijah Rockin’ With Soul – Hank Jacobs
2. I Can’t Change – Lorraine Chandler
3. They’re Talking About Me – Johnny Bragg
4. My Heart Cries For You – Porgy & The Monarchs
5. You’re Never Too Young (To Fall In Love) – The Modern Redcaps
6. Send Him Back – The Pointer Sisters
7. Do The Pearl Girl Pt 2 – The Matta Baby
8. All The Way Home – Dee Edwards
9. Look At Me Now – Terry Callier
10. So is The Sun – World Column
11. The Gig – Raw Soul
12. Wrong Crowd – Prince George
13. Hung Up On Your Love – The Montclairs
14. Ton Of Dynamite – Frankie ‘Loveman’ Crocker
15. Lady Lady Lady (Are You Crazy For Me) – Boogie Man Orchestra
16. I Don’t Know What Foot To Dance On – Kim Tolliver
17. I Wanna Be (Your Everything) – The Pretenders
18. Cuz It’s You Girl – James Walsh Gypsy Band
19. You Sexy Sugar Plum (But I Like It) – Rodger Collins
20. Cut Your Motor Off – Black Nasty feat Herbie Thompson
21. I Got The Vibes – Joshie Jo Armstead
22. Have Love Will Travel – Rosey Jones
23. Do What You Feel Pt 1 – The Rimshots
24. Wash And Wear Love – Lynn Varnado
25. Elusive – Babe Ruth
26. Are You Ready For This – The Brothers
27. I’ve Got The Need – The Moments

CD 7: The 100 Club and Top of the World, Stafford Eras
1. Please Don’t Go – Willie Tee
2. Since I Found My Baby -The Metros
3. I Need My Baby – Jackey Beavers
4. I Still Love You – The Seven Souls
5. Suspicion – The Originals
6. Let’s Talk It Over – Spencer Wiggins
7. I’ll Never Stop Loving You – Carla Thomas
8. Talkin’ Woman – Lowell Fulson
9. You Just Cheat And Lie – Z Z Hill
10. Oh How I Love You – Little Johnny Hamilton & The Creators
11. Too Much For You – Bobby Angelle
12. Naughty Boy – Jackie Day
13. Losing Control – Mary Saxton
14. You Really Made It Good To Me – Ty Karim
15. Girl I Love You – The Temptones
16. Wrapped Tied & Tangled – Lavern Baker
17. Try Me For Your New Love – Junior McCants
18. The Magic Touch – Melba Moore
19. Dearly Beloved – Jack Montgomery
20. Packing Up – Damon Fox
21. Because Of My Heart – Frankie Beverly
22. You Shook Me Up – Roy Hamilton
23. My Love Gets Stronger – Tommy Ridgley
24. I’m Steppin’ Out Of The Picture – Johnny Maestro & The Crests
25. Rat Race – Gino Washington
26. I Don’t Do This (To Every Girl I Meet) – Sidney Joe Qualls
27. I’m Having So Much Fun – Willie Tee
28. Deep Dark Secret – Dee Dee Sharp
29. What Should I Do – Little Ann
30. Such Misery – The Precisions

CD 8: The Weekenders Era
1. If I Could Only Be Sure – Nolan Porter
2. Home Is Where the Heart Is – Bobby Womack
3. Something New to Do – Bobby Sheen
4. Too Late – Mandrill
5. The Game Is Over (What’s The Matter With You) – Brown Sugar
6. Because of You – Jackie Wilson
7. Pour Your Little Heart Out – The Drifters
8. Think It Over (And Be Sure) – Liz Verdi
9. What’s That On Your Finger – Kenny Carter
10. Baby-A-Go-Go – Barbara McNair
11. I Can’t Break The News to Myself – Ben E King
12. The Stars – Barbara Lewis
13. Something’s Wrong – Chris Clark
14. Don’t Pity Me – Joanie Sommers
15. Here Are the Pieces of My Broken Heart – Gladys Knight & The Pips
16. In Love – Tony Galla
17. Tune Up – Jnr Walker & The All-Stars
18. Beggin’ – Timebox
19. Stolen Hours – Patrice Holloway
20. Call On Me – The Dynells
21. How – The Masqueraders
22. Talkin’ ‘Bout My Baby – Dottie & Millie
23. (Just A Little) Faith And Understanding – The Magicians
24. Dynamite Exploded – Honey & The Bees
25. I’m Slowly Moulding – Cody Black
26. What’s With This Loneliness – Chuck Jackson
27. If This Is Love (I’d Rather Be Lonely) – The Precisions
28. It’ll Never Be Over For Me – Timi Yuro

VA – Hanoi Masters: War Is a Wound, Peace Is a Scar (2015)

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Hanoi MastersIn April, Vietnam will mark the 40th anniversary of the end of the war. In commemoration of the conflict, German music label Glitterbeat, best known for its work with Tuareg rockers Tamikrest, has compiled an extraordinary record collecting the work of Vietnamese master musicians.
Hanoi Masters: War Is a Wound, Peace Is a Scar is an intensely affecting set of songs performed by musicians in their later years. Some of the compositions are direct responses to the war, while others are new adaptations of traditional Vietnamese songs. Regardless of when the songs were written, though, the recordings are all shot through with a sense of intense loss – the loss, the listener feels, not only of friends and family, but also of the innocence that a country that has…

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…endured a long history of colonial conflict can perhaps never again enjoy.

This feeling is present throughout the record, but is perhaps most palpable on songs such as I Long to Return to My Hometown, performed on vocal and guitar by Võ Tuấn Minh. The track is slight, but its simple arrangement is pregnant with mourning, the vocal delivered with a desolate, near-cracked quiver full of grief. Elsewhere, the tone is more upbeat, even devotional. On Heroine Song, for example, a two-string lute-like instrument is plucked with startling speed, the tone modulated with occasional bends, while a male and female vocalist sing about Princess Thuong Ngan, “the soul of the mountain river, who helps us to find strength in life”. This double-edged approach characterises the record, on which loss and hardiness sit side by side.

Vân-Ánh Võ, the musical director, zither player and chief percussionist for Hanoi Masters, and a previous Kronos Quartet collaborator, says music played a central role for her family during the war. In order for her father to “avoid holding guns and shooting at people”, he signed up to be a musician. “His task,” she says, “was to rush into battlefields right after two sides stopped shooting, to play the guitar and cheer up the soldiers. Even though there was a high risk of getting killed by snipers, it was still better than shooting at people.”

While her father was a guitarist, many of the songs on Hanoi Masters are performed on ancient Vietnamese instruments half-forgotten by almost everyone but these master musicians. Most fascinating among these is the K’ni, a “mouth violin” believed to have had mystical qualities of such power that to play it privately was outlawed. The K’ni has a single string, held between the teeth and feet and bowed by the player, who sings in a local dialect through the instrument, using their skull as a resonator. The sound, as heard on the minute-long The Wind Blows It Away, performed by Nguyễn Quốc Hùng, sounds like a distant cousin of a regular vocal line, as if lyrics are being transmitted through a theremin.

For Ian Brennan, the Grammy-winning producer who oversaw Hanoi Masters, the K’ni sounds “absolutely extraterrestrial, without the aid of any electricity”. Brennan says many of the traditional instruments that appear on the record act as a precursor to some of the key tropes of western rock music. “Whammy bars,” he says, “are found on many of the instruments, a technology that dates back to the ninth century there, and sound modification like distortion has been valued in their traditions for thousands of years.”

Vân-Ánh Võ, meanwhile, says she has assumed “a responsibility to protect the heritage of these traditional instruments”. For her, this involves not only playing traditional compositions, but also “finding ways to present the sounds of these instruments on the world stages”. Vân-Ánh Võ “redesigns” the instruments in order to play genres including jazz, rock and western classical. “I have been creating new techniques for the instruments,” she says, “and have written new compositions that carry the thoughts of the young generation. Using traditional instruments as the foundation, I introduce a new and modern musical voice to help the young generation develop an appreciation for Vietnamese traditional arts and culture.”

Hanoi Masters offers a window into the stark and powerful beauty of traditional Vietnamese music, and into the nature of music as a salve and response to this most savage of wars. This is not simply a historical exercise; the songs recorded here feel alive and raw, as if the performers are acting as mediums for the horror that their countrymen endured, making it real and present yet again. For Brennan, notions of preservation are too simplistic. Instead, these ideas must be considered in the context of an imbalance born of America’s long cultural dominance. “Music cannot and should not be totally preserved,” he says. “It is a living and evolving thing. Unfortunately, though America may have ‘lost’ the war, they have prevailed in terms of media. The dominance of English language and European musical forms has enacted its own form of cultural genocide globally.”

VA – The Rough Guide to Bollywood Disco (2014)

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Bollywood DiscoJames Brown’s trombonist Fred Wesley famously said ‘Disco music is funk with a bow-tie’ – a witty observation but much too modest for Bollywood. In typically high-voltage fashion, disco done Indian style adds so much more: metallic flares, dazzling over-sized mirror-balls, smoke machines galore and more Technicolor flashing dance floors than you could shake a rhinestone encrusted stick at.
Disco originally steamed up from the hot and hectic streets of ’70s New York. Embracing decadence and presenting a new souped-up beat-driven sound, disco (like punk) can be seen as a reaction to the placid, perennially positive hippy vibes of the ’60s. The UK, its ears already opened to American dancefloor sounds via Northern Soul, had its first disco number one in 1974 with…

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…George McCrae’s ‘Rock Your Baby’. Soon, imported cassettes and vinyl worked their way into the hands of Indian film composers such as Bappi Lahiri, R.D. Burman and Biddu Appaiah.

While ‘Chand Mera Dil Chandni Ho Tum’, a dramatic ballad from the 1977 film Hum Kisi Se Kum Nahin, is an early example of the influence of disco on Bollywood, by the 1980s high energy bass-lines, peppy vocals and luscious strings had taken over.  The fun-loving magpie mentality of Indian film, both visually and musically, meant composers were more than happy to cherry-pick their favourite disco sounds and work them into their songs. On ‘Boom Boom’, sung by the Pakistani pop star Nazia Hassan, producer Biddu lifts Giorgio Moroder’s pulsating bass line straight from the Donna Summer hit ‘I Feel Love’, while the aptly named 1982 blockbuster Disco Dancer is a classic rags-to-riches story with a soundtrack that references dancefloor artists as diverse as Ottawan and The Buggles.

The vocals of legendary Bengali playback singer Kishore Kumar epitomised the Bollywood sound’ throughout the 1970s. Renowned for his distinctive style of yodelling, his forays into disco heard here reflect his versatile vocal ability.

Other treasures abound on The Rough Guide to Bollywood Disco, including such classics of the genre as ‘Hari Om Hari’ and ‘I Am A Disco Dancer’. Today, Bollywood disco lives on via modern interpretations and vintage appreciations. The cult club night ‘Bollywood Disco’ in New York is ever popular – their DJs instruct American youth in the long-lasting influence of the genre while their website explains how even contemporary hip-hop producers such as Timbaland have worked titillating morsels from the Bollywood back catalogue into their sound.

Now it’s time to let loose those dancing shoes and boogie down to Bollywood’s glittering disco heyday.

The Rough Guide To Bollywood Disco also shines the spotlight on one of Bollywood’s greats, highlighting the dazzling career of the award-winning playback singer, actor, composer, screen-writer and director – Kishore Kumar.

VA – PUNK 45: Burn, Rubber City, Burn! Akron, Ohio: Punk and the Decline of the Mid-West 1975-80 (2015)

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BurnSoul Jazz Records’ new ‘Punk 45’ album Burn Rubber City, Burn! charts the rise of the music scene in the mid-West city of Akron, Ohio, at a time when the city and the rubber industry it was associated with was in deep decline.
Featuring a fantastic collection of Akron groups including Devo, The Bizarros, Rubber City Rebels, Jane Aire, Chi-Pig, The Waitresses and more.
The album follows on from Soul Jazz’s earlier Punk 45 albums about USA and British punk (Kill The Hippies! Kill Yourself! and There Is No Such Thing As Society) as well as the cover art book Punk 45. And Burn, Rubber City, Burn coincides with the release of as a second album about Ohio’s early punk scene, Extermination Nights in…

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…the Sixth City – featuring the music scene of nearby Cleveland.

1. The Bizarros – I Bizarro (1:51)
2. The Waitresses – The Comb (3:06)
3. Hammer Damage – Laugh (3:14)
4. Devo – Mechanical Man (4:21)
5. Tin Huey – Squirm You Worm (2:44)
6. The Bizarros – Lady Doubonette (3:51)
7. Chi-Pig – Ring Around the Collar (3:53)
8. Devo – Auto Modown (2:03)
9. Rubber City Rebels – Kidnapped (3:40)
10. Denis DeFrange & Mark Frazier – The Manikin Shuffle (2:42)
11. Jane Aire & The Belvederes – When I Was Young (2:48)
12. Tin Huey – Puppet Wipes (2:47)
13. Chi-Pig – Apu Api (2:43)
14. The Bizarros – Nova (3:20)
15. Rubber City Rebels – Such a Fool (2:52)
16. Denis DeFrange – Sector Wars (2:34)
17. Ralph Carney – Closet Bears (2:47)
18. 15 60 75 The Numbers Band – Narrow Road (6:08)


VA – Highlife On the Move: Selected Nigerian & Ghanaian Recordings from London & Lagos 1954-66 (2015)

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Highlife on the MoveHighlife On the Move covers a period of musical history that remains under-documented but has been hugely influential on the ensuing half century. It brings together thirty-eight tracks by musicians of Nigerian or Ghanaian origin, recorded in Nigeria, Ghana or London, between 1954 and 1966.
An indication of the music’s vintage is that many of the tracks were originally issued on ten-inch 78 rpm shellac discs or seven-inch 45’s; however, there can be no quibbles about the sound quality of the compilation. Those thirty-eight tracks feature some twenty-five ensembles, ranging from those including well-recognised names through to quite a few that have long been forgotten. Irrespective of that, the quality of the music is uniformly high; the compiler seems to have selected on that…

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…basis more than of celebrity.

The album opens with a track by one of the better known names, Nigerian-born percussionist Ginger Johnson, who settled in London after World War II and played in various jazz band and orchestras. In the fifties he released several singles that were some of the first recordings of African music released in Britain. In the sixties he played with many jazz and rock performers, culminating in his appearance onstage with The Rolling Stones at their Hyde Park concert in 1969. (Incidentally, Freestyle Records is planning a re-release of the album African Party by Ginger Johnson and his African Messengers.) His opening track here, “Highlife No. 5,” plunges us straight into the distinctive dance rhythm of West African highlife music, a sound which dominates the compilation; the track’s free-blowing horn breaks, also typical of highlife, are certain to appeal to any jazz fan with a pulse.

Another name that leaps out of the credits is that of Kwamalah Quaye; better known as Cab Quaye. This English-born Ghanaian was the son of bandleader Caleb Quaye and so was part of a musical dynasty that included his own sons Caleb and Finley Quaye as well as trip-hop star Tricky. Cab had an illustrious career in jazz bands and orchestras before rediscovering his African roots in the fifties and forming his Sextetto Africana which blended African and Cuban music, as illustrated by their track “Son of Africa” here.

But if any name here is guaranteed to make aficionados of African music sit up and take notice it must be that of Fela Ransome-Kuti. The future Afrobeat superstar arrived in London in 1958 to study medicine, but soon switched to studying music. By the start of 1960 his first recording—credited to Fela Kuti & His Highlife Rakers—had been released. Never before re-released, both sides of that ten-inch 78 rpm single are included here, entitled “Fela’s Special” and “Aigana.” Heard in isolation, each of them is a powerful, horn-driven piece that is compellingly danceable (and destined to be sampled, no doubt!) But heard in the context of the whole album, they do not stand out as being special, eloquent testament to the uniformly high quality of the music here.

Another later track by Kuti—with his Koola Lobitos (“cool cats”)—is also included and it throws light on another aspect of London during this period. Entitled “Nigeria Independence,” the track is one of three tracks here celebrating independence, another being “Ghana, Forward Forever” by Lord Ganda & Rupert Nurse’s Calypso Band. Between 1958 and 1966, many Commonwealth countries became independent. So, during most of the period covered by this compilation, Britain was still a colonial power, with many London residents having been born in Africa or the Caribbean. Consequently, the city was a melting pot in which there was frequent cross-fertilisation between different musical cultures. As with the Cab Quaye track, there is frequent evidence of that throughout this album, for instance with elements of calypso being obvious is some supposedly African tracks. This was decades before the “world music” label existed, but the influence of one continent’s music on another’s was already happening.

VA – Under the Influence Volume 4 (2014)

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Under The Influence Vol. 4Z Records release the fourth instalment in the Under the Influence series in September, compiled by Nick The Record.
The seminal disco label, run by Dave Lee, AKA Joey Negro, is famous for its compilations, which include the popular Remixed with Love and The Soul of Disco series. Started in 2011, Under the Influence focuses on lesser-known soul, funk, boogie and disco, put together by avid collectors. With a collection that dates back 35 years, UK obsessive Nick The Record is considered one of the top connoisseurs of rare disco from the ’70s and ’80s.
“There were very few people interested in this vein of music history at the time and even fewer as obsessed as me,” says Nick The Record. “So when the re-emergence of disco exploded I was…

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…well ahead of the curve, not only in collecting but historical knowledge.” The two-disc release brings together cuts from the likes of Katunga, Leston Paul and late London-born singer Jean Adebambo.

1. Boogsie – Can’t You See Me [05:23]
2. The Family Tree – 150th Psalm [04:19]
3. Proton Plus – Pay Up (Remixed Rhythm Track) [05:19]
4. Jean Adebambo – Say That You Love Me [08:51]
5. Bill Campbell – Boogie All Night [06:54]
6. Katunga – Palo Bonito [04:28]
7. Wild Fire – Try Making Love [06:21]
8. M.C. and His Great Googa-Moogas – Keep Your Shoes On! (Stuck in the Groove) [06:02]
9. M.C. Roscoe – Feel the Beat (Instrumental) [05:57]
10. Leston Paul – What a Surprise [06:33]
11. Sugar and Spice – The Beast (Instrumental) [04:21]
12. Santth – Do You Want Me Baby, Like I Want You [04:34]
13. K.L. Hamilton – I’m Trying [03:52]
14. Skye – Ain’t No Need [06:21]
15. Betty and Beverly Prudhomme – Tut Tut Twins [05:53]
16. Shelbra Dane – You Move Me [05:55]
17. Ronnie Jones – Video Games [07:46]
18. Charlie Mike Sierra – On the Moon [07:05]
19. Victor Vick – Rescue [05:27]
20. State of Grace – Touching the Times (Instrumental) [05:52]
21. Blackway and Helene – Music for Us (Instrumental) [06:27]

VA – Best of Northern Soul’s Classiest Rarities, Volume 5 (2015)

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Classiest RaritiesA new volume in Northern Soul’s Classiest Rarities series is eagerly anticipated and always “on the go”. Northern Soul is a sufficiently broad field to make various styles of records potential contenders. The R&B and modern ends of the spectrum tend to get covered on “New Breed” or “Masterpieces” compilations, but if the sound has made it onto mainstream Northern dancefloors, it wins its place on Northern Soul’s Classiest Rarities.
Northern Soul’s Classiest Rarities vol. 5 reflects the continued popularity of funk-influenced dancers on the scene. The obscure New Orleans- based Sho-Biz label provides ‘Lover Man’ by the Soul Brothers, by far the rarer of their two singles. Mel Davis’ ‘Just Another Smile’ first found favour with funk fans but the solid beat enabled it to…

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…crossover to forward-thinking Northern venues, as has the Webb People’s Dave Hamilton-produced ‘I’m Sending Vibrations’, featured here in an extended version from multi-track tape for the first time.

Other tape finds come from Nashville’s most important girl group the Avons, whose original 60s version of Peggy Gaines’ ‘When The Boy That You Love’ is femme soul unsurpassed. The Bay Area’s Jeanette Jones had yet another unissued soul stomper in the can at GSR studios and ‘Break Someone Else’s Heart’ will please her followers. J.J. Barnes has devotees stretching back over 40 years and the discovery of an unreleased track from his Ring 45 session will setDetroitcollectors’ hearts aflutter.

Big Northern hitters include Terri Goodnight’s ‘They Didn’t Know’, a super-rare stomper that has evaded collectors for decades. Mary Saxton’s ‘Losing Control’ also commands top dollar, while classy Chicago numbers by the Steelers and Roy Wright aren’t remotely cheap. The relatively common ‘Wrong, Wrong, Wrong’ by Ray & Dave is flavour of the year again, as is the Ballads’ ‘Butterfly’. ‘That Same Old Feeling’ is a quality Detroit 45 by the Volumes which could have been conceived for this compilation, like the less-pricey but equally wonderful ‘Two Loves Have I’ by R&B giant Big Joe Turner. Also included are vocal groups, a hint of modern (Darondo’s brilliant debut single appears on CD for the first time), a Wheel classic and piles of soul for collectors who appreciate the good stuff.

VA – Millions Like Us: The Story of the Mod Revival 1977-1989 (2014)

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Mod RevivalSpread out over four discs and lovingly packaged, Cherry Red’s Millions Like Us tells the tale of the mod revival, one of the most insular and focused music scenes to ever come out of the U.K.
Inspired by the success of the Jam, who played with all the pent-up energy of the Who and sported the dress sense of the nattiest ’60s mods, and the release of the film Quadrophenia, England exploded with bands eager to follow in the Jam’s wake, and Millions collects up most, if not all, of them.
From the most obscure corners of the scene to the bands who almost made it (the Lambrettas, Secret Affair, the Chords, Squire — each of whom get two songs), there are tons of groups made up of young lads in stylish gear looking to express their frustrations, celebrate their small freedoms, bash out ringing chords, and impress the young modettes in the crowd. For the most part, the bands involved play with enough energy and fire to obscure their obvious debt to the past, and the Jam, and the collection is filled with tons of great songs.

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Split between rave-ups about scooters, bank holidays, and girls, and empowering mini-epics about the “kids” and the scene, there’s a positivity to the music that must have provided a nice alternative for people who wanted loud and aggressive music, but also wanted to hear good melodies and look smart. To that end, a great deal of the songs here share a lot with the power pop scene that was operating in the U.S. at the same time. Check out Secret Affair’s “My World,” which sounds like it could have been on a Raspberries album. There’s also a strong R&B thread running through the scene, mostly in a good Northern soul/Motown-inspired way, sometimes in a corny, overly reverent way (like the Q-Tips’ tepid cover of “S.Y.S.L.J.F.M [The Letter Song]”).

The set takes a few interesting detours here and there, gathering up some music on the fringes of the scene like L.A. band the Untouchables’ “Free Yourself,” the twee pop psych of Direct Hits’ lovely “Modesty Blaise,” the modern girl group snap of Dee Walker’s “Snap Back,” and the bubblegummy pop of the JetSet’s “Wednesday Girl.” These diversions show how far the mod revival’s reach extended, and it keeps the set from being merely four hours of bands who wanted to be the Jam’s little brothers. The fourth disc shows that this urge was very strong and long-lasting, since even by 1989 there were still bands in deep thrall to the classic mod sound, though peppered by psychedelic leanings (the Leepers’ “Paint a Day”) and early acid jazz (the James Taylor Quartet) too.

Like most box sets, Millions Like Us isn’t perfect and goes on a little too long, but overall it’s a fun, exhaustive, and inspired look back at a vibrant scene that tends to be overlooked, but really shouldn’t be.

Disc One
1. The New Hearts – Just Another Teenage Anthem
2. The Exits – The Fashion Plague
3. The Reaction – I Can’t Resist
4. Strangeways – All the Sounds of Fear (demo)
5. Sema 4 – Sema 4 Messages
6. Speedball – No Survivors
7. The Jolt – See Saw
8. The Cigarettes – They’re Back Again, Here They Come
9. The Killermeters – Why Should It Happen to Me
10. The Donkeys – What I Want
11. Secret Affair – Time for Action
12. Purple Hearts – Millions Like Us
13. The Chords – Now It’s Gone
14. Back to Zero – Your Side of Heaven
15. Squire – Walking Down the Kings Road
16. Merton Parkas – Plastic Smile
17. The Crooks – Modern Boys
18. Untamed Youth Untamed Youth
19. The First Steps – The Beat Is Back
20. The Nips – Gabrielle
21. The Teenbeats – Strength of the Nation
22. The Lambrettas – Go Steady
23. Long Tall Shorty – 1970’s Boy
24. Les Elite – Career Girls
25. Beggar – Don’t Throw Your Life Away (live)
26. The Mods – Let Me Be The One (live)

Disc Two
1. The Circles – Opening Up
2. The Odds – Saturday Night
3. Seventeen – Bank Holiday Weekend
4. The Most – Carefree
5. The Scene – Hey Girl
6. The Same – Wild About You
7. The Vandells – Bank Holiday
8. The Directions – Three Bands Tonite
9. The Chords – Maybe Tomorrow
10. Sta-prest – School Days
11. 9 Below Zero – Pack Fair And Square (previously Unissued Demo)
12. The Accidents – Blood Spattered With Guitars
13. Mi5 – Television Screen Heroes
14. Secret Affair – My World
15. Q-tips – S.Y.S.L.J.F.M. (The Letter Song)
16. Red Beans And Rice – That Driving Beat
17. Dead Beats – Choose You
18. The Letters – Nobody Loves Me
19. The Name – Fuck Art Let’s Dance (demo)
20. The Lambrettas – D-a-a-ance
21. Squire – My Mind Goes Round in Circles
22. The Scene – I’ve Had Enough
23. D.c.10’s – I Can See Through Walls
24. Run 229 – Soho
25. The Fixations – No Way Out
26. Two Tone Pinks – Don’t Lecture Me

Disc Three
1. Small Hours – The Kid
2. Weekend – Tina’s Party
3. The Upset – Only for Sheep (previously unissued)
4. The Amber Squad – Can We Go Dancing
5. The Times – Red with Purple Flashes
6. The Heartbeats – Go
7. The Dodos – Blind to Fiction
8. The Retreads – Would You Listen Girl
9. Long Tall Shorty – Win Or Lose
10. The Gents – The Faker
11. The Clues – No Vacancies
12. The Onlookers – You and I
13. Small World – Love Is Dead
14. Purple Hearts – Plane Crash (respond Version)
15. The Stripes – One Step Ahead
16. Direct Hits – Modesty Blaise
17. The Diplomats – I’ll Keep On Holding On
18. The Truth – Confusion (hits Us Everytime)
19. The Prisoners – Hurricane
20. Fast Eddie – I Don’t Need No Doctor
21. The Jetset – Wednesday Girl
22. Dee Walker – Jump Back
23. The Way Out – Time Moves Us On
24. Manual Scan – Nothing You Can Do
25. Mod Fun – I Am with You

Disc Four
1. The Scene – Something That You Said
2. Stupidity – Bend Don’t Break
3. The Moment – In This Town
4. The Untouchables – Free Yourself
5. The Combine – Dreams Come True
6. The Alljacks – Guilty
7. Makin’ Time – Here Is My Number
8. The Co-stars – Kiss and Make Up
9. The Boss – One Good Reason
10. The Blades – The Last Man in Europe
11. 5:30! – Catcher in the Rye
12. Solid State – Train to London Town
13. Eleanor Rigby – I Want to Sleep with You
14. The Rage – Looking for You
15. The Threads – Step Back
16. The Risk – Jobs For the Boys
17. James Taylor Quartet – Blow Up
18. The Kick – Julie London
19. The Reflection A.o.b. – All I Want to Be
20. Studio 68 – Get Out of My Hair
21. The Leepers – Paint in a Day
22. The Clique – Worming
23. The Aardvarks – Arthur C. Clarke

VA – The Soul of Designer Records (2014)

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Designer RecordsChances are, you’ve never heard of Designer Records. One of many independent labels run on a little less than a shoestring in the ’60s and ’70s, Designer Records was one of the many imprints run by Style Wooten, a Memphis recordman who recruited new talent in classified ads in the back of local newspapers (this also happened to be how he found his wife). Wooten’s rates ran low but he wasn’t cheap. As long as the musicians had the cash, he took his time in the studio, coaxing the best possible performances out of his non- professional artists, which wasn’t a particularly easy thing to do due to his own amateur status. He could play a little, but he left a lot of the actual recording up to Roland Janes, a former studio guitarist for Sun who had played with Billy Lee Riley and…

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…Jerry Lee Lewis before he departed to set up Sonic Studios in Memphis in 1962. Two years later, Style became a regular customer of Sonic, cutting a wide variety of artists — country, rockabilly, soul, rock & roll — and issuing them on a bewildering number of imprints, many of them named after cars. Wooten dedicated Designer Records to gospel. Many vocal harmony groups came through Memphis with the intent to perform live and they’d wind up recording while they were in town, waiting to release a single until the groups could afford to get a record pressed. Nobody involved ever expected that one of these records would turn into a hit, and none did. Often, the groups would sell several copies at live shows — sometimes selling well enough to ensure a second single from Designer — but that was the only place they’d ever circulate. Over the years, collectors were drawn to Wooten’s work and Designer in particular because there was a raw, vibrant authenticity to the records.

Little was known of the musicians or Wooten himself — in his series of excellent liner notes, Michael Hurtt’s writes that Style’s son Jason admitted that his father remains a mystery to him — but that hardly dilutes the impact of Big Legal Mess’ four-disc 2014 box set The Soul of Designer Records. In a way, this mystery strengthens the music as it underscores that it was, in many ways, true folk music, performed, recorded, and sometimes written by musicians who simply had a compulsion to sing these songs. Hurtt details biographical information for as many of the groups as he can — more than you’d expect, although the information is often sketchy — but the common thread is this: these are groups raised in the church but whose material often was informed by contemporary soul (some of the latest tracks here even feature newfangled effects like phased guitars), so they sounded like they belonged to the present, not the past. Sometimes the group had a guitarist, sometimes they also had a bassist, but it was Janes’ responsibility to fill out the arrangement, so he’d sometimes add some live-wire guitar to the proceedings. The focus was always on the groups whose joy in harmonizing was palpable. This kind of gospel music isn’t made much anymore. It’s all rural small groups who were determined to connect on the terms of the modern world, adapting to its rhythms and sometimes addressing its secular concerns. At times, this does mean the music is tied to its time — music made on a budget usually reflects the limits of technology — but that’s what is exhilarating about The Soul of Designer Records. Some of the groups are exceptional, as are some of the songs, but what matters is the cumulative impact, how the four discs paint a picture of a thriving, distinctive regional scene.

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