New York City - I’m Doin’ Fine Now
RAJ
tenacious local 7,783 Posts
Any body feeling this LP? It's been on heavy rotation for about a month now. Sweet Soul that gives me goose bumps.
Comments
Let's Set The Record Straight, you know things could really be better
made it's way onto my iriver this morning
Been a long time since I gave that a spin, thanks for the reminder!
Just found this and have been enjoying it on the sweet soul tip
I'll post an MP3 in a bit. It's mid 70s stuff with sitars and orchestras and shit.
This track is .
Anything else on Music Merchant worth picking up?
Definitely some good 45s, but I don't know about any of the other LPs.
This one seems to be consistently available for cheap...
...But I don't know if it's any good. I have heard it described as "prog rock," which makes me reluctant to take a chance on it.
PeeRe turned me onto that cut.
yes.
This track is nice! Is the whole album quality?
My business dealings with a fellowTheNonStrutter depends on your answer.
Yes... It's very solid. I got it at TSL for $15 which qualifies as a cheapie.
I'd compare them to the Spinners. Both groups were produced by Thom Bell, and NYC's lead singer had an uncanny vocal similarity to the Spinners' Bobbie Smith.
I have quite a few of NYC's singles (including their crossover smash, "I'm Doin' Fine Now"), but the only full-length LP I have is SOULFUL ROAD, yet another of the umpteen thousand album covers that parodies the Beatles' ABBEY ROAD. As far as the music itself, it's okay but no classic. If anything, it sounds like a bunch of songs that the Spinners turned down. In other words, filler.
There were three NYC albums in all on the Chelsea label, counting their best-of. (A best-of from a group that had only two albums? Ain't no sense in that...)
To paraphrase: Every race gets the David Clayton-Thomas it deserves. There's some good music and good texture on that thing, but the vocals are straight chest-rug, and pouring Holland-Dozier-Hollandaise on that don't make it brunch.
Chest rugs can be overlooked when Satan is somehow referenced.
You know this.
So...exactly what kind of music is it? Since you dropped the name of David Clayton-Thomas, I'm guessing Warlock was somewhere in the zone of Blood, Sweat & Tears (the band Thomas sang for) or Rare Earth.
I guess I can consider this a damn decent 3 euro find then
Seriosly though, this LP comes highly recommended. The arrangements are on point without sounding overproduced, the falsettos are in key, they got loops for days... yeah, mos def a dope LP.
Their second LP entitled "Soulful Road" (a play on Abbey Road) I thought was absolute garbage though. Way over the top.
- J
So did Captain Funkaho.
-e
Yes. Very brassy, very virile, very boot-cut, somewhat paunchy. The instrumentation is pretty good, and I like the not-entirely-airtight horn arrangements. Dude up front hurts my feelings, though; he's got that digging-waaaay-down/singing-from-my-colon kind of voice, like the guy from Creed, or maybe Taylor Dayne.
Does Stone Temple Pilot and Pearl Jam dude fall into this category?
First thought this is a joke. Record is nice but it'a dollar bin classic in Germany for 10+ years. I don't know how often I've seen this record for a few Deutschmarks. I never thought that it as something special or unknown.
I like this record.
Eloise Laws[/b] 45s are generally excellent.
I want that Warlock even tho people are saying it sucks...then again, I like Rare Earth and The Mob, so it may be my cuppa tea.
Cosign on the NYC, I don't have the LP but have picked up around 4 or 5 of the singles on Chelsea and they are mostly excellent...one uptempo track with some fuzztone is killer!
I would say "yes," but from what I've seen, both of the guys you've mentioned are more about the double-handed, stoop-shouldered microphone-grabbing stance so common in exponents of the New Sincerity movement of the 90s, and what I'm talking about here is more of a single-handed, head-thrown-back, one-arm-outstretched, lord-of-the-manor type of affair. A certain sense of entitlement is required to finesse this, which I feel is lacking in both the STP dude and the Clam Jam dude.
thats right. so what if it is common? if thats true, buy every copy you see!
i had the 45 when i was a child and it was a hit, and it's still sounding good today: "I'm doin ' fine no-o-ow...without you, bay-beee..."
friend of mine picked that up a few months ago out here & i peeped it out, i was actually into some of it, prog rock meets soul, def worth picking up & givin a listen, cuz if you dont like it, would be an easy flip back out in the world...
peace
That end groove is very nice. Thank you for upping that.
I did it twice and stopped doing it because i thought nobody would dig this record. As I said I'm just suprised. If you would kno how many records that people are bragging about here are completley unknown to me I would be dead. Luckily I'm doing fine now.