The Salty Peppers
jazzman21
287 Posts
The Salty Peppers only recorded a few singles on capitol records, i'm trying to collect all their 45's, can yall help me fill in the blanks? Thanks*Capitol 2568 (1969) Your Love Is Life/Uh Huh Yeah
Comments
"La, La, La/ Pt. 2" (TEC 1014)
"La La Time/ Pt. 2" (Capitol 2433) 1969
"Uh Huh Yeah/ Your Love Is Life" (Capitol 2568)
For some reason, Capitol released the A-side on a various-artists compilation album (Super Soul-Dees, Vol. 3), even though I don't think it was a gigantic hit.
Probably because Capitol released such a small amount of soul
that they had trouble filling comps with material.
No shit - that Curtis Knight acid-rock track on Vol. 2 (Hendrix on guitar) sounds wildly out of place...even though Dante and Terry C. love this label (and could probably think of a bunch of soul/funk one-offs they could have used), Capitol wasn't much of an R&B factory prior to 1975 or so.
Beg to differ, as Capitol issued hundreds of soul records on 45 from 1965-1975.
The Thrills, Patrice Holloway, Alexander Patton, Impalas, General Crook, etc etc etc.
I'm not disagreeing...Capitol did have the black music talent (including the Fame and Invictus labels), it's just that it wasn't until the mid-seventies that they learned how to properly promote it. If they did, General Crook wouldn't have had to switch labels to get a hit.
yow!!
Did you see my EXPLANATION of that statement a few posts back?
I see I gotta repeat it again:
Capitol DID release some worthwhile soul classics in the 60's, but it wasn't till midway through the 70's that they had half a clue as to how to promote[/b] it.
That's why Natalie Cole was a superstar and Patti Drew WASN'T. Poor Patti had the misfortune of being on Capitol in the 60's, and even though she had her five minutes of fame, Capitol didn't have the juice to work her records they way they later pushed Natalie Cole's.
Read carefully, people. I wasn't implying Capitol didn't have ANY rhythm & blues in the 60's, but they were so busy with the Beatles, Beach Boys, Buck Owens, etc., that most of Capitol's soul recordings got lost in the shuffle, unless you were Lou Rawls. (And PLEASE don't tell me 'bout some lost Northern Soul classic that only the artist's mama bought! I'm talkin' about the actual charted HITS.)
Northern Soul was all about records that weren't successful so it kinda makes sense.
It is true that Capitol is known more for Anne Murray and Wayne Newton, but as far as 45's are concerned, one can't say that Capitol did not make a legitimate effort to cash in. They had their share of Motown knock-offs, and it was Capitol that did distribute Eddie Bo's "Lover And A Friend". Yet when it comes to soul, most people would think Atlantic and not Capitol, which makes finding a Capitol-related 45 interesting. The Salty Peppers are a perfect example, because that's Maurice White's band after he left Ramsey Lewis, and before EW&F came to be. The first two Ohio Players albums were on Capitol, before they started putting bald women in chains on their covers.
As someone said, the whole Northern Soul movement was done to show respect to the thousands of artists who didn't make it, but felt as good as "Dancing In The Streets" or "Green Onions". One man's Northern soul is another woman's hip-hop "golden era". The world may salute "Looking At The Front Door", others may salute Style's "What A Brother Know".
I do wish that Capitol, or at least EMI, would be respectful to their music as Warner Music has been to their deep catalog. There's only a small handful of Capitol-related comps compared to the wealth of compilations released by Warner in the past. Then again, there is that story of Capitol throwing out masters by the ton when they needed to make room for "other things", which is why the label was known for having some of the most valuable trash bins in the business.
A respected DJ and collector in these parts told me when he was putting together a compilation involving a Capitol-related artist, the EMI vaults were a mess. And this was in the last few years.