I wanna hear some stories about the Northern Soul "All-Nighters" that took place in the UK in the 70's and 80's....I understand it still goes on today but I understand that shit back in the day was WILD!!!
I wanna hear some stories about the Northern Soul "All-Nighters" that took place in the UK in the 70's and 80's....I understand it still goes on today but I understand that shit back in the day was WILD!!!
buy Pete McKenna's "Nightshift" book. Interesting read.
obscure 60s soul music that sounds like motown but not usually as good as motown. that about sums it up!
I agree with this but it does get a little more complicated.....the first single I found that someone told me was "Northern Soul" was by Lou Pride on the Suemi label out of El Paso.....I listened to it and thought....second rate James Brown impersonator.....I was wrong to the tune of about $1,200.....but to this day I'll find two 45's...one might be a Northern Soul MONSTER and the other a five dollar piece-O-crap and I can't tell the difference soundwise.
I wanna hear some stories about the Northern Soul "All-Nighters" that took place in the UK in the 70's and 80's....I understand it still goes on today but I understand that shit back in the day was WILD!!!
obscure 60s soul music that sounds like motown but not usually as good as motown. that about sums it up!
not quite, 'cause actual motown records fit the bill as well ("there's a ghost in my house" by r. dean taylor is considered one of the touchstone records of that genre)
obscure 60s soul music that sounds like motown but not usually as good as motown. that about sums it up!
I agree with this but it does get a little more complicated.....the first single I found that someone told me was "Northern Soul" was by Lou Pride on the Suemi label out of El Paso.....I listened to it and thought....second rate James Brown impersonator.....I was wrong to the tune of about $1,200.....but to this day I'll find two 45's...one might be a Northern Soul MONSTER and the other a five dollar piece-O-crap and I can't tell the difference soundwise.
obscure 60s soul music that sounds like motown but not usually as good as motown. that about sums it up!
I never thought I'd take to defending the northern scene but this is not really accurate and somewhat misinformed
i was kidding. and it's informed by listening to northern soul comps and going...oh, ok, i see...i'll just stick with motown and some gloria jones. it's a silly umbrella term that only really means anything if you are of a certain age and were from a certain party of england and went out to these nights...for the rest of us...it's soul music.
obscure 60s soul music that sounds like motown but not usually as good as motown. that about sums it up!
I never thought I'd take to defending the northern scene but this is not really accurate and somewhat misinformed
i was kidding. and it's informed by listening to northern soul comps and going...oh, ok, i see...i'll just stick with motown and some gloria jones. it's a silly umbrella term that only really means anything if you are of a certain age and were from a certain party of england and went out to these nights...for the rest of us...it's soul music.
I don't know what you've got against Northern, Patrick! But damn dude. The northern scene is responsible for a lot of records being known, moreover for the record collecting world even caring about soul music beyond doowop and ballads... huge feed into the disco and boogie/modern scenes... you're really not giving it due as a scene.
And it means something to anyone that cares about the history of these things, not to mention those of us who sell records that could be called "northern"...
i don't have much against it it...i just can't relate to it because i wasn't there and i don't have any need for any label for the music besides "soul". if you want to you can fake a british accent and call certain rare soul tunes "northern"...i do that some times...as in, "that's a right northern stomper innit?"
Comments
wikipedia it and avoid the hatt
Mostly 60's, US/Detroit-style (though Northern Soul records come from all over the place), dancable, pop-inflected soul.
soul music that was played in clubs which were located in northern uk.
Completely objective term denoting Soul made and manufactured due north of Ames, IA.
Prince is Northern Soul.
Yes, the genre was invented before Guzzo was born
And tracks dating back to probably about '73 were getting spun under that title at Northern events
it is somewhat objective, despite having a murky definition
not very important in the scheme of things unless you are actually part of the northern scene
because if you are not, the primary classifications one should use are "good" and "bad"
Records still seem to be introduced on the Northern scene today and go from $5 to $70 overnight.
buy Pete McKenna's "Nightshift" book. Interesting read.
Right, and despite the misinformed posts to the contrary there is a "sound"
I never thought I'd take to defending the northern scene but this is not really accurate and somewhat misinformed
Most definitely, although its not a sound I'm big on...
Increasingly I'm seeing every dope obscure soul 45 from the 70s/80s I find is a 'modern' or 'crossover' spin though...
I agree with this but it does get a little more complicated.....the first single I found that someone told me was "Northern Soul" was by Lou Pride on the Suemi label out of El Paso.....I listened to it and thought....second rate James Brown impersonator.....I was wrong to the tune of about $1,200.....but to this day I'll find two 45's...one might be a Northern Soul MONSTER and the other a five dollar piece-O-crap and I can't tell the difference soundwise.
SLANDER
Irma Thomas - What Are You Trying To Do
Ask Miss Shing-a-ling! LOL
not quite, 'cause actual motown records fit the bill as well ("there's a ghost in my house" by r. dean taylor is considered one of the touchstone records of that genre)
Scarelidge. That's a good record.
K in Canada.
i was kidding. and it's informed by listening to northern soul comps and going...oh, ok, i see...i'll just stick with motown and some gloria jones. it's a silly umbrella term that only really means anything if you are of a certain age and were from a certain party of england and went out to these nights...for the rest of us...it's soul music.
Take the northern soul tour:
http://soulfuldetroit.com/web02-northern/index.html
DAMN!
I don't know what you've got against Northern, Patrick! But damn dude. The northern scene is responsible for a lot of records being known, moreover for the record collecting world even caring about soul music beyond doowop and ballads... huge feed into the disco and boogie/modern scenes... you're really not giving it due as a scene.
And it means something to anyone that cares about the history of these things, not to mention those of us who sell records that could be called "northern"...
Is there a "look"?
And does it involve dagger sideburns?