January so far has proved to be a month
of late finishes at the office (partly because I am so hopeless at getting up
in the morning), and successive social whirls at the weekends. All together, that
has left little, no, no time for blogging.
But hey, it’s Friday, so there must be
time for a post.
Previously here I have bemoaned the increased
cost of shipping records to the UK from the US and how that has seriously
curtailed my Soul 45 buying habit. This has caused me to cast around the ‘net
to try and find a Soul source closer to home. I find a lot of UK dealers tend
to seriously overprice their records – the Northern effect I guess – but I have
found a couple of sources on mainland Europe recently. From one of those sources
a few days ago this 45 dropped on the mat in amongst a pack of eight 45s, the
postmark is the Netherlands of all places.
Back in the mid Sixties it was
commonplace for a Soul 45 to feature a dancefloor pitched uptempo track on one
side and a slow “deepie” on the other. This 1965 release from Gloria Parker is
a perfect example and a great two sider. This was early enough in that decade for
the “deepie” to feature as the A side (possibly).
I’m featuring both sides. As It’s Friday and
there are kitchen tables to be danced around you get the uptempo one first. l love
the way that behind the pounding rhythm section and the big voiced Gloria the pianist is throwing his own little party. Later in the evening be sure to listen to the “deepie”
too (with a glass of whiskey maybe). It reminds me strongly of something else but,
maddeningly, I can’t put a name to it.
Hmm now I’ve said that, the structure is reminiscent of A Change Is Gonna Come
isn’t it? With Otis singing maybe.
To me, brought up in the UK with staid,
dull, mono coloured record labels a bright yellow label looks way ahead of it’s
time for 1965. Not unusual for the US of course. But 1965 –this record is
almost 50 years old!, and I reckon when I pulled it out of its sleeve and put it
on the turntable earlier today it was quite probably the first time it had ever
been played. That thought is always a thrill.
Not surprisingly Sir
Shambling has dedicated a page to Gloria, who it seems only ever had three 45
releases, and by the sounds of things her two LLP releases were almost certainly recorded at the same session. It is pointed out there that Jean Wells also performed the songs featured here with the same backing tracks and released them as a
paring on an Eastern 45 . Jean also recorded "The Best Thing For You Baby", Gloria Parker's Samar release.
3 comments:
Nice!
I have bought a few things from the Netherlands recently and also from France and Canada (Kops Records in Toronto) where the postage rates are really reasonable and arrive quicker than from the states
I have had to go to the US for a couple of things. For one the postage was double the price of the single but it had to be done.
Both songs play the same tune. It's a good one though.
Link updated. Thanks Snakeboy.
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