Old Town & Barry Soul Survey – Various Artists CD (Kent)

Code: CDKEND244

£13.99

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01 If I Had Known – Freddie Houston
02 Could This Be Love – Rosco & Barbara
03 Souvenirs Of A Heartbreak – Thelma Jones
04 Left Out – Jesse Johnson
05 I Gotta Have Love Too – Bobby Long & The Dealers
06 Nobody’s Home To Go Home To – Charlie Thomas
07 You Can’t Trust Your Best Friend – Donald Height
08 All I Wanna Do Is Cry – Billy Bland
09 Try Love (One More Time) – The Sparkels
10 Say It With Feeling – Beverly Mckay
11 Let Your Love Shine – Lester Young
12 Think Smart – The Fiestas
13 I’m So Glad – Frank Howard & The Commanders
14 It’s A Woman’s World (You Better Believe It) – The Gypsies Aka The Flirtations
15 Baby, I Need You – Lorraine & The Delights
16 Hold It Baby – King Ernest
17 Keep On Loving You – Buddy & Ella Johnson
18 Baby, I Need You – Jesse Gee
19 The Tide Has Turned – Mark Iv’s Feat Sam Fain
20 Lonely Man – John Standberry Jr
21 You Took My Love For Granted – Billy Bland
22 Slowly I Turn – Billy Profit
23 Stop And Take Another Look – The Divine Men
24 I Must Be Doing Something Right – Irene Reid
25 Second Chance – Thelma Jones
26 Things Have More Meaning Now – Peggy Scott

Weight 120 g
Title

Old Town & Barry Soul Survey

Artist

Various Artists

Label

Format

Genre

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Release Year

Condition

The Kent label has had a long and happy relationship with Old Town Records and its subsidiary Barry. The first recordings we put out was the wildly named Think Smart Soul Stirrers: Jerk It At The Party In Chinatown” Various Artists LP. A contender and probable winner for any “Let’s see how many track titles we can get into an album name” contest. That was in 1987 and featured all the labels’ Northern Soul classics like the Gypsies It’s A Woman’s World, Lorraine & The Delights Baby I Need You and the Fiestas Think Smart. It was also the period when the label was being reassessed by soul fans as a source of “newies”, ie 60s soul sounds that had never been played on the Northern scene before. Also the desired tempo of records had dropped and the big beat ballad was very much in vogue. So tracks like Freddie Houston’s If I Had Known and Donald Height’s You Can’t Trust Your Best Friend were more than acceptable to Northern devotees of the time. These sorts of records also made great listening for the general soul fan. In true Kent style we put in a ballad or two and even managed some Latin boogaloo to rile the purists.

When LPs became a doomed species Old Town was one of the first labels to be transferred to CD, which due to lack of space on the cover was merely called Old Town & Barry Soul Stirrers”. We went with this soul source because there had been more exciting discoveries on the label, the tapes were great and label owner Hy Weiss and Ace were by then old buddies. The extra music we could squeeze on included: the Sparkels enchanting Try Love One More Time, a Jobete song from the New York pens of Sidney Barnes and George Kerr, Frank Howard’s rousing dancer I’m So Glad, Rosco & Barbara (Mr & Mrs Gordon to you) Could This Be Love, a Rhythm and Soul classic and Peggy Scott’s magnificent, modern mover Things Have More Meaning Now. by Ady Croasdell – Ace Records

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