lush post-1970 soul music from motown / tamala / atlantic is the best shit ever

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (108 of them)

yeah that record is prob my favorite barry white

human life won't become a cat (man alive), Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:51 (ten years ago)

he had a 40-piece orchestra called the love unlimited orchestra. yes that definitely qualifies

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:52 (ten years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev2QTgehWkM

larry appleton, Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:52 (ten years ago)

dc, i found a record store in district heights, md called memory lane records and it's basically heaven for this type of shit

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:54 (ten years ago)

Heez you might also like early Hall & Oates (h/t sund4r for this vid):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=si03zdG6Twk

human life won't become a cat (man alive), Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:56 (ten years ago)

There goes all my money. Thanks!

dc, Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:57 (ten years ago)

whoa who is 21st century? that's great

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 03:59 (ten years ago)

Actually the album version might be closer to the sound you want

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-msVGwWIh8U

human life won't become a cat (man alive), Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:07 (ten years ago)

nice i've always wondered about hall & oates but never dug in.

I got 3 eddie kendricks albums, blue lights in the basement, the isaac hayes movement, pure smokey, and fullfillingness' first finale in like 5 minutes at this record store and had to make myself leave

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:12 (ten years ago)

Also you may find some overlap with the stuff recommended in this thread that I started a while back:
Recommend me some simmering soul tracks like "Thin Line Between Love and Hate" and "Walk on By"

human life won't become a cat (man alive), Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:18 (ten years ago)

Somehow I manage to do damage even at cdepot, which is kind of a mess. Mostly jazz today, though.

That 21st Century is great.

dc, Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:19 (ten years ago)

nice. i was having a hard time finding threads on this. this gladys knight and the pips live album is really worth checking out

https://open.spotify.com/track/78jtejv9Uic44cE2ndNBhb

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:27 (ten years ago)

How did we get so deep into this thread without someone mentioning The O'Jays?

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:53 (ten years ago)

And the chi-lites!

dc, Sunday, 3 April 2016 04:58 (ten years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIfQpzzTfio

here's another good one from 21st Century

larry appleton, Sunday, 3 April 2016 05:01 (ten years ago)

yeah o'jays are one i've been meaning to check out. for some reason i associate them with the psychedelic side of this stuff

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 05:53 (ten years ago)

chi-lites a letter to myself album sounds perfect!

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 05:56 (ten years ago)

jesus

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkPdOxUBGwU

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 05:59 (ten years ago)

^great track

human life won't become a cat (man alive), Sunday, 3 April 2016 06:06 (ten years ago)

I got to think that getting to 16 track recording is a big part of this type sound. You have a similar thread of strings being used on classic blues artists like BB King and Bobby Blue Bland along with the 'countrypolitan' productions of Billy Sherrill for Charlie Rich and George Jones.

earlnash, Sunday, 3 April 2016 13:20 (ten years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olKfUfB3GEI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJe8Q6912NM

scott seward, Sunday, 3 April 2016 18:18 (ten years ago)

best listening to that album all week. lots of gwen guthrie songs. every motown and philly soul trick in the book.

scott seward, Sunday, 3 April 2016 18:19 (ten years ago)

Yeah, speaking of Philly soul, I thought of it while listening to the new Bonnie Raitt---she still sometimes seems like she's assimilated elements Ganble-Huff's approach over the years---and thinking I still need to check out albums by MFSB, who were pretty much the house band on a lot of G-H productions right? Also thinking about psychedelic Soul, what a 70s Creem reviewer dubbed the Norman Whitfield Experience. A lot of hits and deep album excursions on this 2-CD set:
http://www.amazon.com/Psychedelic-Soul-CD-The-Temptations/dp/B00009V7U8

dow, Sunday, 3 April 2016 18:56 (ten years ago)

Dunno why it won't let me post the righteous cover, but here's the tracklist etc.
http://www.amazon.com/Psychedelic-Soul-2-CD-Temptations/dp/B00009V7U8/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1459710067&sr=1-1&keywords=psychedelic+soul

dow, Sunday, 3 April 2016 19:02 (ten years ago)

yeah the sister sledge is nice. phily soul is probably what first hooked me on the stuff. i remember the arrangement to "ready or not" flooring me when i first heard it.

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 22:10 (ten years ago)

and yes charlie rich and a lot of the pre-outlaw stuff hit's the same vein for me. in fact, wasn't it this stuff that inspired the stripped down outlaw period?

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 22:15 (ten years ago)

this is my fave rich/sherrill jam

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Azui-cs9DQ

Heez, Sunday, 3 April 2016 22:17 (ten years ago)

wow, Kendricks is great (I also love how it rhymes with Hendrix)

I could listen to the beat on this one for days:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kg48iWKKC0s

calstars, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 00:24 (ten years ago)

That album is probably the best of his, but they're all so good.

Heez, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 00:40 (ten years ago)

Heez blowing my mind with this thread. CHI-LITES

calstars, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 00:45 (ten years ago)

http://youtu.be/EqMk57Scxu0

sciatica, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 01:00 (ten years ago)

want to play bass like this

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_iOr49DJ8U

Heez, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 02:31 (ten years ago)

and this one's a beauty. the drums!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBZ9jgvcCqo

Heez, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 02:38 (ten years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X23t2MCZsHE

calstars, Wednesday, 6 April 2016 16:17 (ten years ago)

mandrill doing some good shit around this time

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIoQDDoVElg

Heez, Saturday, 9 April 2016 05:03 (ten years ago)

i swear someone sampled this but i'm not finding anything. maybe the beginning just sounds like a portishead song or something

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PK8F51cIFn8

Heez, Saturday, 9 April 2016 05:21 (ten years ago)

This is a good retrospective of Kendricks's solo career: http://soultrain.com/2015/12/22/soul-retrospective-eddie-kendricks/

Sounds like co-producers Leonard Caston and Frank Wilson played a big part on his better early material.

Heez, Monday, 11 April 2016 15:27 (ten years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5BJmtHCyc8

larry appleton, Friday, 22 April 2016 19:04 (ten years ago)

wow, that's beautiful

calstars, Friday, 22 April 2016 19:30 (ten years ago)

This track by Buddy Miles is one I recently came across. It's lush.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCwBhbhbok8

earlnash, Friday, 22 April 2016 19:47 (ten years ago)

Dunno if these fit entirely (too gospel? too disco?) but they are 1970s and they are lush and I love them

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKEdTikamG4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yp1HdiRGA7Q

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rcz_TG-qY_8

tay.ai fan (seandalai), Saturday, 23 April 2016 01:09 (ten years ago)

niiiiiiice. i totally support disco era lushness here. it gives me an excuse to post one of my favorite songs ever:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJ_0sof4kLE

Heez, Saturday, 23 April 2016 01:50 (ten years ago)

That Caston & Majors track is stunning.

rhymes with "blondie blast" (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 04:07 (ten years ago)

The Caston & Majors album is great all the way through. Think it got reissued a couple of years ago.

Kitchen Person, Tuesday, 26 April 2016 15:23 (ten years ago)

Not on Spotify or iTunes.

rhymes with "blondie blast" (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 15:26 (ten years ago)

Yeah it was buried by Motown first time round and the reissue is kind of hidden too (insofar as not releasing it digitally counts as hiding).

tay.ai fan (seandalai), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 20:37 (ten years ago)

Thanks guys, especially Heez, and speaking of Charlie Rich, and what Elvis, Jimmy Webb (incl. songs for Glenn Campbell), Dusty Springfield and Van Morrison, for that matter, were getting to or toward in that era, maybe try Sturgill Simpson's new A Sailor's Guide To Earth: he's been listening deep, for his own purposes, which ain't just retro.

dow, Tuesday, 26 April 2016 21:29 (ten years ago)

Also, of course, if nobody's mentioned it yet, Isaac Hayes's epic reverie re "By The Time I Get To Phoenix."

dow, Tuesday, 26 April 2016 21:31 (ten years ago)

this is the best thread thank you all

marcos, Tuesday, 26 April 2016 21:34 (ten years ago)

im going through and listening to every tune itt and they are all good

marcos, Tuesday, 26 April 2016 21:34 (ten years ago)

It's a shame most of these links are dead. I heard an Eddie Hendricks tune I liked a few months ago and was hoping for some help navigating his very large catalog. All I know is "Keep on Truckin'"

Paul Ponzi, Wednesday, 17 April 2019 01:04 (seven years ago)

people...hold on is a classic, i'd start there. if you haven't heard 'girl, you need a change of mind' before, i'm jealous.

voodoo chili, Wednesday, 17 April 2019 01:22 (seven years ago)

Thanks!

Paul Ponzi, Wednesday, 17 April 2019 05:47 (seven years ago)

if you haven't heard 'girl, you need a change of mind' before, i'm jealous.

This is what I posted before the time jump. I'm also very fond of Date With the Rain and Goin Up in Smoke.

chap, Wednesday, 17 April 2019 10:50 (seven years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAjNgDt-10s

seandalai, Wednesday, 17 April 2019 12:00 (seven years ago)

Let the beat build

voodoo chili, Wednesday, 17 April 2019 12:34 (seven years ago)

five months pass...

Smokey duet with Claudette Robinson - Wine, Women and Song

https://youtu.be/_iRiGqYeoQ4

Heez, Monday, 30 September 2019 03:08 (six years ago)

The Main Ingredient - "Euphrates"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXB1Ys7367M

enochroot, Monday, 30 September 2019 17:52 (six years ago)

Stylistics haven't been mentioned, do they count? I don't think I'd heard the long version of "People Make the World Go Round" before, and I'm now listening to it for the third time today.

A breezy pop-rock feel fairly typical of the mid-'80s (Dan Peterson), Monday, 30 September 2019 18:44 (six years ago)

these are some of the finest lyrics to a quiet storm sex jam i've ever heard

smokey robinson "travelin through"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCFs1WSN5ro

Heez, Monday, 30 September 2019 19:00 (six years ago)

pleased to see love for mid-late 70s smokey here. those albums are so underrated.

really like smokey's family robinson. the first cut finds smokey deep in the funk. flute solo!

his first proper solo album still hangs high as my favorite though. not least of all for this amazing medley.

also: inventor of quiet storm whose forgotten deep cuts blow away most of the competition. hell yes.

Totally different head. Totally. (Austin), Monday, 30 September 2019 21:16 (six years ago)

I've started cross-reading Tim Lawrence's massive Love Will Save The Day---A History of New York dance Culture: 1970-1979 and Vince Aletti's The Disco Files 1973-1978: New York's underground, week by week: so far, a lot of what yall are talking about here is just now being or about to be recorded, but right from the beginning, the writers and their DJ and dancing colleagues/interviewees are zooming in on album tracks re length, flow and sonic depth, with 12" singles still several years away. And yeah, Philadelphia International, Eddie Kendricks, Barry White are def seized on right away.
From the Aretha Franklin in the 1970s thread:
Let Me In Your Life was really striking, w variety unified by dynamics, detail, atmosphere: title track by Bill Withers, incl. the suddenly quiet, dead-on bridge before the resurge---will she scare him away? "Every Natural Thing" by Eddie Hinton, couple originals, with "If You Don't Think" especially appealing, rhythmically suave and flirtatious (confident!) xpost "Til You Come Back To Me" by Stevie (and others), country soul "With Pen In Hand," rocking 60s Aretha "Eight Days On The Road," rippling, hovering "A Song For You"(prob. overrecorded, but her version is the keeper)---smoking the 70s with Cornell Dupree, Pretty Purdie, Deodato, Donnie Hathaway, Joe Farrell, many others,

― dow, Sunday, 20 May 2018 19:53 (one year ago) link

xgau's take, from Rock Records of the 70s or whatever:

Aretha Franklin: Let Me in Your Life [Atlantic, 1974]
Welcome Tom and Jerry (Dowd and Wexler) back--this isn't great Aretha, but it rocks steady even on the ballads. If she doesn't get away with "The Masquerade Is Over," she does renew "A Song for You" with a fresh electric piano part and a good helping of indiscreet interpretation. Guided indiscretion, that's the key--her great gift is her voice, but her genius is her bad taste. B+ ****Fuck the grade, but he's not entirely wrong, like she does justify "What A Fool Believes" and a number of other kitschy choices over the years.

― dow, Sunday, 20 May 2018 19:58 (one year ago) link

Young, Gifted & Black is an astonishing album. Daydreaming! All The Kings Horses!

― Lou Grant, the Iranian cinema of late '70s TV (stevie), Sunday, 20 May 2018 19:59 (one year ago) link

oooh I haven't heard "If You Don't Think" in ages

― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 May 2018 20:14 (one year ago) link

Young, Gifted & Black, Spirit In The Dark and Sparkle are the only 70s albums I have of hers. They're all fantastic. I need to check out some of the others.

― kitchen person, Sunday, 20 May 2018 20:21 (one year ago) link

dow, Monday, 30 September 2019 22:18 (six years ago)

Let Me In Your Life has the same appeal to me as Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes when Teddy Pendergrass was in there: the rowdy voice driving through/grooving with the lush layers

dow, Monday, 30 September 2019 22:24 (six years ago)

Austin, those are some of my favorite Smokey tracks

Heez, Tuesday, 1 October 2019 01:37 (six years ago)

dow, have you seen James Hamilton's Disco Page? It's maintained by ILXor Mike-t-Diva, and it's the perfect companion to the books you're reading when you get to 1975.

ArchCarrier, Wednesday, 2 October 2019 07:38 (six years ago)

one month passes...

This is lush. One of the lost Hot Wax releases that are currently getting re-released.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3pRF-sdaEc

Life is a meaningless nightmare of suffering...save string (Chinaski), Saturday, 30 November 2019 11:18 (six years ago)

three weeks pass...

minnie ripperton w/ rotary connection -- silent night

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wjBbn5BjE0

Heez, Thursday, 26 December 2019 05:12 (six years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.