Soundtrack To Your Life
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^^
Fucking incredible. Thank you for that. -
glad you guys enjoyed my little run down memory lane
looking forward to yours joe
and riffblaster generals
and black hearts
and wolfbloodsFUCK i can not believe i wrote that whole thing and never once mentioned my undying man crush on otis redding
fuck
in my eyes hands down thee greatest male vocalist ever
but thats just me
my obsession may have start with the first time i saw top gun
but i probably heard dock of the bay threw my grandmother before that
who knows -
Phew - amazing contributions here.
When I get around to putting my soundtrack together it's going to be very tame by comparison!
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Great Thread. I'll start putting mine together
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Redding was as good a song writer, arranger, musician, and producer as be was a vocalist. What a loss…
I love him, Cooke, Gaye, Hathaway, Mayfield, Charles, Wonder...
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Sam Cooke best voice in the game. Total gem.
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Almost every goddamn time they die too soon too…
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so many good names mentioned above. Natehate's story sounds almost identical to mine, id swear he was a kid from the little click of HC kids I ran with through out my youth.
To add a few more I was a huge agnostic front fan for awhile…Now though, as I have gotten older and mellowed out.... If im stranded on an island with nothing but some old vinyl and player, Give me some old motown and a little bebop and ill be one happy man. I can get lost (in a great way) listening to coltrane, parker, or miles just doing what they did so well. And I have never in my life heard a song from the old motown days that didnt put a smile on my face. That age of music, IMO, was the highwater mark, so much goodness..... so so much...
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I have never in my life heard a song from the old motown days that didnt put a smile on my face. That age of music, IMO, was the highwater mark, so much goodness….. so so much...
Yes, I feel exactly the same way!
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I am big on Stax and Motown, and I'd add New Orleans soul as well, Eddie Bo, Earl King, Lee Dorsey, Ernie K-Doe, Allen Toussaint, Irma Thomas, and I don't want to get started until I can really get into it with the stride pianists like Professor Longhair and the funk like the Meters….
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so many good names mentioned above. Natehate's story sounds almost identical to mine, id swear he was a kid from the little click of HC kids I ran with through out my youth.
To add a few more I was a huge agnostic front fan for awhile…Now though, as I have gotten older and mellowed out.... If im stranded on an island with nothing but some old vinyl and player, Give me some old motown and a little bebop and ill be one happy man. I can get lost (in a great way) listening to coltrane, parker, or miles just doing what they did so well. And I have never in my life heard a song from the old motown days that didnt put a smile on my face. That age of music, IMO, was the highwater mark, so much goodness..... so so much...
not trying to be a dick
but can we refer to it as northern soul, not motown, motown was just one label, albeit the biggest and most recognized. its just a pet peeve of mine.
northern soul is technically the proper term for that style of music
i'll shut up now
ocd much? -
always have referred to it as such (as everyone I have ever known has) and doubt it will change, but if you refer to it as northern soul i'll know what your talking about.
also known as "motown soul", or "motown sound"….
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Right , however, Motown is a form of soul in which Barry Gordy played "the hand of god" in crafting a sound that became synonymous with Detroit..
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MoStax MoProblems
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Also, if someone said "northern soul" I'd say "oxymoron" ha!
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Of course, there are all sorts of subgenres of Soul Music usually by region: Detroit, Memphis, Philadelphia, etc. But to call all that music Northern Soul is just as incorrect as calling it all Motown. The term Northern Soul is rarely used in the States (where Soul Music actually originated). Here's a definition of Northern Soul from Wikipedia: "The phrase northern soul was coined by journalist Dave Godin and popularised in 1970 through his column in Blues and Soul magazine. The term refers to rare soul music that was played by DJs at nightclubs in northern England. The playlists originally consisted of obscure 1960s and early 1970s American soul recordings with an uptempo beat, such as those on Motown Records and more obscure labels such as Okeh Records. Modern soul developed when northern soul DJs began looking in record shops in the United States and United Kingdom for music that was more complex and contemporary."
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Haha oh man, were an OCD bunch. I'm sticking with Motown, Its too ingrained to change, 99.9% of the population refers to it as such, and most importantly….I've never been concerned with being PC anyways. Everyone knows what it means, or it wouldn't have even been debated in the first place...