The renowned Memphis 60s soul label Goldwax was a medium-sized operation with just short of a hundred releases. Though it ran a tight ship, inevitably some of their recordings fell by the wayside.
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The label is revered by fans of the classic age of soul music around the world. In the late 70s the Japanese Vivid Sound label contacted Goldwax owner, Quinton Claunch and accessed his tapes. They found a dozen excellent, previously unheard, tracks and issued them, along with Goldwax favourites on a short series of LPs in 1977. In 2000 Ace Records purchased the label from Claunch and his partners gaining full ownership of the tapes, which lead to more musical discoveries.
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Our releases on Ace and Kent over the past twenty plus years have seen most of these recordings featured, primarily on CD - the medium of the early years of the 21st century. More recently the renewed demand for vinyl has led to new 12â compilations and to augment those we have come up with a neat, boxed collection of seven singles that will appeal to the soul collectors who live for this format.
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Of the 14 tracks, only three have been singles before - the sublime harmony vocals of the Vel-Tones and the Lyrics with their mid-60s Goldwax releases and Barbara Perryâs R&B explosion âA Man Is A Mean Thingâ first released on Kent but now long gone and craved for.
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Goldwaxâs star James Carr kicks us off with âYour Love Made A U-Turnâ, a funk groove from 1969. This would surely have prolonged his and the labelâs lifespans had it been issued at the time. Our flip however would have needed to be an underground hit; it is doubtful that any radio station would have entertained such smutty lyrics in the 60s.
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Connoisseurs of the mid-60s Detroit soul sound will be thrilled to have the Ovations âI Miss Youâ on a 45 at last; it really has all the ingredients of a Motor City classic. âWhat Did I Do Wrongâ makes a great stomping B side - complete with virtuoso harmonica.
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The label was known for its gritty southern sound, so âTo Me Itâs Stormingâ is an atypical, softly melodic, mid-tempo song sung by, but oddly not penned by, George Jackson and Dan Greer. George does get to sing his own, tougher, composition âLet The Best Man Winâ on the flip.
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Apart from her aforementioned New Breed classic, Barbara Perryâs 45 features the charming, country-soul beat ballad âWelcome Home Babyâ, which is a real grower.
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We do have one exclusive debutant with Willie Walkerâs original take on the Homer Banks written âLucky Loserâ. This version is in the classic Goldwax southern sound and groove, recorded two years before his funked-up version was released on Chess. James Carrâs rendition of this song was recorded at the same session but did not have the splendid brass section Willieâs boasts. The flip is a southern rave-up from Chicagoan Lee âShotâ Williams who regularly visited Memphis and was given a two-song contract and recording session which didnât earn a release until we belatedly found the tape.
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The Lyrics/Vel-Tones original releases make up our sixth disc.
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The âenderâ is a dramatic big city-style ballad from Phillip & The Faithfuls, which was clearly inspired by the Righteous Brothers. It is coupled with a beguiling oddity from an unknown artist. âItâs Really Alrightâ is as catchy as they come and despite its limited orchestration makes a wonderful 45 and a mystery to be solved.
Tracklist
YOUR LOVE MADE A U-TURN â James CarrÂ
WHOâS BEEN WARMING MY OVEN? â James Carr
I MISS YOU - The Ovations feat. Louis WilliamsÂ
WHAT DID I DO WRONG â The Ovations feat. Louis Williams Â
TO ME ITâS STORMING â George & GreerÂ
LET THE BEST MAN WIN â George JacksonÂ
WELCOME HOME BABY â Barbara Perry
A MAN IS A MEAN THING â Barbara PerryÂ
A LUCKY LOSER â Willie Walker
YOU GOTTA HAVE SOUL â Lee âShotâ WilliamsÂ
SO HARD TO GET ALONG â The Lyrics with The Top Notes
I DO â The Vel TonesÂ
IF YOU LOVE HER â Phillip & The Faithfuls
ITâS REALLY ALRIGHT â Unknown Artist