
The Complete Ty Karim: Los Angeles' Soul Goddess
Product Info
Here is the story of a family of three black LA musicians that showcases the vocal talents of the wife and mother, Ty Karim. Her husband Kent Harrisâ vocal career was largely over by the time she came into his life and he then spent most of his musical energy producing and promoting his wifeâs soul recordings. 43 years on from those first recordings, the coupleâs daughter Karime, now performs that wonderful music to the same UK fans who have serached out and appreciate the scarce releases of her parents over the last three decades.
Ty Karim was a stunning looking, tall and elegant LA soul singer with a raw emotive vocal delivery who recorded from the mid 60s to early 80s. Her recordings were mainly original dancefloor-inspired numbers; always very dynamic and great vehicles for her husky voice. The 60s tracks are Northern soul at its best and their rarity and excellence has put three of them into the ÂŁ1000+ bracket, even though âYou Really Made It Good To Meâ was issued on three different catalogue numbers. âYou Just Donât Knowâ is the hugely expensive number, only ever issued on Kent Harrisâ Romark label and now costing ÂŁ3,000+, but worth it for those glorious vocals and the cascading piano fills alone. âLighten Up Babyâ is another costly item whose full story could fill a book, given the time. Even the 70s remake of it, âLightin Upâ, is on the pricey side but like most of Tyâs 45s is a stunning double sider with a beautiful James Taylor, of all people, song on the flip.
60s Big Beat ballad fans should look out for the stunning âAll At Onceâ which may have passed them by as its flip commands such a high price. Due to heavy local sales âHelp Me Get The Feelingâ is a relatively cheap (weâre talking hundreds not thousands) single but an equally great 60s Motownesque dancer.
Ty and Kentâs crossover funk âWear Your Naturalâ presaged the 70s soul sound that Ty also mastered. She worked through that decade with âLightinâ Upâ the standout release, and then into the 80s, when her 12â collaboration with George Griffin âKeep On Doinâ Whatchaâ Doinââ gained her new overseas fans. We are pleased to be able to include her prototype of that song âIf I Canât Stop You (I Can Slow You Down)â as recorded by CB Overton and Johnny Bristol; it has got the Modern Room DJs licking their lips already.
Sadly Ty died in 1983, but with her daughter Karime living only a couple of miles from Ace, weâve pieced together this fascinating story. It includes how a Northern soul fanzine article about her mother inspired Karime to move to the UK and eventually led to her singing her parentsâ wonderful music to very appreciative crowds on todayâs Northern Soul circuit. Kent Harris has given us complete access to all his master tapes and photographs and we have even found new material and alternative takes on some of Tyâs songs, including a great blues version of âLighten Up Babyâ. The musical clarity from the masters is particularly good too; given the understandably poor sound quality of previous bootlegs of the music.
From being an almost mythical and revered West Coast chanteuse, we can now appreciate and understand Ty Karim for the sublime artist she was.
By Ady Croasdell
More Info
Tracklist
1 Lighten Up Baby
2 Help Me Get That Feelin' Back Again
3 Ain't That Love Enough
4 Only a Fool
5 All at Once
6 Lightin' Up
7 Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
8 Wear Your Natural, Baby
9 You Just Don't Know
10 You Really Made It Good to Me
11 I Ain't Lying
12 Take It Easy Baby
13 Don't Make Me Do Wrong
14 Keep On Doin' Whatcha' Doin' Part 1
15 Keep On Doin' Whatcha' Doin' Part 2
16 Natural Do Aka Wear Your Natural, Baby
17 I'm Leavin' You
18 All in Vain
19 After Your Love Has Gone
20 All at Once (Alt. Vocal)
21 Lighten Up Baby (Alt. Vocal)
22 If I Can't Stop You (I Can Slow You Down)
23 It Takes Money
Original: $23.10
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Description
Product Info
Here is the story of a family of three black LA musicians that showcases the vocal talents of the wife and mother, Ty Karim. Her husband Kent Harrisâ vocal career was largely over by the time she came into his life and he then spent most of his musical energy producing and promoting his wifeâs soul recordings. 43 years on from those first recordings, the coupleâs daughter Karime, now performs that wonderful music to the same UK fans who have serached out and appreciate the scarce releases of her parents over the last three decades.
Ty Karim was a stunning looking, tall and elegant LA soul singer with a raw emotive vocal delivery who recorded from the mid 60s to early 80s. Her recordings were mainly original dancefloor-inspired numbers; always very dynamic and great vehicles for her husky voice. The 60s tracks are Northern soul at its best and their rarity and excellence has put three of them into the ÂŁ1000+ bracket, even though âYou Really Made It Good To Meâ was issued on three different catalogue numbers. âYou Just Donât Knowâ is the hugely expensive number, only ever issued on Kent Harrisâ Romark label and now costing ÂŁ3,000+, but worth it for those glorious vocals and the cascading piano fills alone. âLighten Up Babyâ is another costly item whose full story could fill a book, given the time. Even the 70s remake of it, âLightin Upâ, is on the pricey side but like most of Tyâs 45s is a stunning double sider with a beautiful James Taylor, of all people, song on the flip.
60s Big Beat ballad fans should look out for the stunning âAll At Onceâ which may have passed them by as its flip commands such a high price. Due to heavy local sales âHelp Me Get The Feelingâ is a relatively cheap (weâre talking hundreds not thousands) single but an equally great 60s Motownesque dancer.
Ty and Kentâs crossover funk âWear Your Naturalâ presaged the 70s soul sound that Ty also mastered. She worked through that decade with âLightinâ Upâ the standout release, and then into the 80s, when her 12â collaboration with George Griffin âKeep On Doinâ Whatchaâ Doinââ gained her new overseas fans. We are pleased to be able to include her prototype of that song âIf I Canât Stop You (I Can Slow You Down)â as recorded by CB Overton and Johnny Bristol; it has got the Modern Room DJs licking their lips already.
Sadly Ty died in 1983, but with her daughter Karime living only a couple of miles from Ace, weâve pieced together this fascinating story. It includes how a Northern soul fanzine article about her mother inspired Karime to move to the UK and eventually led to her singing her parentsâ wonderful music to very appreciative crowds on todayâs Northern Soul circuit. Kent Harris has given us complete access to all his master tapes and photographs and we have even found new material and alternative takes on some of Tyâs songs, including a great blues version of âLighten Up Babyâ. The musical clarity from the masters is particularly good too; given the understandably poor sound quality of previous bootlegs of the music.
From being an almost mythical and revered West Coast chanteuse, we can now appreciate and understand Ty Karim for the sublime artist she was.
By Ady Croasdell
More Info
Tracklist
1 Lighten Up Baby
2 Help Me Get That Feelin' Back Again
3 Ain't That Love Enough
4 Only a Fool
5 All at Once
6 Lightin' Up
7 Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
8 Wear Your Natural, Baby
9 You Just Don't Know
10 You Really Made It Good to Me
11 I Ain't Lying
12 Take It Easy Baby
13 Don't Make Me Do Wrong
14 Keep On Doin' Whatcha' Doin' Part 1
15 Keep On Doin' Whatcha' Doin' Part 2
16 Natural Do Aka Wear Your Natural, Baby
17 I'm Leavin' You
18 All in Vain
19 After Your Love Has Gone
20 All at Once (Alt. Vocal)
21 Lighten Up Baby (Alt. Vocal)
22 If I Can't Stop You (I Can Slow You Down)
23 It Takes Money









