Toronto Escorts

A much needed Black Music thread.

xmontrealer

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One of my favourites from the Daptone label out of Brooklyn, recorded in 2011...

Charles Bradley - "Heartaches and Pain"


A great vocalist, who unfortunately passed away in 2017 at the age of 68.
 

xmontrealer

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The Queen of Daptone, who we also lost too soon. Passed away age 60 in 2016 from pancreatic cancer.

Check out Netflix "Miss Sharon Jones!" for a bit of her story and some amazing performance footage.

Here is the preview clip:

 

xmontrealer

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Lee Fields - "Could Have Been" (2008) Another fine example of old-school deep soul recorded in modern times.

 

xmontrealer

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Here we have The Radiants (kind of, see below), on Chess, with their amazing "Feel Kinda Bad"



Copied and pasted from whoever put this up on Youtube:
"This is a record by 2 groups. Recorded in 1965 by Mitchell Bullock and the Confessions, then released as by The Radiants in late '66. Try to follow. The Confessions broke up after their '65 session but Chess Records didn't want to lose their great lead, Mitchell Bullock. The Radiants followed their 2 big hits, 'Voice Your Choice' and 'Ain't No Big Thing' by losing co-lead Leonard Caston Jr.in '65. Then in '66, Maurice 'Mac' McAlister left. So The Confessions (Bullock) had no group, the Radiants no lead singers and Chess had a great record sitting on the shelf. What to do! What to do! The Radiants had the name and Bullock the voice, so he was added to the Radiants, and their next release was "Kind Of Bad' by the Confessions (or should I say The Radiants). Oh, so you know what I mean. Anyhow, it became a hit in spring of '67. Hope you got all that. Wonder what happened to the rest of the Confessions. Enjoy a nice Chicago disc. Sometimes it gets sooo confusing."
 

xmontrealer

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Here's a change of pace...

Jo-Jo and The Fugitives - "The Fugitive Song"


Were they a Toronto group? Originally from Jamaica? What year would this have been released? I can't find info...

I heard it at Sam The Record Man in 2006 and bought it instantly.
 

xmontrealer

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Dang! This thread is back on the second page of the Lounge. Hope my postings are still of some interest.

Anyways still under Covid-19 prevention isolation, so gotta do something productive with my time.

Here are some more interesting toons from my collection...
 

xmontrealer

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A slightly unusual subject for a Northern Soul Record...

The Invitations - "Skiing In The Snow" (1966)

 

ogibowt

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as a kid I bought a Stones album named Rolling Stones Now...I still have it..and this song was on it.Down Home Girl..now at that time I knew it was a cover because of who wrote the lyrics....but I swear to God this is the 1st time I have heard the original....nice, real nice
 

xmontrealer

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For a little more variety here's Slim Gaillard & His Orchestra's "Slim's Jam" from 1945.

Slim invented his own jazz language, which he called "Vout-O-Reenee", and which can be heard on this record as he addresses Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Jack McVea, and other members of the band. Regardless of the first frame of the clip, and although Charlie Parker is heard briefly speaking during the clip, the primary voice is Slim Gaillard.

 

K Douglas

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Here's a change of pace...

Jo-Jo and The Fugitives - "The Fugitive Song"


Were they a Toronto group? Originally from Jamaica? What year would this have been released? I can't find info...

I heard it at Sam The Record Man in 2006 and bought it instantly.
That's pretty cool. Ya did a quick search online looks like it was recorded in Toronto in 1968.
 

K Douglas

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For a little more variety here's Slim Gaillard & His Orchestra's "Slim's Jam" from 1945.

Slim invented his own jazz language, which he called "Vout-O-Reenee", and which can be heard on this record as he addresses Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Jack McVea, and other members of the band. Regardless of the first frame of the clip, and although Charlie Parker is heard briefly speaking during the clip, the primary voice is Slim Gaillard.

Wow I think you have it for oldest song played on this thread. Dizzy, Charlie, Miles all the jazz greats there.
 

K Douglas

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Alvin Robinson - "Down Home Girl" (1964)

What an incredible tune. That horn sequence at the beginning and played throughout is intoxicating. I swear that was sampled in a hip hop song back in the 90's but its not credited. I'm going to find that song and post it here.
 

xmontrealer

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Slim Gaillard had a fairly large Jewish fan base in New York, and recorded two songs "Dunkin' Bagels" and "Matzo Balls" aimed at them.

Here's "Dunkin' Bagels"

 

K Douglas

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I got the hip hop song that sampled those horns. Not credited on WhoSampled website which is surprising


Of course the master of jazz hip hop fusion Pete Rock would find this sample. Dope!
 

xmontrealer

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Even more so for The Crystal's "He Hit Me (And It Felt Like A Kiss)" (1962)


Here's an excerpt from Wikipedia regarding the somewhat negative reaction to the song soon after it was first released:

"Upon its initial release, "He Hit Me" received some airplay, but then there was a widespread protest of the song, with many concluding that the song was an endorsement of spousal abuse. Soon, the song was played only rarely on the radio, as now.

The 1930 Frank Borzage film Liliom contains the line "He hit me and it felt like a kiss" in its final scene. The film was not a success and nothing suggests that Goffin or King had seen it. Liliom, originally a play by Hungarian playwright Ferenc Molnár, was the basis for the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical classic, Carousel. While King and Goffin may not have seen Liliom, it is possible that they were familiar with the successful 1956 film version of Carousel, which contains essentially the same line. However, King has stated that their friend who inspired the song had used that exact phrase.

Carole King, in that same radio interview, said that she was sorry she had ever had anything to do with the song. She was a survivor of repeated domestic abuse (but not from Goffin, who had been her husband from 1959 to 1969)."
 

xmontrealer

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Another Kip Anderson song, "That's When The Crying Begins" (1964)


Some men use their hands, some women use their tears???
 

xmontrealer

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I imagine almost everybody has heard this. This is the 1962 version with Wilson Pickett On lead.

The Falcons - "I Found A Love"

 
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