![]() I was thrilled when Lou recounted to me how much he’d enjoyed recording that particular song.Ĩ0% of the songs are provided by Brill building dwellers Billy Giant, Bernie Baum and Florence Kaye or the Bacharach and David team. Like me, soul fans were noticing what a great body of work this was and further investigation revealed that ‘Park Avenue’ was not a travelogue for a Manhattan ad agency but a wonderfully crafted and vivid description of life in the Big Apple for a fictitious black chauffeur driving his bigwig boss around and having the time of his life. As we only know of this copy, it was indeed fortuitous that it was in-house.Īlthough primarily a ballad singer, several of Lou’s beatier songs have gained acceptance on the Northern Soul dance scene, notably the powerful ‘Wouldn’t That Be Something’ and his first single ‘If I Never Get To Love You’. Featured on it is the track ‘No Other Guy’, which never made it to 45. Our esteemed director Trevor Churchill had squirreled away a copy of Lou’s Big Top LP, which only ever reached test pressing stage. ![]() Working at Ace is rather like getting locked in the sweet shop and probably no other company could have come up with this compilation, as many of the Big Top tapes are missing. We now have a further three tracks that have never appeared on a CD of any description. However, that wait lead to more unissued sides turning up in the ensuing years to add to the pair described. The near 20-year wait is indicative of the problems of licensing, although an extreme example. The hunt was on to get Lou’s recordings out there onto CD for us soul people, especially me. That version was discovered in the mid-80s, around the same time that I snared a brace of Lou’s exquisitely sung ‘The Panic Is On’ acetates, also previously unknown to man. Having relied so heavily on this piece of not uncommon styrene, it was a thrill to hear the alternate take, as discovered on an acetate, which we feature as the ender here. If the previous record spun had turned out to be 10 years ahead of its time, ‘Unsatisfied’ was the remedy and earned time to re-group (while considering whether you’d have preferred to be a hod-carrier to a jock). It is one of those records that is always in the box, acting as a talisman to ward off the DJ’s recurring empty floor nightmare. ![]() As a Northern Soul DJ I was already intimate with ‘Unsatisfied’ and got a buzz from playing it every time. Hearing ‘Reach Out For Me’ was the catalyst for my conversion, smartly followed by ‘The Last One To Be Loved’, ‘(There’s) Always Something There To Remind Me’ and ‘Please Stop The Wedding’. He became my favourite singer, bar none, and although I like his later southern recordings, it is the disciplined and elegant sides he cut for New York City’s Big Top label that are the pinnacle of soul for me. I only fully discovered Lou Johnson relatively late in life, but have been a firm disciple ever since. Of all the CDs in all the record companies in all the world, this was the one I had to do.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |