Web viewMy favourte record is “Didn’t Say A Word” by ... songwriter Duo. Inez...

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The Sidac 13 th September 2014 Tonight’s line up of Djs Sue trappasso 8 till 9 Res’ DJ: from Liverpool Early doors Across the board Freddie T. 9 till 10 Res’ DJ: from St. Helens Warm Up spot Twisted Wheel Toones Paul berry 10 till 11 Guest DJ: from St. Helens Guest Spot Across the board Jimmy Pilk 1l till 12 Guest DJ: from St. Helens Stomping spot Wigan & Torch sounds Chisser 12 till 1 Res’ DJ: from St. Helens Final Hour Cross-Over & Modern Sue Trapasso Joined the Team at Joe's in 2009, having been Djing at the Birchfield Club Widnes. Sue comes from Stoke and went the Golden Torch from 1967 and saw live acts there before it was a all-nighter, Sue moved to Liverpool in the 70s. Sue’s been collecting Northern soul for nearly 40 years and has a few thousand, her favourite Artiste is Jacky Wilson and her fav record is Just Be Sincere; Fred was the big mod in St. Helens and hanged around the blow- out in his Mohair Suites and rode a Vespa Super Scooter. He was a regular at the Cavern Club and The Sink in liverpool an Old Twisted Wheeler and Room at the Top in Wigan all before the Casino. He has a large collection of soul records on English Labels Fred Played at St. Helens First Discotheque,The Place, which many years later became Crystals Night Club and Fred was one of the DJs there as well. He also DJ’d at Applebys Club and at the Bank Bar playing Modern Dance and Rave Tunes. His Favourite Record is the last one played. He's still rides his Scooter

Transcript of Web viewMy favourte record is “Didn’t Say A Word” by ... songwriter Duo. Inez...

Page 1: Web viewMy favourte record is “Didn’t Say A Word” by ... songwriter Duo. Inez &Charlie ... in a Delta growl backed with a whining electric slide guitar, Leonard couldn

The Sidac 13th September 2014 Tonight’s line up of DjsSue trappasso 8 till 9 Res’ DJ: from Liverpool Early doors Across the board Freddie T. 9 till 10 Res’ DJ: from St. Helens Warm Up spot Twisted Wheel Toones Paul berry 10 till 11 Guest DJ: from St. Helens Guest Spot Across the boardJimmy Pilk 1l till 12 Guest DJ: from St. Helens Stomping spot Wigan & Torch soundsChisser 12 till 1 Res’ DJ: from St. Helens Final Hour Cross-Over & Modern

Sue Trapasso Joined the Team at Joe's in 2009, having been Djing at the Birchfield Club Widnes. Sue comes from Stoke and went the Golden Torch from 1967 and saw live acts there before it was a all-nighter, Sue moved to Liverpool in the 70s. Sue’s been collecting Northern soul for nearly 40 years and has a few thousand, her favourite Artiste is Jacky Wilson and her fav record is Just Be Sincere;

Fred was the big mod in St. Helens and hanged around the blow-out in his Mohair Suites and rode a Vespa Super Scooter. He was a regular at the Cavern Club and The Sink in liverpool an Old Twisted Wheeler and Room at the Top in Wigan all before the Casino. He has a large collection of soul records on English LabelsFred Played at St. Helens First Discotheque,The Place, which many years later became Crystals Night Club and Fred was one of the DJs there as well. He also DJ’d at Applebys Club and at the Bank Bar playing Modern Dance and Rave Tunes. His Favourite Record is the last one played. He's still rides his Scooter

Paul Berry from Sutton St.Helens playing Across the Board Parr lad, born & bred, I first got into Soul listening to my elder sister’s Motown records. When I was about 14 I attended the Y youth club in Nunn St. Parr, and heard Love Love Love by Bobby Hebb and it was my first Soul record I bought. When I started work at UGB I met Garry Beech and he played at the Connie Club in Sutton, which I attended, later we went to the Casino in Wigan then we started to go to the Ritz in Manchester, Sometime later after getting married and having a family I started to go to Lowton on the Second Friday of the Month and started looking for Northern records again. My favourte record is “Didn’t Say A Word” by Yvonne Baker, my favourite soul Artiste is Roy Hamilton

Jimmy Pilkington Guest Dj; from St. Helens playing Northern stompers!I started collecting northern soul records in 1972 my first record I bought was by the Creation “I Got The Fever”.My Favourite Northern record is Eddie Foster’s …. “I Never Knew” since then I’ve had three different collections bought and sold and I now have about 1500 singles and about 200 albums My favourite soul clubs are The Casino, SaintsSoul at

Joes, Birchley. and lately The Sidac

Chisser It started for me in 1961 having a dance with Denise Anks to lets Twist Again, by Chubby Checker at Sutton Nash school's Christmas Party, this became my first record, on the Green Columbia label DB4961 followed by Sam Cooke's Chain Gang and the Drifters Save The last Dance For Me and its been my vice ever since buying these

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little Black Gems. My first djing was about 1966 at Derbyhill youth club between the Band sets on Thursday nights. Then I played at the Geraldo club with a couple of mates of mine Trev Muhic & Rob Tully until late 1972. My favourite Artiste is Bobby Womack. Ktf!

Visit the club site www.sthelenssoulclub.co.uk for updates

What’s happening September/Oct’2014 Fri 26 - Mon 29th Sept’ Skegness Butlins Soul Week-Ender £80Archie Bell, Dean Parrish, Tommy Hunt, The Flirtations & Johnny Boy. Sat 27th Sept’ Soul & Motown OJs Soul Band, £10.00 Mill Brow Social ClubWidnes WA8 6RT Sat 27th Ace of Spades Scooter Club Charity Night at Moss Bank 3 Bands & DJs £6.00Sat 4th Oct’ Nalgo with phil & Noel & Jimmy fleming Sat 18th Oct’ Soul at The Sidac guest Djs Norman & Jimmy from LiverpoolSun 19th Oct’ Col Walker’s Late Summer Soul with Keni Burke Watch This Space!If you are celebrating a Birthday this Month you are in good company Archie Bell 70yrs 01/09/1944: (US vocalist; The Drells).Joe Simon 71yrs 02/09/1943: (US soul & country singer).Sam Gooden 75yrs 02/09/1939: (African-American soul singer; The Impressions)Bobby Purify 73yrs 02/09/1941: real name James B. Moore (US soul singer)Inez Foxx 72yrs 09/09/1942: (US lead vocalist; The Inez & Charlie Foxx Duo)Kenny Thomas 45yrs 12/09/1969: (UK.soul & dance singer)Freda Payne 69yrs 19/09/1945: (US soul singer)Bill Medley 74yrs 19/09/1940: (US singer, songwriter; Righteous Brothers)G.C. Cameron 69yrs 21/09/1945: (US soul and R&B singer; The Spinners/solo)Ben E. King 76yrs 28/09/1938: real name Benjamin Earl Nelson (US soul singer; Drifters/solo)Cissy Houston 81yrs 30/09/1933: (US soul singer;Sweet Inspirations/mother of Whitney)

R.I.P. Soul Sisters Soul Brothers passed away in the month of September1st 2005 R.L.Burnside 78 USA blues singer-songwriter, guitarist 3rd 1994 Major Lance 55 US. Soul singer hits: “Ain’t No Soul” “Investigate” “Don’t You want Me”7th 2002 Erma Franklin 64 US. r&b singer 9th 2008 Richard P. Wylie 69 US Singer Producer Writer Pianist11th 1967 Peter Tosh 42 Jamaican guitarist The Wailers11th 2007 Willie Tee 63 US. r&b soul Singer writer12th 2007 Bobby Byrd 73 US. Singer song writer Funk Man with James Brown Revue14th 1998 Johnny adamms 66 US. Blues singer from New Orleans15th 2008 Norman Whitfield 65 US. Songwriter Producer Motown and own Label18th 1970 Jimi Hendrix 27 US. Guitarist Song writer18th 1997 JimmyWitherspoon74 US Blues singer born in Gurdon, Arkansas 18th 1998 Charlie Foxx 58 US. African guitarist singer songwriter Duo Inez &Charlie Foxx19th 2005 Willie Hutch 60 US. Vocalist guitarist song writer producer Motown30th 2011 Marv Tauplin 70 US. Guitarist and Songwiter Miracles Band Motown

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Radio Stations playing the sounds Wednesday 8.00pm 10.00pm radio Wirral 7Waves Tony & Lynn Motown & Soul 92.1FM Wednesday 11.00pm 12.00pm radio 2 BBC Trevor Nunn Across The Board 88.9FM Friday 10.00am 12.00Noon radio Halton Widnes Martin Halstead Soul Show 92.3FM Friday 7.00pm 8.30pm radio West Midlands Jenny Wilkes 60s Soul & Motown 55.6FM Saturday 12.00pm 2.00pm radio Wythenshaw Rob Goulden Soul Colletion 97.2FM Saturday 6.30pm 8.00pm radio Lancashire Russ Winstanley Northern Soul 95.5FM Saturday 6.00pm 9.00pm radio Leeds Steve White Northern Soul 92.4FM Saturday 7.00pm 8.00pm radio Pure Grant Rankin Northern Soul 107.8FM Saturday 6.00pm 8.00pm radio Smooth Dave Brown Motown Show 100.4FM Saturday 8.00pm 12.00pm radio Smooth Andy Pebbles Soul Train 100.4FM Sunday 6.00pm 8.00pm radio Lancashire Keith Fletcher Northern Soul 95.5FM Sunday 6.00pm 9.00pm Wa12Radio Wayne Hill Soul Town Tonight www.wa12radio.co.uk Sunday 8.00pm 10.00pm radio Warrington Al Kinsella Soul Show Internet Sunday 11.00pm 12.00pm radio Bolton Will Harris Soul Train Show 96.5FM

On The Music Scene R.I.P. Henry Stone Sept 2014

Henry Stone (June 3, 1921 – August 7, 2014) was an American record company executive and producer whose career spanned the era from R&B in the early 1950s through the disco boom of the 1970s to the 2010s. He was best known as co-owner and president of TK Records, but reportedly set up over 100 record labels, and was responsible for over 100 million record sales across the world. He was described as "an acute businessman who always made sure that contracts and publishing agreements were written in his favor.

Born in the Bronx, Henry Stone began playing the trumpet in his teens while at an orphanage in Pleasantville, New York. In 1943 he joined the US Army, playing in a racially integrated band and developing an appreciation of what were then called "race records". After being discharged in 1947, he moved to Los Angeles, working on sales and promotion for Jewel Records and then Modern Records, and traveling around the country.

In 1948, Stone settled in Miami, Florida, setting up his own distribution company, Seminole, and shortly afterwards the Crystal recording studio. In 1951 he recorded Ray Charles’ "St. Pete Florida Blues", among others. In 1952 he started two record labels, Rockin' (for blues) with artists including Earl Hooker, and Glory (for gospel), and soon had success in both styles.

In association with King Records, Stone released The Charms’ "Hearts of Stone" on De Luxe Records subsidiary, and it became an R&B #1 hit in 1954. He was instrumental in signing James Brown to King, and recorded his first hit "Please, Please, Please".In 1955, he established his own independent publishing companies and several record labels, including Chart and Dade, mainly recording local blues artists. In 1960, Stone cut "(Do The) Mashed Potatoes" by "Nat Kendrick and the Swans" – actually James Brown's early backing band - for the Dade label. He also set up Tone Distribution (originally Tru-Tone), which became one of the most successful record distribution companies, working with Atlantic, Motown, Stax and many more independent labels.

Stone's distribution expertise was instrumental in spreading the music produced by those labels around the world. At its height, Tone occupied a full city block and a large warehouse in Hialeah, Florida, and employed over 100 people. While he focused on the distribution business during the 1960s, Stone also continued to record R&B artists. These included Betty Wright, whose "Clean Up Woman" was a major hit in 1971 on his and Steve Alaimo's Alston label. Alaimo had previously recorded for Stone and been a Tone employee. Stone also set up the Glades label, recording the million selling hit "Why Can’t We Live Together" by Timmy Thomas. Stone established many different labels on the basis, he said, that it was easier to get records played if the radio stations did not realize they came from the same source.

In 1972, Stone heard from Jerry Wexler that Atlantic was going to merge with Warner Bros. Records and Elektra, they handle its own distribution, and would no longer use Tone. At that point, he decided to concentrate on recording and manufacturing his own records, forming another new record company, with Steve Alaimo TK Records (named after studio owner Terry Kane), based in Hialeah, with which he had his greatest success.

In 1973, Stone’s warehouse worker and occasional front desk receptionist, Harry Wayne “KC” Casey & TK's budding young recording studio engineer Richard Finch began collaborating on writing and performing songs, with Stone allowing them to

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experiment in the recording studio after hours. Casey and Finch wrote and produced the number one hit, "Rock Your Baby" by George McCrae, and his follow-up shits. As KC and the Sunshine Band, they released a string of hits "Get Down Tonight", "That's The Way I Like It" and "Shake Your Booty", “Queen Of clubs” all on Stone's TK label. The band had five number one pop singles, platinum albums, won three Grammys and one American Music Award

Stone’s companies produced numerous other hits during the 1970s, including Beginning of the End’s "Funky Nassau" (on Alston), Latimore’s "Let's Straighten It Out" (on Glades), Anita Ward’s "Ring My Bell" (on Juana), Little Beaver’s "Party Down" and Gwen McCrae’s "Rockin’ Chair" (both on Cat), Peter Brown’s "Do Ya Wanna Get Funky With Me" (on Drive), and Bobby Caldwell's "What You Won't Do for Love" (on Clouds). T-Connection “Do What You Wanna Do”

Kt records was the first record label to issue a 12” Disco single along with Disco Label CasablancaFrom the anti-disco movement which followed. In the late 70s TK Records ceased operating by 1981, and Stone went into partnership with Morris Levey of Roulette Records but with no success, Stone sold all his record labels to Rhino records in 1990 all the Masters are owned by Waner Brothers.

Featured Artiste Joe Simon Sept’ /Oct 2014

Joe Simon (born September 2, 1943 is an American chart-topping, Grammy Award winning, soul and R&B musician.

Simon was born in Simmesport, Louisiana, United States. Similar to many other African-American artists from the era, Si mon began singing in his father's Baptist church. He

pursued his vocal abilities full-time once the family moved to Richmond (near Oakland, California) in the late 1950s. There Simon joined the Golden West Gospel Singers and became influenced by Sam Cooke and Arthur Prysock. With

this, the group decided to turn secular and recorded "Little Island Girl" / Doreetha. On the Hush Label 101 and “You Left Here To Cry” Hush 102, as the Golden Tones in 1959

Hush Records label owners Gary and Carla Thompson urged Simon to record on his own, and he recorded another Five records on the Hush Label from 1959 -1963. Hush 107 “ I See Your Face” 1961 being sort after.

In 1964 Simon scored considerable success on the Vee -Jay  label with "My Adorable One". Simon scored again in 1965 on the Chicago based label with "Let's Do It Over", which landed a #13 spot on the US Billboard R&B chart. However, the Vee-Jay label folded soon after. the song's release, Simon found himself traveling the country singing.

Simon caught the eye of Nashville, Tennessee, R&B disc jockey John Richbourg, Richbourg became Simon's  manager/record producer  and brought the singer to Monument Records' subsidiary label Sound Stage 7 in 1966,

In that year Simon released "Teenager's Prayer", which peaked at #11 on Billboard's R&B chart. Within the next two years, Simon released a string of hits: "(You Keep Me) Hanging On", & "The Chokin' Kind" (Billboard Hot 100 #13), "Farther On Down The Road", and "Yours Love". "The Chokin' Kind" was written by Harlan Howard, and spent 12 weeks in the charts, and had sold 1 million copies by 16 June 1969. In addition, Simon was given a Grammy Award in 1970 for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance Joe, recorded around twenty singles for Sound Stage 7, all top quality toones the Northern classics “Long Hot Summer SS7 2608 released in 1968 & “I Got a Whole Lotta Lovin” SS 7 2264 released in 1970 being top tracks.

Under the encouragement of Richbourg, Simon moved to Polydor who distributed Spring Records label in 1970, which paired Simon with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. They scored a #3 R&B hit in 1971 "Drowning In The Sea of Love" and a #1 R&B hit in the summer of 1972 with "Power Of Love". Both songs reached #11 on the Hot 100. "Drowning In The Sea of Love" sold over 1.5 million copies and the R.I.A.A. on 6 January 1972 gave Joe a gold disc."Power of Love", written by Gamble & Huff and Simon was Simon's third million seller, and the R.I.A.A. awarded a gold disc status to Joe on 29 August 1972.

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Simon continued to release R&B hits with "Pool Of Bad Luck", "Trouble In My Home", and "Step By Step", (this was his only hit in the UK charts) "I Need You, You Need Me", "Music In My Bones", "Carry Me", and 1975's Disco flavoured, "Get Down, Get Down (Get On The Floor)", which gave Simon his third #1 R&B hit, and also a #8 Hot 100 hit. Simon's success escalated with his own writing /producing on the theme tune for the film, Cleopatra Jones in 1973. He released thirty singles on the spring label (and some unreleased tracks where eventually released in 2000.)

In the late 1970s/early 1980s, Simon decided to remove his tenor/bass-baritone voice from the secular music world and devote it and his life to Christianity Simon began evangelist preaching in Flossmoor, Illinois. In 1983, he produced the album Lay My Burden Down for former Davis Sisters second lead Jackie Verdell. Simon released a gospel album titled This Story Must Be Told in the late 1990s. and released around eight singles on the Posse label from 1980 -83

And a couple of singles on the Mell- O-Soun label 1982-83 and the Compleat Label in 1983. Joe has had around twenty Albums released. on different record labels

In 1999 Joe Simon was inducted as a Pioneer Award honoree by the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. Joss Stone covered "The Chokin' Kind" on her 2003 album, The Soul Sessions. He still Preaches today at his Baptist church.

Record labels Chess part 2 Sep’t /Oct’

2014 issue

A host of other blues legends recorded for Chess during the early and mid-1950s. Memphis Slim, Eddie Boyd and Willie Mabon, assuredly did. Boyd's 1953  "24 Hours" and "Third Degree" both sold very well, as did Mabon's "I Don't Know" (1952) and "I'm Mad" (1953), both number one R&B smashes.

Eddy Boyd Willie Mabon

John Lee Hooker first recorded for Chess in 1950 and Joe Williams made the charts that same year with "Every Day I Have The Blues." Big Bill Broonzy and Washboard Sam recorded  material in '53 that straddled the fence between pre-war Chicago blues and the brasher new style. Memphis Minnie likewise attempted to resuscitate her career with a 1952 Checker single, "Me And My Chauffeur." On the jazzier side of the tracks, saxmen Leo Parker, Tab Smith, Lynn Hope, and Eddie Johnson kept things swinging. By the early-1950s, slide Guitarist Muddy Water's group added pianist Otis Spann. And though he was now a star in his own right, Harmonicist Little Walter still recorded behind his ex-boss on Waters' immortal "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man"

In 1955  new talent was added to the Chess stable. Sonny Boy Williamson, a blues legend across the Mississippi Delta thanks to his King Biscuit Time radio broadcasts. He joined Checker, a Chess subsidiary label, for his first recording “Don't Start Me Talkin” Chess paired him with most of Muddy Water's band.

John Lee Hooker Sonny Boy Williamson

As the record label grew, so was their musicians skill in performing at their night club the Macomba. when muddy waters first played there Leonard didn’t like him at all, he sang “I Can't Be Satisfied”, in a Delta growl backed with a whining electric slide guitar, Leonard couldn't imagine it pleasing anyone. "What's he saying?" he asked. "Who's going to buy that?" Fortunately, his partner in Aristocrat, records, Evelyn Arons, suggested that some of the black southerners who had moved north in search of jobs might enjoy the sounds of home. So Chess pressed 3,000 singles, they sold out in a day, and six decades later Muddy Waters recording is remembered as the first masterpiece of electric Chicago blues.

But now Waters was also trying to reach a broader audience, adding a drummer and harmonica player ( Little Walter) to his live shows to create a tight, tough band. He was frustrated when Chess refused to mess

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with a winning formula and insisted that he keep making stark guitar-and-bass records like his song Rollin Stone, a one-chord chant that was archaic even by the standards of rural Mississippi. Neither of them could have imagined that a dozen years later five lads in London would like that record enough to name a their band after it. The Rolling Stones.

Leonard Chess and Waters had a particularly close relationship, and it served both of them well. When Waters finally persuaded Chess to record his full band, he incidentally brought the label’ its biggest blues hit-maker: Little Walter he was barely out of his teens, and reshaped the course of blues harmonica by amplifying his instrument and playing it like a jazz saxophone. It was a fresh, hip sound, and in 1952 he cut an instrumental called Juke that stayed at the top of the R&B charts for eight weeks.

That is the paradox of the Chess story. The brothers were not musical visionaries; they were small-time "indie" record, cigar smoking polish men, making a quick buck from the poorest, least respected people in America - The blackman. Yet their cheaply recorded, bread-and-butter discs of local street musicians and bar bands, still sound as fresh today as they did 60 years ago. By failing to be timely, they succeeded in being timeless. They were also lucky, and loyal to their artists. Muddy Waters & Howling Wolf stayed with chess all the recording lives.

Can You Name The Stars Sep’t/Oct’ 2014 issue Here are some cluesRiver Hat man, He was nicknamed the walrus ew&f main singer, Chetto man Give A little & Rise in Dreams, Somebody else guy Unbreak my Heart, Helen folosade

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The elements! Automobile cleaners, Virgin Trains rivals, U may see this in the darkRussel T. big falsetto, Change the Big Man at the back. Medioca Caucasion. Backstabbers men

Saturday 13th September 2014 playlists side 18 till 9 Sue Trapasso Resident Dj From Liverpool Wade Flemmings…………….That Other Place All Original VinylTeddy Randazo ………………You Don’t Need HeartMasquraders………………….How Big Is BigThe Players……………………Why Did I LieRay Pollard……………………It’s A Sad ThingSam Fletcher………………….I Think It’s OverSandy Williams……………….Pushing A Good Thing To FarKurt Harris……………………The EmperorBrown Sugar………………….The Game Is OverDean Parrish………………….Broken Bottles And SticksIncredibles…………………….Crying HeartArabians……………………….Please Take A Chance On MeBarbara Lynn………………….I’m A Good WomanGarnet Mimms………………..Prove It To MeFive Royals…………………….Catch That TeardropContinental 4 ………………… The Way I Love You Danny White……………………Take My Woman HomeDot Williams…………………….Watch DogPeggy Paxton…………………..It Ain’t What I Do ( It’sThe Way I Do It)Originals………………………..Good Night IreneAnita Humes……………………What Did I DoJoe Tex………………………….I Wanna Be Free7 Souls…………………………..I Still Love YouRonda Davis…………………….Can You RememberEthics…………………………….Look At Me NowNice set from Sue aov. some money,s worth here all big favs what a set from Sue just Brill!

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9 Till 10 Warm Up Spot, Freddy T. resident DJ: from St. Helens Carter Bro’s ………………...So Glad She’s MineJohnny Taylor……………….Somewhere Down The |LineJimmy Hughes………………It Ain’t What You GotErma Thomas ……...............Don’t Mess With My ManAlbert Washington …………I’m The ManMickey Champion ………….What Good Am IDorothy Williams …………..Well Gone DryBenny Spellman…………….Furtune TellerCharles Sheffield……………Is Your Voodo WorkingMel Torme’…………………..I’m Coming Home BabyLittle Willie John……………..Uh Uh Baby (No No Baby)Sugar Pie Desantos…………Soulful DressRita And The Tiaras…………Gone With The WindKenny Gamble ………………Jokes On YouThe Trends……………………Thanks For A Little LovingThe Showmen………………..Our Love Will GrowMoses Smith…………………Girl Across The StreetHolly St. James ……………...That,s Not LoveBobby Paris ………………….I Walked AwayTony Clark…………………….LandslideMillie Jackson ……………….House For SaleJoe Tex………………………..Under Your Powerful LovePrince Philip Mitchell………..So HappyGreat, Fred! another top set my favs are Albert Washington, and Charles sheffield

Visit the club site for updates photos www.sthelenssoulclub.co.uk

Saturday 2014 playlists side 210 till 11 Paul Berry Dj from St.Helens Eddie Spencer…………….If This Is Love I’d Rather Be LonelyMickey Moonshine……….Name You Got ItFlirtations………………….Stronger Than Her LoveEarl Van Dyke……………..6 X 6Detriot Spinners………….What More Can A Boy Ask ForMiracles……………………Whole Lotta Shakin’Contours…………………...Baby Hit And RunGladys Knight……………...If You Ever Get Your Hands On LoveBarbara Lewis……………..Remember The FeelingBobby Womack……………Home Is Where The Heart IsLenny Welch ………………100 Pounds Of PainJimmy Robbins…………….I Just Can’t Please YouVernon Garrett……………..Shine It OnWillie Mitchel……………….That Driving BeatRoscoe Shelton …………...Running From My LifeEarl Grant…………………...Hide Nor Hair4Tops………………………..Something About YouSupremes …………………..He’s All I GotVelvellettes…………………Lonely Lonely Girl Of MineIsley Bro’s………………….My Love Is Your LoveRuby Andrews……………..Just Loving YouCarla Thomas………………I’ll Never Stop Loving YouAnother great set of toones from Paul

11 till 12 Spot Jimmy Pilkington Guest Dj from St. Helens playing Torch & Wigan Stompers!Gladys Knight ……………No One ThereDoug Banks………………I just kept On DancingClarence carter ………….Messing with my Mind

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Milton Wright……………..I belong To YouMarvin Gaye………………This Loved Starved Heart Of MineEdwin Starr ……………….My weakness Is YouVelvelletts…………………These Things Will keep Loving YouN. F. Porter………………..Keep On keeping OnOtis Smith ………………...Let her Go (Inst’)United Four……………….She’s Putting You OnJulian Covey ………………A Little Bit HurtsOtis Smith………………….Let Her Go (Vocal)Paul Anker…………………Can’t Help Loving YouFour Perfections…………..I’m Not Strong EnoughDenise LaSalle……………..Love ReputationMoses Smith………………..Girl Across The StreetDuke Browner………………Crying Over YouVelvets……………………….I’m Gonna Find me somebodySoul Bro’s Six………………I’ll Be Loving youN. F. Porter…………………..If I Could Only Be SureMel Britt……………………..She’ll Come Running BackTempests……………………SomedaySome great toones played tonight and jimmy set is another to spot, favsTempests, & Mel Britt!

12. till 1.00 Chisser resident DJ playing requests and FavouritesSydney Barnes……………….Standing on Solid GroundPhylis Hyman…………………You Know How To Love MeBenny Troy……………………I Gonna Love you tomorrowAlphie Davidson………………Love Is A serious businessChuck Jackson ……………….I’ve Got The NeedRoy Hamilton …………………Cracking UpPauline Parfitt…………………Love Is WonderfulPaul Anker…………………….When We Get ThereJohnny Taylor…………………Blues In the nightRay Agee………………………Losing A Good ThingJimmy Frazer…………………Of Hope And DreamsFlame ‘N’ King………………..Ho Happy DaysHarold Melvin…………………PrayingFrankie Croker………………..Ton Of DynamiteKenny Thomas……………….Crazy WorldDriazbone……………………..PressureDJ Genesis……………………Tribute To BettyBob Sinclair………………….. TributeKirk Franklin…………………..Looking For You. Tobi Legend ………………….Time will Pass You ByBarbra McNair………………..Your Gonna Love My BabyJimmy Radcliffe………………Long After To nights All OverThe Djs never let us down music wise they hit the spot every time for our club!

Thanks to everyone who came especially Rob Ross With his New Wheels This guy has got a lotta Heart, keep going mate you look great!

Thanks to all the Punters I hope you enjoyed the music thanks to the Djs.All top sets lots of R&B lots of Motown, Northern favs some sublime toones and I played crossover and modern towards the end of the night.

Next One is on the Saturday 18th October B There Or B Square as Tully SaysGuest Dj’s Jimmy and Norman from Liverpool. Visit the club site for updates photos www.sthelenssoulclub.co.uk

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