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Elgin & The Marbles - The Sun Never Sets LP
  • 1: Before The World Burns
  • 2: The British Museum
  • 3: Something Good
  • 4: Stick To The Plan
  • 5: If Elvis Faked His Death
  • 6: Coronation Day
  • 7: Stop The Boats
  • 8: The Rebound
  • 9: My House
  • 10: Nothing Like You
  • 11: The Treasury's In Love
  • 12: When We Were Special
Reservar27.02.2026

debe ser publicado en 27.02.2026


Ültimo hace: 2026 Años
Various - Northern Soul classics II LP 2x12"
  • Freda Payne - Band Of Gold
  • Robert Knight - Love On A Mountain Top
  • Lynne Randell - Stranger In My Arms
  • Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell - Ain't No Mountain High Enough
  • Stevie Wonder - Nothing's Too Good For My Baby - Single Version
  • Dean Courtney - I'll Always Need You
  • The Velvelettes - A Love So Deep Inside - 2004 Anthology Version
  • Barbara Mcnair - Baby A Go-Go - Cellarful Of Motown Version
  • Darrell Banks – Angel Baby (Don’t You Ever Leave Me)
  • Carolyn Crawford - Forget About Me
  • Holly St. James - That's Not Love
  • The Trammps - Scrub Board
  • Major Lance - Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um
  • The Supremes - He's All I Got - Stereo Version
  • Gladys Knight & The Pips - Just Walk In My Shoes - Single Version
  • Four Tops - Shake Me, Wake Me (When It's Over) - Single Version / Mono
  • Frank Wilson - 'Til You Were Gone - Writer/Producer Demo Version
  • Lou Johnson - Unsatisfied
  • Four Below Zero – My Baby's Got Esp
  • David Ruffin - Walk Away From Love - Single Version
  • Dusty Springfield - Long After Tonight Is Over
  • Chairmen Of The Board - Give Me Just A Little More Time
  • The Marvelettes - Your Love Can Save Me
  • Roy Hamilton - Crackin' Up Over You
  • Towanda Barnes - You Don't Mean It
  • Vibrations - 'Cause You're Mine
  • San Remo Golden Strings - Festival Time - Single Version
  • Just Brothers - Sliced Tomatoes
  • Sandi Sheldon - You're Gonna Make Me Love You
  • Marvin Gaye - Little Darling (I Need You)
  • The Spinners - I'll Always Love You - Single Version
  • The Elgins - Put Yourself In My Place - Single Version
  • Frankie Valli - You're Ready Now
  • The Isley Brothers - Tell Me It's Just A Rumor Baby
  • Smokey Robinson & The Miracles - Whole Lot Of Shakin' In My Heart (Since I Met You)
  • Kim Weston - I'm Still Loving You
  • Kiki Dee - The Day Will Come Between Sunday And Monday - Album Version
  • Tony Clarke - Landslide
  • Edwin Starr - Time
  • The Impressions - You've Been Cheatin' - Single Version
  • Brenda Holloway - Just Look What You've Done - Single Version
  • Martha & The Vandellas - My Baby Loves Me - Single Version / Mono

Head back to the floor with this brand-new 2LP compilation featuring 42 more of the world’s most remarkable Northern Soul tunes.

Expand your collection and freshen up your dancing shoes with this must-have sequel including none other than the incredible Stevie Wonder, Dusty Springfield, Freda Payne, Robert Knight, The Supremes, Major Lance and the all-time classic duet between Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell, Ain't No Mountain High Enough.

Reservar13.06.2025

debe ser publicado en 13.06.2025


Ültimo hace: 2026 Años
Eddie Capone's Treatment - Only You Know What I Like

Freestyle Records drop another UK boogie 12" rarity from Eddie Capone's Treatment, this time the previously white label-only "Only You Know What I Like" from 1985. Limited to 300 copies worldwide.

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A mainstay of the UK's reggae, soul, funk & rock circuits since the early 1970s, Eddie Capone has played with a diverse and revered collection of acts; Chairmen of the Board, The Foundations, Black Velvet, The Elgins, Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come, Arthur Lee's Love, Billy Preston and Edwin Starr to name but a few. Eddie was also part of short-lived group Casablanca, with David Costa & Barry Clarke of early 70's folk-rockers Trees, signed to Elton John's Rocket Record Company.

Eddie founded the Treatment band in the early 1980s bringing in a revolving cast of singers and players, and created the Treatment Records imprint out of his own Black Rock studio in South East London in 1982. Releasing a string of singles - with efforts from Eddie Capone's Treatment, a side-project with singer Beryl Marsden as Salt & Pepper, and a single from Norwegian group Wave - Treatment Records then followed this up in 1985 with the 12" release of "I Won't Give You Up" with Diane Jones brought in on vocal duties. This received solid support amongst DJs and radio at the time, and was quickly followed with this solid slice of white label-only UK boogie-funk that has since become a favoured deep cut on the selectors circuit.

Treatment Records continued through the 1980s through to early 1990s releasing Eddie's music, both as a solo artist and as part of collaborative side-projects, and Eddie has continued to write, perform and produce music from his home studio right through to the present day. As a committed community figure & activist in South East London, Eddie has since 2014 re-started Treatment Records under the name of 3G Treatment - bringing together three generations of people from the local area to ensure young artists & musicians have access to the expertise and experience of their elders for support and encourage successful careers in the industry.

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Ültimo hace: 14 Meses
Various - Northern Soul Classics LP 2x12"
 
42

A 2LP compilation featuring 42 of the world’s most supreme Northern Soul anthems.

An essential collection for any fan of great timeless music, this compilation celebrates the dance movement that emerged in Northern England and the Midlands in the early 1970s. Be transported back to the swinging sounds of Northern Soul, featuring the soulful classics from Gloria Jones, The Supremes, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, Dusty Springfield and Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons.

Reservar20.03.2024

debe ser publicado en 20.03.2024


Ültimo hace: 2026 Años
VARIOUS - HIP-HOP ALLSTARS 3x12"

Various

HIP-HOP ALLSTARS 3x12"

3x12inch3442246
Wagram
20.10.2023
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Ültimo hace: 14 Meses
Ron Geesin - Pot-Boilers – Ron Geesin Soundtracks To Stephen Dwoskin Films, 1966 - 1970

Sublime, unique, sexy and peculiar unreleased scores by electronic and jazz pioneer Ron Geesin, made for the sublime, unique, sexy and peculiar films by maverick director Stephen Dwoskin. There. we’ve said it. And if you have not heard of one or either of these two dudes it doesn’t really matter. Geesin made great music and worked with Pink Floyd. Dwoskin made odd films, most of them are in the BFI permanent collection. They are great and a bit strange.
These superb unreleased soundtracks come from a fascinating, progressive and important period in British film history. They represent an intriguing collaboration between the lively Ron Geesin from Scotland and the American Stephen Dwoskin, who both met in London.
Musically they are minimal, charismatic and quite groundbreaking. Here is the story…
HISTORY:
Steve Dwoskin arrived in London in 1964, aged 25, with several 16mm films in his trunk, shot in the cold-water flats of Greenwich Village. He had been on the fringe of the Factory scene, and some of his films starred Beverly Grant, ‘the queen of the underground’. But they had scarcely been seen, and they didn’t have soundtracks. For almost a year they stayed in the trunk, and stayed silent. Then he met Ron Geesin, somewhere around Portobello Road.
‘Slept last night, completely dressed after working over 12 hours on sound tracks at Ron’s,’ wrote Dwoskin in his diary for 29 July 1965. ‘My films are not anywhere near being anything. I need more energy, more concise and positive ideas and less inhibition. And of course space, money and people.’ Dwoskin, who taught and practised graphic design by day, had recently decided to stay in London beyond the term of the Fulbright scholarship that had brought him there.
Ron, living with Frankie in a basement flat in Elgin Crescent – they would marry the next year, with Dwoskin as best man – was about to leave the Original Downtown Syncopators, the trad jazz band he had joined aged seventeen-and-a-half, and was trying to go solo. On stage he would make vigorous use of piano and banjo; at home Frankie had bought him a new kind of instrument – a tape recorder. ‘Soon I had one tape recorder, two tape recorders, three tape recorders.’

Ron, wrote Dwoskin in his unpublished autobiography, ‘loved to record, and to cut and splice the quarter-inch recording tape to make new sounds. This triggered in me the idea of getting back to my films and finishing them’. Soon he was living in a dank basement in Denbigh Road, a few minutes’ walk from Elgin Crescent. Ron’s soundtracks for Dwoskin’ films, recorded in the Geesins’ flat, encompassed Ron’s very eclectic range of styles – madcap piano and fretted banjo as well as tape manipulation.
Aside from Ron’s soundtracks, some of which belong to films that no longer exist (including Pot Boiler), Frankie would act in one of the films that Dwoskin either lost or never finished during these years. He was disabled, having contracted polio as a child, and Ron and Frankie were both carers and collaborators; Ron had met him when he was struggling into his car.
There was no London equivalent to the underground film scene that Dwoskin had known in New York, and his films remained unseen until such a scene began to come into being, in the autumn of 1966. Some of them made their debut at the Mercury Theatre, near Notting Hill Gate, that September. Dwoskin wrote that Alone, starring Zelda Nelson (from Ron Rice’s Chumlum), and Chinese Checkers, with Beverly Grant and Dwoskin’s friend Joan Adler, went over best.
Soon both Dwoskin and Geesin became involved in the nascent London Film-Makers’ Co-op, which put on screenings in Better Books on Charing Cross Road – ‘if you can call them screenings,’ Ron recalls; ‘I’d call it fifteen blokes in various stages of disarray, peering through the smoke’. One or more of the films had been ‘striped’ with magnetic audiotape; with others ‘we had no means of direct syncing to the picture, so he started the film and I started the tape recorder’.
In the same autumn, Dwoskin moved into a flat almost opposite the Geesins on Elgin Crescent. More collaborations followed, including Naissant, on which Gavin Bryars, whom Geesin had met during a stint on the northern club circuit with novelty act Dr Crock and His Crackpots, played double bass.
Around the end of 1967 Geesin released his first solo LP, A Raise of Eyebrows, and Dwoskin won recognition the Fourth Experimental Film Competition, aka EXPRMNTL 4, an occasional film festival staged at Knokke-le-Zoute in Belgium. By now the films had optical soundtracks.
It was only after this that Dwoskin completed his first ‘British’ films, including Me Myself and I, with Barbara Gladstone, an American dancer who had appeared in Barbara Rubin’s Christmas on Earth, and with whom Dwoskin and Geesin had at one point devised a stage show, never produced. For Moment, a single-shot film, Geesin provided his most experimental score yet. At the time of its debut in 1970, Dwoskin and the Geesins were sharing a house in Ladbroke Grove.
By then, Ron was working with Pink Floyd, and soon afterwards he and Frankie moved out to the country, to be replaced by Bryars both in the house and as Dwoskin’s principal collaborator.
Until now these scores have remained part of the Geesin Archive and have never been issued.

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Ültimo hace: 5 Años
Smoove & Turrell - Stratos Bleu

Smoove&Turrell

Stratos Bleu

12inchJAL340V
Jalapeno
09.06.2020

2020 sees the release of Smoove & Turrell's 6th studio album Stratos Bleu – a slightly different direction for the boys as they take influences from their infamous DJ sets where they fuse northern soul with funk and electronica.

The production is a marriage of everything that they grew up on fused with elements of modern music, taking influences from Chicago House to Massive Attack, Inner City to Kruder & Dorfmeister but with the distinctive drum heavy dancefloor production Smoove is famous for.

For lyricist Turrell the album is a throwback to the rose-tinted halcyon days of his youth, from stealing his Dad's aftershave to hearing house music for the first time. The challenge for both was about finding the right balance between the Smoove & Turrell sound that has brought them such a fanatical following and the raw dance music they grew up on, while always striving to be original.

Do It - the first single from the album is recognizably a Smoove & Turrell dancefloor destroyer and leads into the glorious analogue bubbler It Ain't Working – slated as their second single.
The tougher electronic sound will be a surprise to some but those denizens of the night who have seen these guys work a crowd from the DJ booth will know what to expect – extraordinary lyricism and tight beats.

The ecstatic breakbeat fueled This Time keeps the album peaking but of course there is always shade with the blinding light on a Smoove & Turrell album and downbeat tracks like Never Wanted You More and Talk About Nothing bring you back to a balearic heyday for vocal electronic dance music

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Ültimo hace: 5 Años
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