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Thursday, 29 September 2016

Totally (Sunshine) Soul

What's your estimation of a good soul song? Would you say a Motown hit or maybe a Northern floor filler? Perhaps you like a bit of Modern, a Beat Ballard even Crossover. And what about today's soulful tunes - are they your cup of tea? 

Confused? You're in good company, I just can't place my finger on what genre of soul music I like, and so it seems do many others. One man's Northern is another's Motown is another's Modern. Maybe I'll just give all of them a whirl.

Well, come Thursday 29th September that's exactly what I will be doing as I host the Totally Soul Show on Total FM, the community radio station for Javea. Every week I'll be bringing you three hours of an eclectic mix of all things soul to ease you into your Thursday evening. (Showtime 5pm - 8pm) Click here. 

Growing up in The Lancashire seaside town of Morecambe it was easy to forge a liking for the soul genre; everywhere was playing it. My first exposure to it was in the youth clubs, the breeding ground for many a "would
be" DJ and definitely the place a young man could cut his teeth on the dance floor. Acts such as Donnie Elbert, The Supremes and The Drifters provided the soundtrack to my formative years. We listened to The Chi-Lites, Detroit Spinners and the O'Jays on the juke boxes in the coffee bars of the town. 

Usually skint, we would imagine being able to afford and moreover allowed by our parents to attend Blackpool Mecca and Wigan Casino, unimaginable sounds (we believed) would fill our senses in those venues. We did have a lifeline to more soul, though - Dixieland Showbar.

Part of the Winter Gardens complex, Dixies, as it was known, had a Monday soul night; big problem for me, obviously a school night. I pray for forgiveness to my parents for the white lies I spun to attend those Monday night extravaganzas. It's where I first heard R Dean Taylor's "Ghost in my house", and that immortal line "Where our love used to be"...CLAP CLAP..."only shadows can I see." DJ's have been turning the sound off to the claps for years. Audiences have fully obliged.

Another great soul memory for me was the fact I owned the Motown Chartbusters Vol 3 LP. Not only were the tracks epic Motown, the album cover was a concentric design of silver. Move It around in the light and the metallic shades changed hue - mesmerising.

All good things come to an end I guess. Well, if you call joining the army a bad thing. I went off for a year's Junior Leader training in September 1974, I don't even recall the term "northern soul"being part of our vocabulary. It was in fact, given the name by a London soul record dealer who separated the funkiest soul enjoyed in the south to the smoother up-tempo beats preferred by visiting Northern football fans. "Just show them to the northern soul" the owner would tell his staff and thus an expression was coined.Thank the Lord for those pioneering UK soul DJ's who went over to the States and emptied the record shops and warehouses of all the great sounds.


It wasn't until I left the army in 98 that I came back into the soul scene. I met up with a dear departed friend Sean O'Conner. We'd catch each other at Morecambe  football matches down south (where I was living), as footie and soul music sort of go together we had plenty to talk about.

Sean would compile CD mix sets of Northern, Motown and a genre I'd missed out on, all the years off scene - modern. On my journeys back to Morecambe he introduced me to a collective of local fanatics called the Seaside Soul Club, I'd even been at school with a couple of the lads - my reintroduction to soul music was now underway.

As a soul returnee one of my many regrets was not having a record collection. Travelling the world in the forces and years later in industry wasn't conducive to keeping a vinyl collection in good nick. It was digital for me, although I do own a mixer, speakers and decks I'm not prepared to pay the funny money today's dealers want for records. I couldn't afford them anyway!

There is a slight one-upmanship regarding the ownership of vinyl and one debate I'm not prepared to get dragged into. I know what I like and like what I know. As long as it gets out there clearly, it's good for me.

My own personal soul journey is still out there on the highway. I now have a broader knowledge of the different
sub-genres and am willing to listen to and accept new sounds that come along. As a presenter I won't instil my favourites on the listeners, but throw in a whole mix of stuff, heightening the senses to this timeless genre of music.

Come and join me on this journey every Thursday - you never know where it will take us.

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