Dionne WordPress Banner

The Second Disc

Expanded and Remastered Music News

  • Home
  • News
    • Classic Rock
    • Rock
    • Pop
    • Jazz
    • Popular Standards/Vocal
    • R&B/Soul
    • Country
    • Folk
    • Cast Recordings
    • Soundtracks
    • Everything Else
      • Classical/Opera
      • Disco/Dance
      • Funk
      • Gospel
      • Rap/Hip-Hop
  • Features
    • Release Round-Up
    • The Weekend Stream
    • Giveaways!
    • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Classic Rock
    • Rock
    • Pop
    • Jazz
    • Popular Standards/Vocal
    • R&B/Soul
    • Country
    • Folk
    • Cast Recordings
    • Soundtracks
    • Everything Else
      • Classical/Opera
      • Disco/Dance
      • Funk
      • Gospel
      • Rap/Hip-Hop
  • Release Calendar
    • Coming Soon
    • Now Available
  • About
  • Second Disc Records
    • Full Catalog
  • Contact

/ Features / Holiday Gift Guide

Holiday Gift Guide Review: Various Artists, "The South Side of Soul Street"

December 23, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

South Side of Soul StreetThe trusty musical archaeologists at the Omnivore label have the perfect stocking stuffer for those looking for a little bit of southern soul hung by the chimney with care.  The 2-CD anthology  The South Side of Soul Street (OVCD-68, 2013), collecting the A- and B-sides of 20 singles released by the Minaret label between 1967 and 1976, makes the argument that Valparaiso, Florida’s Playground Recording Studio deserves to be spoken of in the same breath as Muscle Shoals, American Sound, Stax and Hi.

Founded in Nashville in the early 1960s, the Minaret label was purchased in 1966 by Finley Duncan.  Three years later, the producer-entrepreneur founded Playground, where he specialized in smokin’ R&B grooves.   Though none of Minaret’s artists broke through to the top echelon of soul music, The South Side of Soul Street still shows off some of the best southern soul you’ve never heard – with the genre’s trademark smoldering vocals, taut guitars, dirty brass, funky bass, tinkling piano or churchy organ.Why didn’t Minaret break through to the big time?  It’s hard to say, based on these forty mini-treasures.  Most likely, the vocalists’ styles weren’t distinctive enough, while most of the songs simply don’t stack up to the greatest works of Willie Mitchell, Isaac Hayes and David Porter, or Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham (who is actually represented on this disc).  But there’s still the real joy of discovery in finding just how good these lesser-known artists with names like Big John Hamilton, Genie Brooks, Doris Allen and Leroy Lloyd actually were.

After the jump, we'll trek to Soul Street with the Minaret gang!

Hamilton, or “Big Bad John” (“...and I don’t give a <<beat>> if they do!”) according to one song title, was the label’s signature artist.  Exactly one-half, or twenty, of the set’s forty tracks are solos or duets (four with Doris Allen) featuring the soul shouter supreme.  Hamilton was believable crying the blues (debut single “The Train”), riding a brassy R&B groove (“Big Bad John”) or doing his best Otis Redding (“I Have No One,” the kind of slow, horn-infused ballad with which Redding would have been comfortable).  One of the treats of South Street is hearing Hamilton evince his mastery of every soul style.

He delivers a loose, spirited vocal on Neil Ray’s “Big Fanny” (“Even dogs refuse to sniff/Big Fanny,” goes the not-so-kind lyric).  “She weighs 300 pounds!” he interjects at one point with palpable glee.  Its B-side, the torrid “How Much Can a Man Take,” was much more in Hamilton’s typical, impassioned vein as he confronts a difficult lover.  The opening riff of his ode to the “Pretty Girls” (the metaphorical though not literal flipside of “Big Fanny”) is too close for comfort to “Soul Man” but the track is nonetheless enjoyable.  Hamilton explored a country vein with the twangy “Breaking Up is Hard to Do” (not the Sedaka/Greenfield song but rather the swamp-pop staple by “Jivin’” Gene Bourgeois and Huey P. Meaux) and might have had a shot at the pop charts with the catchy “If You’re Looking for a Fool.”  Often the As and Bs were in contrasting styles; the B-side of “If You’re Looking...” is the lush and melodic ballad “Take This Hurt Off Me Fool.”  The bright cut “Just Seeing You Again” even has a bit of an Archie Bell and the Drells flavor crossed with melodic inspiration taken from the Burt Bacharach/Hal David hit for Chuck Jackson (and later Ronnie Milsap), “Any Day Now.”

It’s worth noting that Hamilton co-wrote many of these tracks, including some co-writes with producer Duncan and fellow Minaret artist Leroy Lloyd.  The guitarist headlines one single as Leroy Lloyd and The Dukes.  The dancefloor-tailored “Sewanee Strut” is an exciting instrumental, and the B-side “A Taste of the Blues” shows off Lloyd’s jazzier side.  He recurs backing Count Willie on the steamy ballad “I’ve Got to Tell You,” and as LRL and the Dukes for the energetic “Double Funk.”  Another Hamilton collaborator was Doris Allen, who possessed a bluesy, gutsy, no-nonsense growl that she deploys to fine effect on four duet sides with Hamilton and her own “The Shell of a Woman” b/w “Kiss Yourself for Me.”

Another John, or Johnny, to make a big impression on Minaret was Johnny Dynamite.  The former John Henry Adams, Jr. lives up to his stage name with the high-octane “The Night the Angels Cried,” one of the best and most driving tracks here.  Accented by vibrant horns, it would have made the Ike and Tina Turner Revue proud.  Its B-side, “Everybody’s Clown,” is another strong tale of pathos (“Go ahead and laugh...he’s everybody’s clown!”).  Dynamite cuts loose with a bit of a yelp as the song comes to a close.

Genie Brooks arrived at Minaret through the acquaintance of Leroy Lloyd.  He’s represented here with four tracks, or two singles.  Spooner Oldham and Oscar Frank’s fine ‘n’ funky A-side “Fine Time” is a standout, as is its follow-up, “Helping Hand.”  Told from the POV of a prisoner from his jail cell, the latter talks welfare and poverty (“I had to come up the hard way/Because I never had a helping hand...”) as strings add to the drama.  Its B-side gives this collection its title.  “The South Side of Soul Street” (“You can take your shoes off if you wanna”) is another true rouser with some scorching guitar.

The Double Soul (a.k.a. Elmore Morris and Charles Cooper) delivered just one 1968 single.  The A-side, “Blue Diamonds,” is a somewhat square throwback (“She wears blue diamonds” – instead of “blue velvet,” I suppose?) but its flip, the John Hamilton-penned “I Can’t Use You,” shows off the duo’s close harmonies.  Singer-songwriter Willie Cobbs came to Minaret following appearance on a variety of imprints including Vee-Jay.  His gravelly, expressive voice brings to life the funky blues of “I’ll Love You Only” and its flipside, “Don’t Worry About Me” with color added by prominent harmonica and horns.  (By Omnivore’s admission, Cobbs’ two tracks have been sourced from vinyl as the original masters could not be located.  All other tracks save Genie Brooks’ “Juanita” are derived from the masters.)

Another Willie, Gable, recorded what’s likely the most soulful variation on “Row, Row, Row Your Boat” you’ve ever heard, as “Row Row Row.”  Its flip, “Eternally,” features strings and the electric sitar à la B.J. Thomas’ “Hooked on a Feeling” or “The Eyes of a New York Woman.”  “Eternally” was produced by the great Shelby Singleton, who distributed Minaret via his SSS International label.  Singleton also took a “directed by” credit, to Duncan’s “produced by,” for the tough, rip-roarin’ Hamilton/Allen single “Bright Star.”

The South Side of Soul Street, expertly produced by Jim Lancaster (who has also superbly remastered at Playground Studios) and Omnivore’s Cheryl Pawelski, bests previous CD-era releases of the Minaret material thanks to its full-color 20-page booklet designed by Greg Allen with new liner notes from Bill Dahl.  Dahl goes into very welcome detail about the artists involved, and that’s no small feat, considering their obscurity.  Anyone who appreciates diamonds in the rough of R&B will doubtless want to take a visit to the South Side of Soul Street.

You can order The South Side of Soul Street at Amazon U.S. and Amazon U.K.!

Categories: Holiday Gift Guide, News, Reviews

Avatar photo

Joe Marchese

JOE MARCHESE (Editor) joined The Second Disc shortly after its launch in early 2010, and has since penned daily news and reviews about classic music of all genres. In 2015, Joe formed the Second Disc Records label. Celebrating the great songwriters, producers and artists who created the sound of American popular song, Second Disc Records, in conjunction with Real Gone Music, has released newly-curated collections produced by Joe from iconic artists such as Johnny Mathis, Bobby Darin, Laura Nyro, Melissa Manchester, Chet Atkins, and many others. He has contributed liner notes to reissues from a diverse array of artists, among them Nat "King" Cole, Paul Williams, Lesley Gore, Dusty Springfield, B.J. Thomas, The 5th Dimension, Burt Bacharach, The Mamas and the Papas, Carpenters, Perry Como, Rod McKuen, Doris Day, Jackie DeShannon, and Andy Williams, and has compiled releases for talents including Robert Goulet and Keith Allison of Paul Revere and the Raiders. Over the past two decades, Joe has also worked in a variety of capacities on and off Broadway as well as at some of the premier theatres in the U.S., including Lincoln Center Theater, George Street Playhouse, Paper Mill Playhouse, Long Wharf Theatre, and the York Theatre Company. He has felt privileged to work on productions alongside artists such as the late Jack Klugman, Eli Wallach, Arthur Laurents, Betty Comden and Adolph Green. In 2009, Joe began contributing theatre and music reviews to the print publication The Sondheim Review, and in 2012, he joined the staff of The Digital Bits as a regular contributor writing about film and television on DVD and Blu-ray. Joe currently resides in the suburbs of New York City.

Connect With Joe: FacebookTwitter

Comments

  1. John says

    December 23, 2013 at 4:59 pm

    This is pretty great stuff, though not all of it hits the sweet spot. However, of its 40 tracks, 28 are collectively available on Sundazed's Big John Hamilton anthology, "How Much Can A Man Take" and its sister compilation, "A Fine Time! The South Side Of Soul Street." Those two Sundazed CDs each have 18 tracks and don't share any between them.

    To get everything, you'd need all three CDs. If you have the two Sundazed CDs, you probably don't need this - the "unique" tracks here aren't among the best - a couple are really weak. If you don't have the Sundazed sets, this probably a better bet - it too has all the crucial stuff from the Sundazed CDs (and 40 tracks instead of 38) and none of the Sundazed-exclusive material is absolutely crucial.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to John Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Upcoming Releases

  • Status Quo Live deluxe
    Live! Deluxe Edition
    Status Quo
    May 16, 2025
    US UK
  • Brothers in Arms 40
    Brothers in Arms: 40th Anniversary Edition
    Dire Straits
    May 16, 2025
    US UK
  • Version 1.0.0
    The Bridge
    David Sancious
    May 16, 2025
    US UK
See Full Calendar

Connect

  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 4,673 other subscribers

Popular Posts

  • Most Commented
  • Most Viewed
  • Dionne Warwick Make It Easy on Yourself(Don't) Walk On By: Dionne Warwick's "Make It Easy on Yourself: The Scepter Recordings 1962-1971" Due in June on 12...
  • Tracks II CD packshot no disc artShut Out the Light: Bruce Springsteen Offers Seven Unheard Albums on 'Tracks II'
  • Rod Stewart Ultimate Hits Amazon exclusiveHe Wears It Well: Rod Stewart's 'Ultimate Hits' Due in June
  • RSD 2025 best of restRecord Store Day 2025: The Best of the Rest
  • record store day logoThe Second Disc's Guide to Record Store Day 2025: Our Favorite Picks
  • John Williams Anthology 1Mondo Maestro: New John Williams Box Set Series Announced, Plus 'Star Wars' Re-Recordings on Vinyl

Music Resources

  • Addicted to Vinyl
  • Crap from the Past
  • Discogs
  • Film Score Monthly
  • IMWAN Forum – From the Vaults
  • MusicTAP
  • Musoscribe
  • Pause & Play
  • Popdose
  • Slicing Up Eyeballs
  • Steve Hoffman Music Forums
  • Ultimate Classic Rock
  • Vintage Vinyl News
  • Wolfgang's Vault

Labels of Note

  • Ace Records
  • Analog Spark
  • Bear Family
  • BGO Records
  • Big Break Records
  • Blixa Sounds
  • Cherry Red Label Group
  • Craft Recordings
  • Demon Music Group
  • Friday Music
  • Funky Town Grooves
  • Iconoclassic Records
  • Intervention Records
  • Intrada
  • Kritzerland
  • La La Land Records
  • Legacy Recordings
  • Light in the Attic
  • Masterworks Broadway
  • Now Sounds
  • Omnivore Recordings
  • Real Gone Music
  • Rhino Entertainment
  • Rock Candy Records
  • SoulMusic Records
  • Sunset Blvd. Records
  • Supermegabot
  • Varese Sarabande
  • Vinyl Me, Please
  • Wounded Bird
Copyright © 2025 The Second Disc. All rights reserved. · Site by Metaglyphics

The Second Disc is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com, amazon.ca and amazon.co.uk.

Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy