Tuesday, 29 October 2013

The Northern Soul Top 500

I came across a great book today, 'The Northern Soul Top 500' by Kev Roberts. Kev has been a central force to the Northern Soul scene since the early days, so one can rest assured that it'll be a worthwhile read. Below is 'sample excerpt' taken from the foreword to the book (by Frank Wilson himself!). If, like me, it whet your appetite for more, I've inserted a link for paperback copies at the Amazon store. Happy reading.

Michael
Northern Soul

Foreword by
Frank Wilson
I had been producing records independently for around 18 months in the early early 60’s when I came to work for Motown. During that time I had written and produced a song for Ike and Tina Turner with another recording quickly following for their backing group the Ikettes. Things were starting to roll, especially following a song I had written for Stevie Wonder entitled ‘Castles In The Sand’.




At that time Brenda Holloway, a new young beautiful and talented songstress with Motown was having an incredible impact on my desire to become a popular songwriter and producer. I thought that the only thing that stood in my way was sufficient opportunity to realise my dream.
Shortly after I secured a position as a producer with Motown, Berry Gordy Jnr. invited me to move to Hitsville, USA in Detroit from my base of operations in Los Angeles and I jumped at the opportunity! Within weeks I was there in the studio, producing a song on ‘Smokey’ Robinson! After Smokey’s’ record came out I started to work with Marvin Gaye, The Four Tops, Diana Ross, The Supremes, The Marvellettes, The Originals, Kiki Dee, Jimmy Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks.
Now besides being one of America’s top five producers I also ranked number one in Britain - thanks! At this point my work as both a songwriter and producer with these great artists had already sold over 35 million records worldwide! Later, lost in all of my success with Motown was a song that Berry had originally intended to release on me as an artist, it was entitled ‘Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)’. Prior to producing all these other artists I had been doing a bit of songwriting around the Los Angeles area and often became the vocal vehicle for my own material.
Now standing backstage at the Fox Theatre in Detroit, Michigan one night in 1966 a decision was made that changed my life in more ways that I could have imagined. It was decided between myself and Berry that, rather than becoming a recording star myself, I would instead concentrate on being a writer and producer for Motown stable of awesome talents.
Berry then ordered that all of the masters with my voice on be destroyed and overdubbed another artist (Chris Clark sic.) on my backing track! Somehow, and I don’t know how, a copy surfaced in England and was played in the clubs... The rest is, one might say, history!
It seems to me that England is made up of people who are by nature explorers, discoverers and pioneers. I should therefore have not been surprised to find that ‘Do I Love You’ has been caught up in the phenomenon called ‘Northern Soul’ which has been secretly bubbling under in the North of England for quite sometime but is now seeping slowly into the rest of the world.
How did I become such an integral part of such an occurance? It has to be supernatural, it has to be God because I knew nothing of it until just a few years ago!
A producer/promoter from London called me up enquiring whether I had any idea where he might get his hands on an original recording of ‘Do I Love You’ - of course I didn’t! I had NO idea an original still existed! Though today I consider it to be one of my life’s great achievements!
Since this discovery, I have done countless interviews for the print and electronic medias with regard to this unique musical uprising known as ‘Northern Soul’ and my own part in it. What have I learned about it personally? Northern Soul is a love affair, some callously suggest that it is just American music that never made it. But if you are in love with it you know that it is music that has found a true home in the hearts of those who have found it to be for them a ‘treasure’.
I’m honoured to be included in this book and happy that Kev has asked me to write this foreword to his work which chronicles the experiences, history and most importantly harmonies of this grand odyssey known affectionately in England as Northern Soul.

Writer and Artist behind ‘Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)’
Sadly Frank passed away on September 27, 2012. My fondest memory of the man came in Los Angeles, March 2004 when joining our Northern Soul gathering at the Wilshire Grand Hotel. Frank came up to our room for a chat before meeting the gathering downstairs in the Point Moorea bar. He casually mentioned a call would be coming through for me at 8pm.
Shortly after 8 the phone rang, with Frank urging me to pick up. A voice said ‘Thanks for looking after Frank and keeping our music alive’.... to quote the man. The phone went dead...... I said ‘Frank who was that ??’..... with a strong look into my eyes..... he whispered...... ‘Berry Gordy’.

A moment I could never forget.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0953929108