For Dancers Also (2013)
BAND/ARTIST: Various Artist
- Title: For Dancers Also
- Year Of Release: 2013
- Label: Ace Records
- Genre: R&B, Soul, Disco
- Quality: flac lossless
- Total Time: 00:38:46
- Total Size: 174 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
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01. Lay This Burden Down - Mary Love
02. If I Could Turn Back The Hands Of Time - Vernon Garrett
03. You Just Cheat And Lie - Z Z Hill
04. Beauty Is Just Skin Deep - Sweethearts
05. My Baby Needs Me - Yvonne Baker
06. Good Taste Of Love - Danny Monday
07. Can It Be Me - Mel Williams
08. Wanting You - Jimmy Bee
09. Take Your Shoes Off Pt 2 - Booker T Averhart And The Mustangs
10. Hole In The Wall - The Other Brothers
11. Talkin' Woman - Lowell Fulsom
12. Everybody Needs Love - Willie Gauff & the Love Brothers
13. Running Out - Vernon Garrett
14. What Kind Of Man Are You? - Jackie Day
15. I'm In Your Hands - Mary Love
Like its earlier sister compilation of sorts (For Dancers Only), For Dancers Also is a grab bag of soul tracks - 16 in all - originally issued on the Kent/Modern family of labels in the mid- to late '60s. (And, as with For Dancers Only, no bonus tracks or additional historical liner notes were added when it was reissued on CD about 25 years after its original appearance in the early '80s.) Kent/Modern soul releases, with some exceptions, weren't too commercially successful when first issued, and the label didn't cultivate one of the stronger company identities or rosters among '60s soul labels. Why, then, this devoted base of collectors, particularly in Britain, where the modern-day Kent imprint (administered by Ace Records) is based? In part it's because even the generic Kent/Modern soul sides were well suited for midtempo dancing, which is a big deal among the Northern soul aficionados in the U.K. who collect this stuff. To be honest, though, much of Kent/Modern's soul output was on the generic side, though at least For Dancers Also isn't as heavy on the Motown imitations/derivatives as For Dancers Only. These tracks are pleasantly upbeat period soul, though none of the songs are outstanding, and some are mediocre. In its favor, it has some cuts that have a bluesier edge than most '60s soul, particularly Lowell Fulsom's "Talkin' Woman," the Johnny Otis Show's sly "Country Girl," and Jackie Day's convincingly pained "What Kind of Man Are You?" The strain to emulate Motown is in full force, however, on Mary Love's "Lay This Burden Down," which could almost pass for a Martha & the Vandellas stormer with a different singer. If you want some heavily Impressions-influenced stuff, there's Z.Z. Hill's "You Just Cheat and Lie" and Danny Monday's "Good Taste of Love." And was Booker T. Averhart & the Mustangs' "Take Your Shoes Off, Pt. 1" instrumental a deliberately tongue-in-cheek takeoff on Booker T. & the MG's?
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01. Lay This Burden Down - Mary Love
02. If I Could Turn Back The Hands Of Time - Vernon Garrett
03. You Just Cheat And Lie - Z Z Hill
04. Beauty Is Just Skin Deep - Sweethearts
05. My Baby Needs Me - Yvonne Baker
06. Good Taste Of Love - Danny Monday
07. Can It Be Me - Mel Williams
08. Wanting You - Jimmy Bee
09. Take Your Shoes Off Pt 2 - Booker T Averhart And The Mustangs
10. Hole In The Wall - The Other Brothers
11. Talkin' Woman - Lowell Fulsom
12. Everybody Needs Love - Willie Gauff & the Love Brothers
13. Running Out - Vernon Garrett
14. What Kind Of Man Are You? - Jackie Day
15. I'm In Your Hands - Mary Love
Like its earlier sister compilation of sorts (For Dancers Only), For Dancers Also is a grab bag of soul tracks - 16 in all - originally issued on the Kent/Modern family of labels in the mid- to late '60s. (And, as with For Dancers Only, no bonus tracks or additional historical liner notes were added when it was reissued on CD about 25 years after its original appearance in the early '80s.) Kent/Modern soul releases, with some exceptions, weren't too commercially successful when first issued, and the label didn't cultivate one of the stronger company identities or rosters among '60s soul labels. Why, then, this devoted base of collectors, particularly in Britain, where the modern-day Kent imprint (administered by Ace Records) is based? In part it's because even the generic Kent/Modern soul sides were well suited for midtempo dancing, which is a big deal among the Northern soul aficionados in the U.K. who collect this stuff. To be honest, though, much of Kent/Modern's soul output was on the generic side, though at least For Dancers Also isn't as heavy on the Motown imitations/derivatives as For Dancers Only. These tracks are pleasantly upbeat period soul, though none of the songs are outstanding, and some are mediocre. In its favor, it has some cuts that have a bluesier edge than most '60s soul, particularly Lowell Fulsom's "Talkin' Woman," the Johnny Otis Show's sly "Country Girl," and Jackie Day's convincingly pained "What Kind of Man Are You?" The strain to emulate Motown is in full force, however, on Mary Love's "Lay This Burden Down," which could almost pass for a Martha & the Vandellas stormer with a different singer. If you want some heavily Impressions-influenced stuff, there's Z.Z. Hill's "You Just Cheat and Lie" and Danny Monday's "Good Taste of Love." And was Booker T. Averhart & the Mustangs' "Take Your Shoes Off, Pt. 1" instrumental a deliberately tongue-in-cheek takeoff on Booker T. & the MG's?
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