An unmissable pairing of Texan-born soul queens! Ruby Wilson was Memphis based for most of her life whilst Emily spent her formative years in Houston before relocating to Stockton, CA, to raise her family. Both were signed to Malaco Records in Jackson, MS, where these two timeless example of Southern Soul were recorded nearly 30 years apart and now appear on 7” vinyl for the first time.
Ruby Wilson first came to our attention in the mid-70s with two singles on T.K. subsidiary Glades, with Number One In Your Heart and the funkier Sky High both still sounding good today. She signed to Malaco during their most fruitful period, and her self-titled album in 1981, from which this classy below-midpaced selection comes, despite being a typically polished affair never reached the highs with the label that Jewel Bass, Fern Kinney, and of course Dorothy Moore had set over the previous few years. It remained her only outing with them, but she went on to make a further three albums in the late 80s with the Hot Cotton Jazz Band, one with the Climax Jazz Band, and finally back on her own A Song For You (2000 Cadre Ent.) and Show You A Good Time (2005 Unkut Music). She became an accomplished actress and was also known as the Queen Of Beale Street for her many club performances in Memphis. Sadly, Ruby died in 2016, but hopefully this release on Jai Alai will help us remember what a talent she really was.
Not only is Emily David an extraordinary talent, she is a remarkable woman too. Her only album Queen Emily was a direct result of her finishing as a semi-finalist of America’s Got Talent in 2008 at the tender age of 40. She was no stranger to talent shows having won a Sammy Davis Jr award in 1999, but back then, as a single-mother decided to put her singing career on hold to bring up her two daughters. One day her troubled sister arrived to stay but left without taking her two boys with her, so Emily felt she had to bring up her nephews as well. Her dreams of a musical career had evaporated but years later her daughters encouraged her to try once again.
It was almost a year after America’s Got Talent that Malaco boss Tommy Couch Jr. called out of the blue and offered her a contract without meeting her. As Queen Emily, a digital 4-track EP was released in the US, but her eponymous CD album, bizarrely released by Malaco in the UK before the US, is one of the best examples of 21st century Southern Soul, steeped with the label’s trademark live instrumentation by the Muscle Shoals Horns Rhythm Section and contains a number of polished standards such as Use Me, Angel In Your Arms, I Betcha Didn’t Know That and Going Crazy. However, it is the George Jackson-penned ballad Throw Away Me that really stands out and deservedly received critical acclaim in the UK at the time. It now gets a very welcome vinyl debut on Jai Alai and makes for a fabulous pairing.
Buscar:ruby wilson
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- 1: Roland Alphonso & His Alley Cats - Jerk Pork
- 2: Neville Esson - Lover's Jive
- 3: Monty & The Cyclones - Lazy Lou
- 4: Owen Gray - Get Drunk
- 5: Monty & The Cyclones - Dog It
- 6: Clancy Eccles - More Proof
- 7: Tommy Mccook & The Skatalites- Exodus
- 8: Clue J And His Blues Blasters - Swanee River Rock
- 9: Delroy Wilson - Spit In The Sky
- 10: Roland Alphonso - Federal Special
- 11: Owen Gray - Grandma Grandpa
- 12: Don Drummond - Cuban Blockade
- 13: Theophilus Beckford With Clue J & His City Slickers - Little Lady
- 14: Tommy Mccook - Away From You
- 15: Clancy Eccles With Hersan & His City Slickers - I Live And I Love
- 16: Roland Alphonso & His Alley Cats - Hully Gully Rock
- 17: Delroy Wilson - Lion Of Judah
- 18: Tommy Mccook - Two For One
- 19: Toots & The Maytals - Sweet Sweet Jenny
- 20: Roland Alphonso - Grand National
- 37: Don Drummond - Mr. Propman
- 21: Owen Gray With Hersan & His City Slickers - Sinners Weep & Mourn
- 22: Tommy Mccook - Peanut Vendor
- 23: Toots & The Maytals - Shining Light
- 24: Lascelles Perkins With Clue J & His Blues Blasters - Lonely Moments
- 25: Toots & The Maytals - Six And Seven Books Of Moses
- 26: Cecil Lloyd - It Happens
- 27: Bunny & Scully - Don't Do It
- 28: Don Drummond - Scrap Iron
- 29: Lascelles Perkins And Clue J & His Blues Blasters - Creation
- 30: Tommy Mccook - Don't Slam The Door
- 31: The Rhythm Aces - Joybells Of Independence
- 32: Roland Alphonso - Jack Ruby
- 33: Toots & The Maytals - Hallelujah
- 34: Bob Marley & The Wailers - Habits
- 35: Frank Anderson & Tommy Mccook - Wheel And Turn
- 36: Busty & Cool - Kingston To Mo'bay
- 38: Higgs & Wilson - Mighty Man
- 39: Tommy Mccook & Roland Alphonso - Trotting In
- 40: Bunny & Skitter With Count Ossie And His Wareikas - Cool Breeze
- 41: The Mellow Larks - Light Of My Life
The Sound Of Young Jamaica - More Early Cuts From The Vaults Of Studio One 1959-63
This is the second collection to bring together many of the visionary producer Clement 'Sir Coxsone' Dodd's early recordings made with Jamaica's most exciting young artists and musicians who helped define the world of reggae music over the decades following Jamaican Independence. These recordings were made when Sir Coxsone ruled the dancehalls of Kingston in the late 1950s and early 1960s with his number one Downbeat Sound System, where songs were tested out on dub plates at a dance to see a crowd's reaction - the most popular of which were then released commercially. Featuring early material by Roland Alphonso, Don Drummond, Tommy McCook (all of whom would form The Skatalites), Toots and The Maytals, young singers such as Bob Marley and The Wailers, Delroy Wilson, Owen Gray all captured in their formative days. The music here spans a wealth of styles - Jamaican rhythm and blues, jazz, gospel, proto-ska, Rastafarian - all of which were drawn upon to create the future sounds of Jamaican reggae that Sir Coxsone and the artists featured would soon create at Studio One which opened its doors in 1963. This collection is released on heavyweight triple-vinyl plus download code and double CD with slipcase. Sleevenotes and text is by the author Noel Hawks.
- A1: Gloria Lucas - One Sweet Song
- A2: Lyn Collins - Think (About It)
- A3: Minnie Riperton - Adventures In Paradise
- A4: Ruby Delicious - Rock Steady
- A5: Brenda George - What You See Is What You're Gonna Get
- A6: Jackie Dee - Love You Wholeheartedly
- A7: Gwen Mccrae - All This Love That I'm Givin
- B1: Marva Whitney - What Do I Have To Do To Prove My Love To You
- B2: Ruth Davis - I Need Money
- B3: Millie Jackson - Do What Makes The World Go Round
- B4: Gladys Knight & The Pips - Thank You (Falettin Me Be Mice Elf Agin)
- B5: Spanky Wilson & The Quantic Soul Orchestra - Don't Joke With A Hungry Man
- B6: Ann Peepbles - Slipped, Tripped & Fell In Love
- C1: Betty Wright - Clean Up Woman
- C2: Little Rose Little - Family Tree
- C3: The Quantic Sould Orchestra - Hold It Up
- C4: Jackson Sisters - I Believe In Miracles
- C5: Rose Royce - Car Wash
- C6: Taana Gardner - Heartbeat
- D1: Melba Moore - Mind Up Tonight
- D2: Sisters Love - Gimme Your Love
- D3: Diana Ross - Upside Down
- D4: Donna Summer - Hot Stuff (Single Edit)
- D5: Carrie Lucas - Dance With You
Copenhagen’s progressive genre-crossing quartet VOLA re-issue their 2nd album ‘Applause of a Distant Crowd’ on 180gr blue/black splatter on transparent vinyl. This re-issue will be released on May 21st via Mascot Records/Mascot Label Group in conjunction with the new VOLA album Witness.
As with its predecessor, ‘Inmazes’, ‘Applause of a Distant Crowd’ is an ambitious and thought provoking dissection of fragile human emotions through an exploration of entwining musical textures. Mastered by Andy VanDette (Porcupine Tree, Steven Wilson, Devin Townsend, David Bowie).
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