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A Cellarful of Motown!
Various Artists
2 discs
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0. DISC 1:
1. Baby a Go-Go - Barbara McNair
2. All Your Love - Brenda Holloway
3. He Was Really Sayin' Somethin' - Earl Van Dyke
4. Danger, Heartbreak Dead Ahead - The Contours
5. Do I Love You (Indeed I Do) - Chris Clark (alternate take)
6. Baby Hit and Run - The Contours (alternate vocal version)
7. How Can I - Brenda Holloway
8. I Like Everything About You - The Contours
9. All I Do Is Think About You - Tammi Terrell
10. Lucky Lucky Me - Jimmy Ruffin
11. On the Avenue (In the Neighborhood) - Jimmy Ruffin
12. My World Is Crumbling - Brenda Holloway
13. Poor Little Rich Girl - The Marvelettes
14. Save My Love for a Rainy Day - Marv Johnson
15. Tell Me It's Just a Rumour Baby - The Funk Brothers
16. If You Ever Get Your Hands on Love - Gladys Knight & the Pips
17. Are You Sure Love Is the Name of the Game - Stevie Wonder
18. Until You Came Along - Carolyn Crawford
19. Before It's Over - Sammy Ward
20. Long Gone Lover - The Velvelettes
0. DISC 2:
1. My Sugar Baby - Frank Wilson
2. Here Are the Pieces of Broken Heart - Gladys Knight & the Pips (Single Reference mix)
3. There's a Definite Change in You - The Temptations
4. Who You Gonna Run To - Brenda Holloway
5. (It's Easy to Fall in Love) With a Guy Like You - Martha & the Vandellas
6. Touch of Venus, The - Patrice Holloway
7. I Wish I Liked You (As Much as I Love You) - Marvin Gaye
8. Trapped in a Love Affair - Brenda Holloway
9. I Know How to Love Her - Jimmy Ruffin
10. Riding High on Love - Junior Walker & the All-Stars
11. Why When Love Is Gone - The Originals (Single Reference mix)
12. If This World Were Mine - The Fantastic Four
13. Don't Let Me Down - Kim Weston
14. Don't Put Off Till Tomorrow What You Can Do Today - The Monitors (extended single mix)
15. (Tell Me) Ain't It the Truth - J.J. Barnes
16. You Made Me Feel Like (Everything Is Alright) - Syreeta
17. Weakspot in My Heart, A - The Isley Brothers
18. Don't Make Me Live Without Your Love - The Lewis Sisters
19. It Must Be Love Baby - Chuck Jackson/Yvonne Fair/Chuck Jackson & Yvonne Fair
20. Ain't No Place Like Motown - The Velvelettes
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Additional Info
Manufacturer Part Number (MPN): 544619
Credits
Producer
Clarence Paul; Clay McMurray; Fowler, George; Richard Witte; Frank Wilson; Mickey Gentile; Hal Davis; Harvey Fuqua; Henry Cosby; Ivy Hunter; Johnny Bristol; Lamont Dozier; Marc Gordon; William "Mickey" Stevenson; William Weatherspoon; Berry Gordy, Jr.; Smokey Robinson; Norman Whitfield; Brian Holland; Paul Nixon (Compilation)
Engineer
Frank Wilson
A CELLAR FULL OF MOTOWN contains previously unreleased tracks from the Motown vaults, with the exception of "Riding High On Love" by Jr. Walker, which was previously released on vinyl only.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
Audio Mixer: Kevin Reeves.
Liner Note Author: Paul Nixon.
Recording information: Golden World Facility (07/02/1962-12/01/1969); Hitsville Studio, West Grand Boulevard, Detroit, MI (07/02/1962-12/01/1969).
Motown can certainly be taken to task for issuing the same old stuff over and over again -- no matter how great it is, how many versions of Marvin Gaye's "What's Goin On" or of Motown's Top 20 singles does anybody really need? -- even if it is as important as Beethoven's Fifth Symphony (or anybody else's, for that matter). Not so in this case. Cellarful of Motown is a double CD chock-full of soul classics that have remained virtually unheard since they were first recorded -- or, in some cases, relegated to the cutting room floor -- by Motown's front line artists, and many that should have been. We can thank the Northern soul underground in the U.K. for this issue in a sense, due to their constant demand for rare Motown soul issues and the massive bootlegging that goes with it -- and a collector's market that is out of control price-wise at the dawn of the 21st century. Here are 40 tracks that were recorded in the glory days of the Detroit soul scene, but never issued at the time due to Berry Gordy's near-fascistic quality control. Track titles include "My Sugar Baby" by Frank Wilson, "I Wish I Liked You" by Marvin Gaye, "Baby A Go Go" by Barbara McNair, "If You Ever Get Your Hands on Me" by Gladys Knight & the Pips, "How Can I" and "All Your Love" by Brenda Holloway, "He Was Really Sayin Somethin" by Earl Van Dyke, "Until You Came Along" by Carolyn Crawford, "Before It's Over" by Sammy Ward, "Long Gone Lover" by Velvelettes, "Lucky Lucky Me" by Jimmy Ruffin, "You Made Me Feel Like" by Syreeta, "Don't Let Me Down" by Kim Weston, "Don't Put Off Till Tomorrow What You Can Do Today" by the Monitors, and "It Must Be Love Baby" by Chuck Jackson and Yvonne Fair. And this is just a sampling. There are solid notes giving recording origins and personnel wherever possible, and some cool photos in the package with liner notes by Northern soul aficionado DJ and editor Paul Nixon, but the music is the treat here. When Holloway sings "All Your Love," the emotion in her voice is underscored by the giant string section and cracks the mix in two, wrenching every ounce of emotion from Frank Wilson's words. When Chris Clark's pathos-ridden "Do I Love You (NDeed I Do)" cuts loose from the heart of a huge horn section and brings the message home in a raw, direct way; the feet will be two-steppin' even as the sultry need of the track moves deep into the solar plexus. That this is followed by the stomp and swagger of the Contours' "Baby Hit and Run," with it's gospel chorus and the funk rhythms is almost too much to take. It's seriously enough to take your breath away. There is one theory as to why these tracks weren't issued at the time of their recording despite their obvious high and enduring quality. Emotionally and/or production-wise, many of these singles were just too raw for the Motown squeaky-clean machine. If one gives a solid listen to Holloway's material in particular, the deep, unruly, sexy nature of the material is not one that is usually associated with Motown. The Contours could have recorded for Stax they were so raw, and Jimmy Ruffin's various performances give his voice the workout it never got on the officially released material. Simply put: This is the most essential Motown collection release since the first singles box, and, in a sense, since that material is available in a number of ways, it is perhaps more so -- and not merely academically. This is as great an introduction to Detroit soul music as anything you are likely to come across. This is the most important -- and thoroughly enjoyable -- soul reissue in years. ~ Thom Jurek
Critic Reviews
Rolling Stone (9/5/02, p.72) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...Other labels would have killed to release...Motown's bulging library of rejects....and CELLAR FULL barely skims those discarded riches..."
Living Blues (11/02, p.80) - "...All of its 40 selections are previously unreleased and are largely upbeat..."
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Genre:
R&B
Label:
Universal International 544619
Distributor:
Universal Distribution
Analog/Digital:
n/a
Mono/Stereo:
Mixed
Studio/Live:
Studio
UPC:
731454461924
In Stock -- Item Ships for FREE
Our price
$9.73
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