Various Artists
South Side of Soul Street: The Minaret Soul Singles 1967-1976
South Side of Soul Street: The Minaret Soul Singles 1967-1976
UPC: 816651014767
Format: CD (2 disc)
Release Date: Jan 01, 2013
Regular price
$17.95 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$17.95 USD
Unit price
per
Couldn't load pickup availability
FREE SHIPPING
This item is currently out of stock and may be on backorder.

Liner Note Author: Bill Dahl.
If the name Minaret doesn't ring any bells for you, there's a reason for that: the '60s/'70s independent label -- formed in Nashville but based in the Florida panhandle throughout its run -- didn't have any hits. As always, hits are not necessarily a reflection of musical quality, and Minaret did release plenty of fine sides, many of them collected on South Side of Soul Street: The Minaret Soul Singles, a double-disc 2013 set by Omnivore Records. Minaret was firmly within the deep southern soul tradition of the '60s and '70s, quite clearly following the path blazed by Stax/Volt Records and Muscle Shoals' studios. Although the label's acts didn't take this path to any surprising places -- based on this, which is billed to run all the way til 1976 but effectively stops around 1970, the label was slow to dip into funk -- but this is an enjoyable journey anyway because this is solid, unflashy, workingman (and workingwoman) soul. Big John Hamilton, the closest thing Minaret had to a star and a guy who is on nearly half of this 40-track collection, stands for all the label's attributes and weaknesses. He is a strong singer in the vein of Otis Redding, James Carr, and Wilson Pickett, but he doesn't have a signature that separates him from his peers. Instead, he just delivers the goods without fuss, and the same can be said of Genie Brooks, Johnny Dynamite, and Willie Gable, among all the others here. There may not be a song that could've crossed over into the pop charts -- this is deep soul at its proudest -- and there may not have been anything hooky or distinctive enough to be heard outside of the south, but all 40 tracks here are good, generic soul, the kind of things that hardcore R&B collectors love and the kind that deserve to be heard by an audience beyond crate-diggers. Fortunately, this collection will now give plenty of exposure to a label that has only be known to those in the know, and will likely please nearly any southern soul fan. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
If the name Minaret doesn't ring any bells for you, there's a reason for that: the '60s/'70s independent label -- formed in Nashville but based in the Florida panhandle throughout its run -- didn't have any hits. As always, hits are not necessarily a reflection of musical quality, and Minaret did release plenty of fine sides, many of them collected on South Side of Soul Street: The Minaret Soul Singles, a double-disc 2013 set by Omnivore Records. Minaret was firmly within the deep southern soul tradition of the '60s and '70s, quite clearly following the path blazed by Stax/Volt Records and Muscle Shoals' studios. Although the label's acts didn't take this path to any surprising places -- based on this, which is billed to run all the way til 1976 but effectively stops around 1970, the label was slow to dip into funk -- but this is an enjoyable journey anyway because this is solid, unflashy, workingman (and workingwoman) soul. Big John Hamilton, the closest thing Minaret had to a star and a guy who is on nearly half of this 40-track collection, stands for all the label's attributes and weaknesses. He is a strong singer in the vein of Otis Redding, James Carr, and Wilson Pickett, but he doesn't have a signature that separates him from his peers. Instead, he just delivers the goods without fuss, and the same can be said of Genie Brooks, Johnny Dynamite, and Willie Gable, among all the others here. There may not be a song that could've crossed over into the pop charts -- this is deep soul at its proudest -- and there may not have been anything hooky or distinctive enough to be heard outside of the south, but all 40 tracks here are good, generic soul, the kind of things that hardcore R&B collectors love and the kind that deserve to be heard by an audience beyond crate-diggers. Fortunately, this collection will now give plenty of exposure to a label that has only be known to those in the know, and will likely please nearly any southern soul fan. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Tracks:
Disc 1:
1 - Train
2 - Big Bad John
3 - I Have No One
4 - I Just Want to Thank You
5 - Fine Time
6 - Juanita
7 - Blue Diamonds
8 - I Can't Use You
9 - Big Fanny
10 - How Much Can a Man Take
11 - Pretty Girls
12 - Before the Next Teardrop Falls
13 - Night the Angels Cried
14 - Everybody's Clown
15 - Helping Hand
16 - South Side of Soul Street
17 - Breaking Up Is Hard to Do
18 - Love Comes and It Goes
19 - Sewanee Strut
20 - Taste of the Blues
Disc 2:
1 - I'll Love Only You
2 - Don't Worry About Me
3 - If You're Looking for a Fool
4 - Take This Hurt Off Me Fool
5 - Shell of a Woman
6 - Kiss Yourself for Me
7 - I'm Your Man
8 - Who's Been Warming My Oven
9 - Place in My Heart
10 - Let a Little Love In
11 - Row, Row, Row
12 - Eternally
13 - Them Changes
14 - Bright Star
15 - Lift Me Up
16 - Just Seeing You Again
17 - I've Got to Tell You
18 - Double Funk
19 - I Got to Get Myself Somebody
20 - Free Me
1 - Train
2 - Big Bad John
3 - I Have No One
4 - I Just Want to Thank You
5 - Fine Time
6 - Juanita
7 - Blue Diamonds
8 - I Can't Use You
9 - Big Fanny
10 - How Much Can a Man Take
11 - Pretty Girls
12 - Before the Next Teardrop Falls
13 - Night the Angels Cried
14 - Everybody's Clown
15 - Helping Hand
16 - South Side of Soul Street
17 - Breaking Up Is Hard to Do
18 - Love Comes and It Goes
19 - Sewanee Strut
20 - Taste of the Blues
Disc 2:
1 - I'll Love Only You
2 - Don't Worry About Me
3 - If You're Looking for a Fool
4 - Take This Hurt Off Me Fool
5 - Shell of a Woman
6 - Kiss Yourself for Me
7 - I'm Your Man
8 - Who's Been Warming My Oven
9 - Place in My Heart
10 - Let a Little Love In
11 - Row, Row, Row
12 - Eternally
13 - Them Changes
14 - Bright Star
15 - Lift Me Up
16 - Just Seeing You Again
17 - I've Got to Tell You
18 - Double Funk
19 - I Got to Get Myself Somebody
20 - Free Me