The UK Love for Obscure Sixties African-American Soul Music Lives On!

Elliot Feldman
Elliot Feldman
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The English Call it "Northern Soul"

Back in the mid-nineties when I began browsing the Internet, I came across a site called "Soul of the Net" run by an Israeli named Yoni. On this site, I found a sizeable collection of sound files of s
ixties soul music singles, mostly obscure regional hits from non-Motown Detroit recording artists such as Nathaniel Mayer, Tyrone Davis, Emanuel Lasky, and Gino Washington. On this site, Yoni kept referring to this type of music as "Northern Soul."

I sent Yoni an email, and asked what the term "Northern Soul" means. He answered that it was a music style first popularized in the English mod scene during the sixties.

But, to me, this was the music I grew up with; the music that played from the cigarette-pack-sized transistor radio that I hid under my pillow as I listened to the great Detroit soul stations, WCHB and WJLB, late at night. Detroit soul music and the great DJs like Frantic Ernie Durham, Martha Jean the Queen and Rockin' Robbie D gave me comfort in the crazy dysfunctional house I grew up in. I couldn't believe that decades later I could hear this music again on the Web.

What is "Northern Soul"?

First off, the "Northern" in Northern Soul refers to the northern part of England, specifically Manchester where the American soul music craze began in the UK in the late-sixties and lives on today. David Godin, owner of Manchester's Soul City record store, is credited with coining the phrase after noticing that certain parts of England preferred particular music genres. He classified Manchester's preferred genre as "Northern Soul."

The Beginnings of Northern Soul

The first Northern Soul dance club was Manchester's Twisted Wheel. It opened in 1963, and DJ Roger Eagle's playlist contained nothing but R&B and soul music with an emphasis on obscure non-Motown singles. Kids flocked to this club, including local musicians John Mayall, Spencer Davis, and Long John Baldry.

In 1971, the Manchester city council closed down the Twisted Wheel.

 
 
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