http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkpenzFNbpk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8-GC_vkAKw
Hello there! Lord Horatio on the blower
After a particularly athletic game of chase along the corridors of The Hall I stooped outside The Ballroom to recover my breath and Whimsy’s new dog chew, a rubber effigy of a Dalek, which squeaks “exterminate” at every bite.
As I rose to resume the pursuit with another mighty throw I was suddenly transported back in time. Through the open doors came the umistakeable melody and insistent beat of a song from another time, another place.
As a callow youth I was introduced to the fleshpots of Manchester by a close pal from “ooop north,” particularly The Twisted Wheel nightspot in Whitworth Street. I fondly remember watching Junior Walker on the tiny stage at 2am during a sweaty, frenzied all night session of non-stop soul and amazing athleticism.
Long before break dancing, teenagers in baggy trousers and billowing skirts, span, high kicked, did the splits and a host of other eye-popping moves that would have been at home in any gymnastic contest. It was a phenomenon that came to be known as Northern Soul, which started at the Twisted Wheel in the 60s and reached a high point in the 70s at Wigan Casino.
Fans came from all over the country to dance to obscure soul records rescued from dusty American vaults by English DJs. The sound from The Ballroom that stopped me in my tracks was the rarest of the rare – Do I Love You (Indeed I Do) by Frank Wilson. There are believed to be only two original copies left in the world. One is reputedly owned by the man behind Tamla Motown, Berry Gordy, and the other recently changed hands for around £15,000.
Thanks to legendary Blackpool born songwriter, producer and DJ Ian Levine (he mixed big dance-hits for The Pet Shop Boys and Erasure, helped save Doctor Who from the scrap-heap and has a collection of every DC Comic title ever sold over the counter) there is actually footage of Frank singing the track. Click on the first UTube link above to watch it,
Even though the record never made it in America, Ian persuaded Frank to perform for his camera during the making of the epic 6 DVD set, The Strange World Of Northern Soul, in 1999. He also filmed Dobie Gray giving a rendition of another Northern Soul anthem, Out On The Floor. To see that click on the second link above.
Determined to find where the sound of yesteryear was coming from I strode into The Ballroom with Whimsy hard at heel. Up on the stage, to my surprise, was my young nephew Alexander. Without revealing my past association with the music I asked what was afoot. He revealed that among a certain section of today’s youth Northern Soul is all the rage. He was preparing to host a Dawdle Hall all nighter for his mates!
For a brief moment I toyed with the idea of appearing in the centre of the heaving throng at 3am, legs flailing, armed with a tin of Old Spice talcum powder. In my day it was the aromatic board dusting of choice for serious spinners and was actually banned from some venues in case it ruined their sacred ballroom floors. However, the prospect of deep humiliation followed by an expensive a trip to the osteopath quickly brought me to my senses.
To find out more about this new phenomenon see Alexander’s take on the subject in The Ballroom https://dawdleandwhimsy.com/about/the-ballroom/ and have a look at some other clips. One of my favourites is of Fred Astaire and Eleanor Powell apparently dancing to the Twisted Wheel Classic by The Contours – Just a Little Misunderstanding. A marvellous re-hash http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEUsuPGBo-c
As they say in Northern Soul circles: “Keep The Faith.”
PS: As winter draws on keep the faith too with my photographer friend Ian Wylie. He has just contributed some heartwarming sunrises and sunsets to The Wylie Collection in The Gallery https://dawdleandwhimsy.com/about/the-gallery/the-wylie-collection/
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