

Seattle Funk, Modern Soul & Boogie: Volume II 1972-1987
In 2004, the first volume of Wheedleās Groove shone a light on the formerly unheralded soul scene in 1960s and ā70s Seattle, followed by a new album in 2008, and then an award winning feature-length documentary film. The on-going Wheedleās Groove series continues to present a vast chapter of the cityās musical heritage that has little to do with long-haired rock dudes with guitars. But unlike Volume I, Seattleās soul scene did not stop in 1975. A new volume, Wheedleās Groove Vol. II, documents the period from 1972 to 1987, when funk was superseded by disco and modern soul. Compiled and sequenced by Seattleās DJ Supreme La Rock, this 18-track compilation will also introduce you to the forgotten sound of Seattleās soul & funk scene.
[[Release Description]]Available:
Digital ā May 20
CD & 2xLP ā June 24
In 2004, the first volume of Wheedleās Groove shone a light on the formerly unheralded soul scene in 1960s and ā70s Seattle, followed by a new album in 2008, and then an award winning feature-length documentary film. The on-going Wheedleās Groove series continues to present a vast chapter of the cityās musical heritage that has little to do with long-haired rock dudes with guitars. No ā in the world of Wheedleās Groove, platform shoes and pimp hats were the order of the day.
But unlike Volume I, Seattleās soul scene did not stop in 1975. A new volume, Wheedleās Groove Vol. II, documents the period from 1972 to 1987, when funk was superseded by disco and modern soul. Heading into the ā80s, artists in the Emerald City caught wind of the hip-hop and electro scenes that were growing in bigger cities across America, and gave the music their own distinct spin.
As the years unfurl in the tracks of Wheedleās Groove Volume II, so does the recent history of American music, the songs tracing technological changes and social change, and musicās move from the club to disco as live bands moved aside for DJs. Witness Septimus, on the cusp of both, blending a live drummer with a Roland drum machine and cutting āHere I Go Againā on a disco-friendly 12ā single.
Separated from the major centers of soul music, Seattle was a scene that developed out of the gaze of the mainstream music industry, but one that moved just as fast. As John Studamire of the band Priceless remembers, āA lot of the groups around town would have to incorporate that disco sound or youād sound totally dated.ā
Seattleās size and location had a great effect on its sound. Artists on the scene were accustomed to playing small, discreetly segregated club shows and pressing short runs of 45s for local radio stations. Touring happened mostly on a regional scale and artists popped up in a variety of different bands. Fans of Volume I will recognize some familiar names here: Robbie Hillās Family Affair turn in the soul-jazz gem āDonāt Give Upā and Cold, Bold & Together present the undeniable vocal beauty of āLetās Backtrack.ā
Compiled and sequenced by Seattleās DJ Supreme La Rock, this 18-track compilation will also introduce you to the long-forgotten blue-eyed soul boy Don Brown (āDonāt Lose Your Loveā) and frustrated talents Push, overlooked for record deals on account of singer āBig Joeā Ericksonās larger-than-life heft (āYou Turn Me Onā). Thereās Frederick Robinson III and his gospel-funk protest tune āLove One Anotherā, Tony Benton of Teleclere being Seattleās answer to Prince (āSteal Your Loveā) and Seattle Mariners baseball star Lenny Randle recording a tribute to their infamous stadium
[[Selling Points]]- Compiled by DJ Supreme La Rock
- Album cover photo by Leonard Bordeaux
- All tracks re-mastered
- CD & 2xLP housed in deluxe Stoughton āTip-Onā gatefold jackets
- New liner notes by Jonathan Zwickel with band interviews and rare archive photos
- Color vinyl editions:
+ LITA Vinyl Subscriber Exclusive ā 200 on 180-gram āSonicsā colored wax (LP 1 Green, LP 2 Yellow)
+ LITA.net Pre-order Exclusive ā 200 on āRed Light Redā wax ā> limit 2 per customer
+ LITA Shop Exclusive ā 250 hand numbered jackets with 180-gram wax (LP 1 āSeattle Supersonicsā tribute picture disc, shown above, LP 2 āSonicsā yellow/green split wax) ā> limit 2 per customer
Original: $1.29
-70%$1.29
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Description
In 2004, the first volume of Wheedleās Groove shone a light on the formerly unheralded soul scene in 1960s and ā70s Seattle, followed by a new album in 2008, and then an award winning feature-length documentary film. The on-going Wheedleās Groove series continues to present a vast chapter of the cityās musical heritage that has little to do with long-haired rock dudes with guitars. But unlike Volume I, Seattleās soul scene did not stop in 1975. A new volume, Wheedleās Groove Vol. II, documents the period from 1972 to 1987, when funk was superseded by disco and modern soul. Compiled and sequenced by Seattleās DJ Supreme La Rock, this 18-track compilation will also introduce you to the forgotten sound of Seattleās soul & funk scene.
[[Release Description]]Available:
Digital ā May 20
CD & 2xLP ā June 24
In 2004, the first volume of Wheedleās Groove shone a light on the formerly unheralded soul scene in 1960s and ā70s Seattle, followed by a new album in 2008, and then an award winning feature-length documentary film. The on-going Wheedleās Groove series continues to present a vast chapter of the cityās musical heritage that has little to do with long-haired rock dudes with guitars. No ā in the world of Wheedleās Groove, platform shoes and pimp hats were the order of the day.
But unlike Volume I, Seattleās soul scene did not stop in 1975. A new volume, Wheedleās Groove Vol. II, documents the period from 1972 to 1987, when funk was superseded by disco and modern soul. Heading into the ā80s, artists in the Emerald City caught wind of the hip-hop and electro scenes that were growing in bigger cities across America, and gave the music their own distinct spin.
As the years unfurl in the tracks of Wheedleās Groove Volume II, so does the recent history of American music, the songs tracing technological changes and social change, and musicās move from the club to disco as live bands moved aside for DJs. Witness Septimus, on the cusp of both, blending a live drummer with a Roland drum machine and cutting āHere I Go Againā on a disco-friendly 12ā single.
Separated from the major centers of soul music, Seattle was a scene that developed out of the gaze of the mainstream music industry, but one that moved just as fast. As John Studamire of the band Priceless remembers, āA lot of the groups around town would have to incorporate that disco sound or youād sound totally dated.ā
Seattleās size and location had a great effect on its sound. Artists on the scene were accustomed to playing small, discreetly segregated club shows and pressing short runs of 45s for local radio stations. Touring happened mostly on a regional scale and artists popped up in a variety of different bands. Fans of Volume I will recognize some familiar names here: Robbie Hillās Family Affair turn in the soul-jazz gem āDonāt Give Upā and Cold, Bold & Together present the undeniable vocal beauty of āLetās Backtrack.ā
Compiled and sequenced by Seattleās DJ Supreme La Rock, this 18-track compilation will also introduce you to the long-forgotten blue-eyed soul boy Don Brown (āDonāt Lose Your Loveā) and frustrated talents Push, overlooked for record deals on account of singer āBig Joeā Ericksonās larger-than-life heft (āYou Turn Me Onā). Thereās Frederick Robinson III and his gospel-funk protest tune āLove One Anotherā, Tony Benton of Teleclere being Seattleās answer to Prince (āSteal Your Loveā) and Seattle Mariners baseball star Lenny Randle recording a tribute to their infamous stadium
[[Selling Points]]- Compiled by DJ Supreme La Rock
- Album cover photo by Leonard Bordeaux
- All tracks re-mastered
- CD & 2xLP housed in deluxe Stoughton āTip-Onā gatefold jackets
- New liner notes by Jonathan Zwickel with band interviews and rare archive photos
- Color vinyl editions:
+ LITA Vinyl Subscriber Exclusive ā 200 on 180-gram āSonicsā colored wax (LP 1 Green, LP 2 Yellow)
+ LITA.net Pre-order Exclusive ā 200 on āRed Light Redā wax ā> limit 2 per customer
+ LITA Shop Exclusive ā 250 hand numbered jackets with 180-gram wax (LP 1 āSeattle Supersonicsā tribute picture disc, shown above, LP 2 āSonicsā yellow/green split wax) ā> limit 2 per customer

















