Showing posts with label Kim Weston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kim Weston. Show all posts

Friday, March 12, 2010

ROCK Sex: "Think!" - 5 Royales > James Brown > Marvin Gaye > Lyn Collins > DJ Rob Base



ROCK Sex follows a train of thought.

This is a culture relay where one song ends up very different on the other end, splicing with others through various styles.

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"It takes two to make a thing go right /
It takes two to make it out of sight!"


Let's put our mental mettle to the pedal.

"Think" was first done by The "5" Royales in 1957. (The "5" was a joke because there were actually six of them.)

Typically, this Rock'n'Roll band was catagorized/segregrated as R'n'B because they were all black, but Lowman Pauling's fiery guitar leads tell the real tale. Just check out his driving and stinging leads in songs like "Say It", "Slummer The Slum", and "Messin Up". Steve Cropper of Booker T And The MGs sure did, and he credits Pauling as the main man who inspired him to take up guitar.

THE "5" ROYALES -"Think" (1957)



Another label mate of The Royales at King Records was the young James Brown. James' remake of the song completely transformed it, revving the tempo and intensifying the shuffle into a precision tap workout. This rhythmic lockstep of syncopation became the first blueprint of the Funk to come later on.

JAMES BROWN -"Think" (1960)


James' version is so definitive, it is routinely thought of as his song.


In the mid-'60s, Marvin Gaye had a run of classic duets such as "It Takes Two", with Kim Weston. Soon after, he made the best duets ever with Tammi Terrell, who was a former protege of James Brown.

MARVIN GAYE And KIM WESTON -"It Takes Two" (1966)



Never one to be left out of the action, James re-remade "Think" as a duet with new ingenue Vicki Anderson in this slinky revamp. Notice how Vicki's tough repeats of the title will anticipate the next song.

JAMES BROWN And VICKI ANDERSON -"Think" (1967)



Then things start to intersect.

James' new diva, LYN COLLINS The Female Preacher, made a different song called "Think (About It)". It takes the sentiment of the original "Think" and puts a female empowerment upgrade on it, while calling up Marvin And Kim's "It Takes Two" in the bridge.

After the 30 second intro, you'll recognize it immediately as one of the most sampled songs in HipHop history.

LYN COLLINS -"Think (About It)" (1972)



The first Rapper to sample it was Roxanne Shante, but this song a few months later stole the show on that, using whole sections of it in one of the biggest breakthrough Rap hits ever.

ROB BASE & DJ E Z ROCK -"It Takes Two" (1988)



MTV was, as was their conservative custom, skittish about Rap music in the '80s. It had barely played any black acts at all in its first two years, despite angry pressure from artists like David Bowie. They finally caved in when the monster successes of Michael Jackson and Prince forced their hand.

Though hit singles by RUN-DMC and The Beastie Boys brought Rap into the radio mainstream by 1986, more political acts like Public Enemy still scared the video network. It was the parallel outbreak of HipHop acts with intensely dancable tracks based on samples that turned the tide, such as MC Hammer, Tone Loc, and Young MC. Bending to the changing wind, in 1988 MTV alotted 30 minutes to "Yo! MTV Raps". It became the biggest hit show they had ever had.

(The other) Doctor Dré, Fab 5 Freddy, and Ed Lover

Rap became a dominant part of the mainstream for the next three decades. Nowadays every dance-pop hit by anyone is a child of that breakthrough. But as usual, synthesis and mutation is the creative path that got us here. It transcends all imposed barriers.

Think about that.

(Rock Sex, baby!)



© Tym Stevens



See Also:

FUNK, The True History: The 1960s, with 3 Music Players!

FUNK, The True History: 1970-1974, with 3 Music Players!


"Fame" - James Brown > David Bowie > James Brown

"UMBABARAUMA!" - James Brown > Jorge Ben > Imperial Teen > Soulfly

SLICE TONES: Sly Stone & His Infinite Influence!, with 5 Music Players!


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist


Friday, February 26, 2010

LADIES FIRST: "Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)" - Kim Weston > The Doobie Brothers



LADIES FIRST gives due to famous songs that actually 'she did first'.

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"Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)" was written by Motown's monster hitwriters Holland-Dozier-Holland in 1964. And technically, the first version was by Eddie Holland himself, though it was never released (until 2005). But the smash hit recording that set it all off was by Kim Weston.

KIM WESTON -"Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)" (1965)



During their Motown years The Isley Brothers also covered it.

In 1971, it was embraced awhile by Blood Sweat And Tears.

It was also updated by Vinegar Joe, a British Rock'n'Soul band with the good fortune to have both Elkie Brooks and Robert Palmer ["Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor, Doctor)", "Addicted To Love"] as their vocalists.

A Canadian soul singer named Charity Brown next did a go at it in 1975, but just as her single was taking off, it was lost in the dust of the following version.


Tom Johnston of The Doobie Brothers loved Kim Weston's single and took the song's title literally by ramping it up guitar style. It became one of their signature songs, so much so that many fans think it was theirs in the first place.

THE DOOBIE BROTHERS -"Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)" (1975)




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

SHAKE AND FINGER POP! Soul Music and the Interior Truth, with Music Player!


LADIES FIRST: "Love's Gone Bad!" - Chris Clark > The Underdogs

LADIES FIRST: "You're No Good" - Dee Dee Warwick > Betty Everett > Linda Ronstadt > The Plasticines

"Tainted Love" - Gloria Jones > Soft Cell

LADIES FIRST: "What A Man" - Linda Lyndell > Laura Lee> Salt-N-Pepa



The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist