This is a great song. Reminds me of the days when we used to drink pop out of bottles, play in the fire hydrant and people would take their fine automobiles to the good car wash on the weekend, spray it and wax and dry by hand. Beautiful days of my childhood in Joliet IL.
Anyone know who the Dakar house band was that played this awesome groove behind Mr. Davis? They were hot! Was that Cosey, Upchurch, or someone else on guitar? It always pains me that the great musicians who made these timeless grooves are given no credit whatsoever.
This is a great song. Reminds me of the days when we used to drink pop out of bottles, play in the fire hydrant and people would take their fine automobiles to the good car wash on the weekend, spray it and wax and dry by hand. Beautiful days of my childhood in Joliet IL.
luvdusties 1 month ago
great tune classaic from underrated song
SuperPsiphi 1 month ago
Thank you for re-posting this great song. And when the assholes take it down re-post it again. OK?
smokiebird06 1 month ago in playlist Favorite videos
Yea he is thumping that bass. This tune makes me laugh "oh the wind is out tonight"
samadjhi 2 months ago
That bassline has got me up on the good foot.
vinkleman 2 months ago
The 'peak' of real grownup sound.
jseitzusa 6 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Sweet!! Great Sound!
Not the original 45 version but IS original take in stereo. Same tracks - alt mix.
Bruce Swedien (engr.) mixed two.
A "stereo" mix destined for the emerging stereo LP mrkt, and a mono 45 mix.
The mono version is the one most familiar and was a different mix ENTIRELY. 45s were mono.
In mid sixties mono was mixed 4 AM radio & 45s.
The mono singles' EQ (tone), reverb effects (pre-stereo depth effect), & punchiness (due to compressing the sound's low end) IS different.
audiomez 7 months ago
Search this right here
Pass It On Pt.1-Pieces Of Peace
He has a write up on the guys under the description if you expand it
BERNARD REED-BASS
JERRY WILSON ,BYRON BOWIE & MICHAEL DAVIS-HORNS
JOHN BISHOP-GUITAR
BENJAMIN WRIGHT-KEYBOARDS
HAROLD NESBITT and later FRED WHITE & FRED CRUTCHFIELD-DRUMS
KING JOHNSON-VOCALS
TigerLikesTail 8 months ago
Anyone know who the Dakar house band was that played this awesome groove behind Mr. Davis? They were hot! Was that Cosey, Upchurch, or someone else on guitar? It always pains me that the great musicians who made these timeless grooves are given no credit whatsoever.
Zeugitai 8 months ago