BBC Northern Soul - Soul Survivors - Close Up North 2000
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
- BBC Northern Soul Soul Survivors Close Up North from 2000
A BBC North 30 minute northern soul documentary that takes a detailed and entertaining look at all things Northern. www.soul-sourc...
Ritz Brighouse, Scene History, Mod Culture, and a lengthy Cleethorpes Weekender segment (The 9th Willie Tee One). Many familiar faces. Edwin Starr, Dave Godin, Richard Searling, Ady Croasdell, Dave Leedham and daughter and many more
Only shown in BBC North's Close Up North catchment area but of a high production quality
Note clip has been edited to remove a bbc dj.
Take me back to this life please god
Wow ...its the Ritz in Brighouse, So glad I found this
Gosh ? Who'd of thought.... I was in the Armitage Arms 2007 till 2015. And had a drink with TWO Beautiful Lady's on a Sunday. Who were sisters. And they Run the Ritz ???? And I never knew 🤔
Paul H. Sint Ellens. KTF. KOKO👍
If you know them ? Pass it on .Thanks........
Hit the record button on the VHS video recorder when this was on close up north in 2000. I watched it and watched it till the tape wore out. Pleased to find it again 20 years later. KTF
Absolutely Outstanding Magnificent 👏 👌 🙌 👍🏻 😀 😎
This is incredible. Just discovered Dave Godin and the compilations on Spotify
Haha "I care as much about northern soul as I do my children "
I was there at The Ritz that night when they were filming. That's Tony Banks who started the northern nights about 3.30 minutes in and has been carried on by Ginger Taylor after he passed away.
👍 😊
I was a Whitworth st. Wheeler. We didn't realize what we were part of or instigating at the time. We were the very fabric of the Wheel. If you didn't go then you will not understand. We made up our own dance steps (Some I recognise in the clips from the Casino etc.) We didn't flop around like fish out of the water doing 'acrobatics'. I would say that 99% took 'gear' Amphetamine. I personally didn't know anyone that didn't take it. A Wheeler would not be seen dead wearing a singlet. Please don't use the term, Northern Soul to records played at the Wheel. It annoys me for one but as time goes on I guess I will be in the minority. 72 yrs. old now and getting grumpier by the year so just face up to the truth----The Twisted Wheel was the mother of this movement. Two more things that I noticed. The dancing has become Clone-like (We are the Borg and you are assimilated) and some of the Casino records are utter shite.
Anything positive to say . Gobshite .
@@jamescarr1467 Nice man
Spot on James. People seemed to forget the ‘cool’ element of the original scene.
Agreed. Latter-day Wiganites think the scene began after they saw 'Footsie' on Top of the Pops in 1975, not even in September 1973 when the All-Nighters started!
'Northern Soul' (as opposed to R&B/Rhthm & Soul/Rare Soul, as it was previously termed in the Wheel/Mojo/Blue Note era), really took off after 100s of previously unheard US imports became more accessible, around 1970-71. The first imports I ever bought were deleted Motown 45s!
Funny how the beeb is now embracing the music they actively chose to ignore for thirty years.
@splashunny........Spot on mate! But to be fair, the prejudice against [ALL] Black music back then was off the scale. Yes, the BBC finally embraced labels such as Tamla Motown, Stax and Atlantic etc - and started playing their records, but it was mainly due to the massive popularity of 'Soul' music in nightclubs.
To be honest though, I think that most 'real' Northern Soul fans were happy that NS music was ignored as it maintained its exclusivity and mystique. I can always remember seeing Jethro and his mates making asses of themselves dancing to Wigan's Ovations on Top of the Pops. IMHO moments like that signalled the beginning of the end for Northern Soul
I'm GLAD they did
We wanted them to ignore us - it was an underground scene