O.C. Tolbert - Black Diamond: Dave Hamilton's Detroit Masters (2011)

  • 02 Dec, 05:58
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Artist:
Title: Black Diamond: Dave Hamilton's Detroit Masters
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Ace Records
Genre: Soul, R&B
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:05:49
Total Size: 273 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Let Me Be Your Only Man
02. That's Enough
03. You Gotta Hold On Me
04. I'm Shooting High (I Reach For The Sky)
05. You Got Me Turned Around
06. Goodness
07. Message To Mankind
08. Rough Side Of The Mountain
09. Where Were You?
10. Give It To Glory
11. That's All She Wrote
12. Hard Times
13. The Grown Folks Thing
14. Fix It
15. Everybody Wants To Do Their Own Thing
16. Along Came A Woman
17. Ride The Gospel Train
18. Back To The Dust
19. Somebody Is Here With Me
20. I'll Take It All
21. All I Want Is You


The Kent label's excavation of soul music from the vaults of Detroit producer Dave Hamilton had stretched over many years by the time this single-artist compilation was issued in 2011. Even for some of the fans dedicated to seeking out such obscure soul, this 22-track compilation might be a stretch too far, as singer O.C. Tolbert hardly released any records. Indeed, only three of the cuts (all from 1972-1973 singles) appeared around the time they were actually recorded, and a dozen of them never appeared anywhere prior to showing up on this CD. The bulk of the tracks date from the late '60s and early '70s (although the date of recording is uncertain for some of them), and display what in baseball lingo might be termed a "tweener" talent: not bad by any means, but not so good or original that the vocalist would command attention from record labels. That limits the desirability of this anthology to serious genre fans, though Tolbert is a fair singer who favors the rough side of the era's soul music, with a husk and growl to his tone. It's hard to get too worked up, however, when the singer doesn't project much of a persona, either in his vocals or the material (much of which Hamilton wrote or co-wrote) and production. Tolbert and Hamilton tried a variety of approaches, from the funky and sweetly upbeat to gospel and the socially conscious, without really hitting on anything much more than adequate, or even too easily summarized or described when listened to decades later. Maybe a cut here and there could be pulled onto a mix tape depending on your particular tastes, like the 1973 single "A Message to the Black Woman" (actually credited to King Diamond upon its original release), which fits very much into the spirit of its time with its slight wah-wahs and attempt to craft an uplifting lyric of African-American pride. "The Grown Folks Thing" comes off like a bluesy late-'60s James Brown, with other 1969 recordings, "Fix It" and "Everybody Wants to Do Their Own Thing," making for other easy Brown comparisons. In a way, it's nice to hear vault soul from the era with a rougher, less polished production edge than most such CD-era discoveries, but at the same time, the playing is often notably more ragged than what you'll hear on many other period soul productions both famous and obscure.



  • nilesh65
  •  15:46
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Thank you so much!!
  • mufty77
  •  02:30
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Many thanks for lossless!!
  • jbake9595
  •  11:04
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Thanks a ton for this the wonderful ace post!!
  • Soulman2
  •  11:37
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Many Thanks for these wonderful ACE/Kent releases, In lossless

magnificent!!