Haul of Records
Blog & Headquarters of Montreal Cratedigger DJ Solespin
Grand Puba
Grand Puba was one of my most sought after MCs in the early 90s.
I was barely aware he was part of Masters of Ceremony until I did a little research on him in the late 90s.
There was a reason he made so many posse cut and remix appearances.
With the exception of Slick Rick or maybe the late Big Pun, his flavorful, silky smooth flow was unlike his contemporaries.
Brand Nubian’s One For All is a classic album and his verse on the title track is possibly his most memorable.
I was very happy on the day I found a DVD compilation of Yo! MTV Raps performances. An early Grand Puba & Mary J. Blige performance was among them.
Bobby Womack
In the late 1990s I was drifting from hip hop music and veering towards its source material.
From jazz to soul/funk artists and groups, I was finding covers of Bobby Womack songs on the 1970s albums I'd get my hands on.
Both Rufus featuring Chaka Khan & Lou Donaldson had covers of You're Welcome, Stop on By on their minds to have recorded their versions of the song.
He had a vocal quality comparable to Wilson Pickett and James Brown but gruffer and rougher. Ironically he wrote dozens of songs for Wilson Pickett in the mid-late 1960s.
During one of my most bittersweet trips to New York a few years ago, I was roaming the streets and stumbled across a book/record store. I used the former first because I didn't know they sold records until I walked in. I bought the Bobby Womack Greatest Hits album above among a handful of others. I was disappointed it didn't have What Is This, Across 110th Street or It's All Over Now but was more than happy with the rest of the track listing.
I bought The Soul Years CD days ago around the time I started this rough draft about Bobby Womack. On June 28, 2014, I complete this draft on the day Womack died. R.I.P.
The Equals
At one of the Montreal Record Conventions, I picked up a copy of The Equals' Baby, Come Back album.
It was on a Black RCA label and not orange but I took it indeed.
Eddy Grant was a member of The Equals before he went solo. Their music is right up my alley. It's eclectic, rare and very underrated. Those are all the elements to get my attention.
Anywhere I found that record this year was charging $25-30 for it. Their other albums are still in the $20+ range. I saw and held an Equals album at the WFMU Record Fair one year that I never thought I'd see.
I asked the vendor for that same album the following year and was told it was sold that day, not too long before I asked him for it.
As for their other albums, I'll play it by ear whether I'll complete their discography. Right now, I'm just happy to finally have that Equals wax among my stacks.
Happy Birthday to Eddy Grant!
Below is the podcast of the Birthday Celebration to bring you up to speed if you missed the live broadcast. Click here to download it and more.
DJ Solespin 2014 Birthday Celebration Playlist:
1. The Rascals - Adrian's Birthday
2. Super Eagles - Love's A Real Thing
3. Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity - Let The Sunshine In
4. The Flaming Ember - Westbound #9
5. Kool & The Gang - Rated X
6. War - Me & Baby Brother
7. Miles Davis - Spanish Key
8. The Equals - Laurel & Hardy
9. The Temptations - (I Know) I'm Losing You
10. Johnnie Taylor - (I Wanna) Testify
11. Hokis Pokis - Nowhere
12. Rare Earth - I Just Want To Celebrate
13. Bob James - Nautilus
De La Soul - 3 Feet High And Rising (1989)
My DNA should be called De La Soul.
It has been said that a reader does not choose a book, the book chooses the reader. There are some pieces of art that speak directly to us from some reason or another, as if they were made for us. This is my connection to De La Soul's debut.
The entire De La Soul catalog was available for free download in 2014.
Thank you Prince Paul.
De La Soul - Jenifa (Taught Me) & Potholes In My Lawn (1988)
Hip hop came to me and I took it all. I wanted to know, hear and have more in high school. Here's a little story that must be told.
One day I was hanging near the high school lounge and heard a song that blew me away. I asked the guy that brought the tape to school for the name of the song and the group. He knew neither. I was left to fend for myself and remembered hearing the name Jennifer, Oh Jenny. The group was still unknown. I got my answer when I went to Dutchy's Record Cave and saw a pink 12" with three guys doing landscaping. The group name was De La Soul.
They looked nothing like any of the rappers of the day. They had no gold chains. Their rhymes & songs were as varied as the samples they used. Something about them and those songs called to me.
The Jenifa 12" was among the three first hip hop vinyl purchases of my life. I would later buy nearly all the De La Soul 12" I could find for 3 Feet High & Rising and in my folly, I would eventually sell them. When I got back into vinyl a few years ago, I realized what a colossal mistake it was to part with my De La Soul vinyls. My quest was to find them all, those I had before or not, and guard them with my life.
I've been pretty succesful on that front.
Please make yourself familiar with the link below for more
Below is a playlist of a podcast to bring you up to speed.
Click here to download.
The Suite Delight February 18, 2014 Playlist:
1. The Incredible Bongo Band - Let There Be Drums
2. The Incredible Bongo Band - Bongo Rock
3. Aretha Franklin - Chain of Fools
4. Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway - Back Together Again
5. The Souljazz Orchestra - Rejoice Pt. 2
6. Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
7. Otis Redding - These Arms of Mine
8. Asheru & Blue Black of The Unspoken Heard - B-Boy
9. Roc C - Don't Stop feat. Oh No & Pox Dog
10. De La Soul - Potholes In My Lawn
11. Superlover Cee & Casanova Rud - Do The James
12. Master Ace - Go Where I Will Send Thee
13. Koncept – Aspirations feat. Soul Khan
14. Abdominal - T.Ode feat. Notes to Self
The Suite Delight February 18, 2014 Playlist:
1. The Incredible Bongo Band - Let There Be Drums
2. The Incredible Bongo Band - Bongo Rock
3. Aretha Franklin - Chain of Fools
4. Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway - Back Together Again
5. The Souljazz Orchestra - Rejoice Pt. 2
6. Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
7. Otis Redding - These Arms of Mine
8. Asheru & Blue Black of The Unspoken Heard - B-Boy
9. Roc C - Don't Stop feat. Oh No & Pox Dog
10. De La Soul - Potholes In My Lawn
11. Superlover Cee & Casanova Rud - Do The James
12. Master Ace - Go Where I Will Send Thee
13. Koncept – Aspirations feat. Soul Khan
14. Abdominal - T.Ode feat. Notes to Self
Dusty Springfield
Prior to my discovering the Simply Dusty CD box set, my last contact with her music was somewhat bittersweet.
In the record rampage of Boxing Day 2014, I was at the counter about to pay for my pile of newly found treasures.
An employee of the record store that I knew well enough had a copy of Dusty in Memphis in his hands.
I immediately remembered that I was looking for a vinyl copy of the album and asked if there was another copy for sale in the store. There was.
I headed to the section that he told me he found his at and picked one for myself. That ended another quest and removed it from my records wantlist that day.
If you are unaware, this is the main reason to own the album.
Method Man
Method Man is among the most popular hip hop artists of my blog.
As the stats for my blog post about his 1994 debut album climb in leaps and bounds, I went to Twitter stating that my blog is officially his home.
Prior to Method Man’s show at Club Soda, I last caught Tical when he & Redman tore up Metropolis.
I was in New York when Method Man, Curren$y and Big Krit were at Club Soda in October 2011.
I arrived at Club Soda to see the venue packed with people waiting for Method Man to take the stage.
I arrived at Club Soda to see the venue packed with people waiting for Method Man to take the stage.
His DJ displacing the one that was onstage as I arrived was a sign that the show would soon be on.
Method Man stormed onstage to Release Yo Delf, a personal favorite of mine that took many listens to become one. The crowd was as energetic and enthusiastic to have Method Man on stage as he was to be there. He stated numerous times during the show that he enjoys Montreal and I was made a believer that night.
He stated how great it was for him to have such a heartfelt reception from a crowd after 20 years in the music industry. In 1992, my New York cousin introduced me to a white covered 12” single from a group of MCs unknown to me advising me to keep my neck warm with no mention of scarves. The flip side was a track called Method Man. When you consider that 2023 was indeed the 30th anniversary of the Wu-Tang Clan classic release, you are made to understand Method Man is legendary.
Hands of the audience were in the air so much that they provided an obvious and expected springboard for Method Man as he repeatedly jumped into the crowd by the end of the performance.
With a catalog full of albums, guest appearances, remixes and releases meeting relentless energy on stage, one is in for a great show. Method Man more than delivered the goods at Club Soda. Of the most prolific things he told the audience was that Redman and Busta Rhymes are among those he would himself pay to see. Not so ironically, he is on the shortlist of MCs I would see perform live at any opportunity I can and one any self-respecting hip hop fan should as well.
Burning Spear
The photo above inspired me to write about Burning Spear.
Years ago, I came across a CD of vintage reggae songs called Studio One Presents Rare Reggae: Collector's Edition.
There was an early Burning Spear single on it called Live Good. I gave it no more thought than that.
It would take me hearing the song Marcus Garvey to light the fire under me for Burning Spear.
I was more than happy to buy the 2CD Burning Spear - Chant Down Babylon The Island Anthology I found at one of my favorite Plateau music stores.
I discovered another favorite single, Slavery Days, thanks to that compilation.
Alice Russell
Just as the 1960s had U.K. soul singers Dusty Springfield and Lulu to claim as their own, our generation can add Adele, the late Amy Winehouse and Alice Russell to ours.
By the time I learned she was on the bill for a Montreal Jazz Festival performance, I was barely aware of Alice Russell as an artist.
From the first time I heard her voice, I vowed to not let her perform in Montreal again without me seeing her live.
I kept my word as she graced the stage at Le Belmont.
Hours prior to the Le Belmont performance, I found out The Souljazz Orchestra would be either her backing band or just do a set the night before in Ottawa. I naturally wished and hoped that I would see the Souljazz six on the Le Belmont stage.
Alice Russell sounded as crisp in person as on record. I wasn’t in the mood to hear ballads that night but I understood she had to give as broad a performance as possible for all in attendance.
Alice Russell’s Someday is the only non-hip hop track on the Wide Angles compilation.
A special thank you is extended to World Famous Music, Tru-Thoughts, DJ Rubyjane and DJ Lexis for their part in making this post possible.
Method Man - Tical (1994)
Method Man is one of my favourite MCs of all time and has been on my mind.
I managed to score his 4:21... The Day After CD at one of my favourite music stores. This made my Method Man discography complete.
There is no surprise why he made so many guest appearances on tracks over the past decade or so. He brings so much flavour, flow and style to a track that you’d be doing the track a disservice by not featuring him. There are a handful of MCs that symbolize New York and he is one of them. That is probably why I am such a fan. If I were to rhyme, I would want to be like Method Man.
I’ve written about how I get when it comes to vinyl in past posts. With as many records and CDs as I have, I choose whether I need to bring another piece of wax home. My weekly radio show was my main outlet for spinning vinyl unless/until I get gigs like Under Pressure to use them so I can’t go buckwild on bringing home records. Let’s now connect that towards Method Man’s debut.
A few years ago, I held the double-vinyl reissue of Tical in my hands. I didn’t know it was reissued. I remember the first pressing was a single vinyl and as I’ve come to learn, issues of sound quality can surface.

There is no surprise why he made so many guest appearances on tracks over the past decade or so. He brings so much flavour, flow and style to a track that you’d be doing the track a disservice by not featuring him. There are a handful of MCs that symbolize New York and he is one of them. That is probably why I am such a fan. If I were to rhyme, I would want to be like Method Man.
I’ve written about how I get when it comes to vinyl in past posts. With as many records and CDs as I have, I choose whether I need to bring another piece of wax home. My weekly radio show was my main outlet for spinning vinyl unless/until I get gigs like Under Pressure to use them so I can’t go buckwild on bringing home records. Let’s now connect that towards Method Man’s debut.
A few years ago, I held the double-vinyl reissue of Tical in my hands. I didn’t know it was reissued. I remember the first pressing was a single vinyl and as I’ve come to learn, issues of sound quality can surface.

The nostalgia of the album dropping in conjunction with Redman’s Dare Iz a Darkside came to mind as I looked at the cover. I particularly remembered how slamming the first side was with Biscuits, Tical and Meth vs. Chef among the track listing.
The urge to bring home the Bring the Pain album was strong but my better judgement prevailed. The $20+ price tag probably didn’t help the matter either. With the limited number of songs I could play on the show each week, why would I shell out for vinyl I already have on CD? I decided I didn’t need it because I’ve already had the CD in my collection for years. I even had a cassette copy of his debut album. I wasn’t that much of a Method Man fan to have left the reissue behind!
As I wrote this, I realize I’ve never seen or held Tical on vinyl since 1994. I don’t know what set it off but Method Man’s been on my mind. I started to have slight regrets about not getting the Tical vinyl reissue. As I think about it now, my cueing up a sweet Method Man track like Release Yo Delf or Mr. Sandman on the turntables during my radio show was not likely to happen unless I come across the vinyl again.
I don’t beat myself up too much over the decision. It’s not like I never heard or owned Tical and let it slide back on the shelf. It was my lesson to learn but I believe the underlying message is that Tical is worth another listen and potentially worth springing for the vinyl, if I get another chance.
In the meantime, I’ll be trying to add more Method Man to DJ setlists to come.
Method Man performed at Montreal's Club Soda in early January 2013. I did a small tribute to him on the first episode of my former radio show for that year.
Method Man performed at Montreal's Club Soda in early January 2013. I did a small tribute to him on the first episode of my former radio show for that year.
Method Man and company, Wu-Tang Clan, performed at Montreal's Olympia on November 29, 2013.
Please make yourself familiar with the link below for more.
The Suite Delight - 2013 CKUT Funding Drive Podcast by Dj Solespin on Mixcloud
Method Man & Redman – Blackout! (1999)

When was the last time you heard Blackout!?

Am I the only one that thinks that album gets better with each listen?

I hadn’t heard Blackout in a few years and reached for it.
1995 was a magical year for hip hop as most can agree. Proof of that came in the form of the dynamic duo’s How High. When I saw the pair together, I agreed with the pairing. If the single was hot, then it stood to reason an album of theirs would be hotter. It would take another five years for my theory to be proven right.
Presumably, both MCs were busy with their solo and respective Wu-Tang Clan/Def Squad projects leading up to the Blackout! date.
There is easily no weak beat on the album meaning the producers must have known what they were working on and brought their A-game. The choice of guest appearances is also faultless with the exception of one. In retrospect, it would have been nice for Young Zee to have spit a verse on Blackout! instead of Ja Rule but I was not consulted or contacted for my opinion when the album was in planning.
Epic hip hop albums like both Brand Nubian and Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth debut releases, Raekwon's Only Built 4 Cuban Linx and Blackout! have many common traits. They are classic and timeless. As great as Blackout! is, it misses a smidgeon of an element for it to be considered timeless but is unquestionably a strong album graced by the charisma and talent of the two titans.
In the early 2000s, I was very picky about hip hop. Regardless of my rigid rules on hip hop, Blackout! did not slip passed by me. I did not over-saturate myself with it at the time. I had a feeling it was like a fine wine that I would want to try to savor later.
I was too occupied to have fully listened and studied Blackout! 2. The beauty of the sequel is that it allows us to revisit the brothers from other mothers. One verse from Method Man or Redman is a blessing. I’m not sure when but a visit here in the future might reveal how I feel about the sequel.
Please make yourself familiar with the link below for more.
Below is the 2013 CKUT Funding Drive podcast to bring you up to speed.
Click here to download.
Playlist:
1. Salt-N-Pepa – Get Up Everybody
2. DJ Kayslay – Untouchables feat. Prodigy & Raekwon
3. D-Shade - The World We're In 2(Simahlak Mix) feat. Buckshot And Blurum 13
4. Kanye West - Classic (DJ Premier Remix)featuring Nas, KRS-One and Rakim
5. EPMD – The Big Payback
6. Diamond & The Psychotic Neurotics - A Day In The Life featuring Sadat X & Lord Jamar
7. Masta Ace and Edo G - Good Music featuring Posdnuos & Light
8. The Beatnuts – Se A Cabo (Remix) featuring Method Man
9. Shad + Skratch Bastid – Homie featuring Cadence Weapon
1. Salt-N-Pepa – Get Up Everybody
2. DJ Kayslay – Untouchables feat. Prodigy & Raekwon
3. D-Shade - The World We're In 2(Simahlak Mix) feat. Buckshot And Blurum 13
4. Kanye West - Classic (DJ Premier Remix)featuring Nas, KRS-One and Rakim
5. EPMD – The Big Payback
6. Diamond & The Psychotic Neurotics - A Day In The Life featuring Sadat X & Lord Jamar
7. Masta Ace and Edo G - Good Music featuring Posdnuos & Light
8. The Beatnuts – Se A Cabo (Remix) featuring Method Man
9. Shad + Skratch Bastid – Homie featuring Cadence Weapon
Posted by DJ Solespin at 12:00 AM

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