New Beat Soul Club, at 10pm to 3am,
third Tuesday of the month at the Respectable Street Cafe, 518 Clematis St.,
West Palm Beach.
Ric
Pattison had no choice. Known in the local music scene as a singer-songwriter,
guitarist, record producer, and sound engineer, he is a child of the UK's clubland,
coming of age in the early '70s Northern Soul scene. He was a regular at the
fabled Wigan Casino, where all-night dance parties drew thousands of young
people from all over the UK, raves before there were raves. "It's hard to
explain it to people who weren't there," he told us. "It never leaves
you."
So when
two months ago Ric visited the UK and learned of a second coming of Northern
Soul -- "It's the biggest underground dance culture in the UK at the
moment," he says -- he came back to Florida determined to spread the word.
Tonight he's unlocking his personal vault of vinyl to bring forth New Beat Soul
Club, a monthly party at Respectable Street Cafe, dedicated to limited release
45s of '60s U.S. soul that the original Northern Soul movement discovered and
treasured.
"It's
about uptempo, hard core soul music," Ric told New Times. "The Mods
were about soul but this was grittier stuff, from black America, from the
heartland. It wasn't Motown. A lot of it never did well in the states, or it's
B-sides, so it's rare stuff."
The fans
of Northern Soul, he said, "were working class kids who didn't want to
conform to the b.s. that was on the charts," and the dancing was as gritty
as the music. "It was very macho, about two-thirds of the crowd boys,
one-third girls. It was about dancing alone, not about picking up girls on the
dance floor. It was a very intense experience -- four on the floor grooves,
bam-bam-bam-bam. Like house music but with real songs, real vocals."
Ric
expects the Northern Soul revival to kick into overdrive with the release of
the film Northern Soul, a fictionalized recreation of the birth of that
culture. Ten years in the making, with backing from Steve Coogan (a veteran of
the Manchester scene), the film has been repeatedly delayed, by copyright
issues among other things, but is expected to hit the big screen later this
year.
To get a
jump on the film and steep yourself now in the spirit and history of Northern
Soul, Ric recommends the half-hour BBC documentary Northern Soul: Keeping the
Faith.
Ric said
he's checked out the current local dance club scene and finds it lacking.
"So much of it is so bland," he said. "It's asking for something
good, something really great to happen. [New Beat Soul] could be it."
And if
it isn't? "First and foremost," Ric said, "New Beat Soul is a
labour of love."
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