Thursday, September 11, 2025

K SPECIAL - VA - Super Soul 64 - The Greatest Soul Songs of 1964 (60th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition) (6CD) (2024)

K SPECIAL


PLEASE THANK K for this wonderful compilation

VA - Super Soul 64 - The Greatest Soul Songs of 1964 (60th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition) (6CD) (2024)

Due to the overwhelming response, praise and feedback of my previous Super Soul 65 compilation with over 1,400 downloads...

http://butterboycompilations.blogspot.com/2025/07/k-specal-va-super-soul-65-greatest-soul.html

I decided to revisit the previous year 1964 and take a look at all the amazing soul music recorded and released during that incredible 12-month period.

1964 was a significant year for soul music, with several artists and songs leaving a lasting impact on the genre. Some prominent artists and songs from that year include Sam Cooke, Otis Redding, The Supremes, Martha and the Vandellas, and James Brown. The year saw the rise of several important soul tracks, including "Good Times" by Sam Cooke, "Baby Love" by The Supremes, and "Dancing in the Street" by Martha and the Vandellas.

Key artists and tracks from 1964:

Sam Cooke:

A hugely influential soul artist, his 1964 release "Good Times" is considered a soul classic.

Otis Redding:

Known for his powerful vocals and emotive style, Redding's "Security" and "Chained and Bound" were released in 1964.

The Supremes:

With "Baby Love" being a major hit, The Supremes contributed significantly to the Motown sound in 1964.

Martha and the Vandellas:

Their energetic hit "Dancing in the Street" became a quintessential soul anthem.


Other Notable Soul Tracks from 1964:

"The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)" by Betty Everett.

"Need to Belong" by Jerry Butler.

"Mercy, Mercy" by Don Covay and the Goodtimers.

"Keep on Pushing" by The Impressions.

"Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um" by Major Lance.

"Under the Boardwalk" by The Drifters.

"My Guy" by Mary Wells.

"Wish Someone Would Care" by Irma Thomas.

"Steal Away" by Jimmy Hughes.

"Hi-Heel Sneakers" by Tommy Tucker.

"The Way You Do the Things You Do" by The Temptations.

"Oh No, Not My Baby" by Maxine Brown.

"Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" by Solomon Burke.

"Walk on By" by Dionne Warwick.

"Baby Love" is a song by the American music group the Supremes from their second studio album, Where Did Our Love Go. It was written and produced by Motown's main production team Holland-Dozier-Holland and was released on September 17, 1964.

"Baby Love" topped the Billboard pop singles chart in the United States from October 25, 1964, through November 21, 1964, and in the United Kingdom pop singles chart concurrently. Beginning with "Baby Love", the Supremes became the first Motown act to have more than one American number-one single, and by the end of the decade, would have more singles hitting the top slot than any other Motown act (or American pop music group) with 12, a record they continue to hold.

The Supremes were an American girl group formed in Detroit, Michigan, in 1959 as the Primettes. A premier act of Motown Records during the 1960s, the Supremes were the most commercially successful of Motown's acts and the most successful American vocal band, with 12 number-one singles on the Billboard Hot 100. Most of these hits were written and produced by Motown's main songwriting and production team, Holland-Dozier-Holland. Their breakthrough is considered to have made it possible for future African-American R&B and soul musicians to find mainstream success. Billboard ranked the Supremes as the 16th greatest Hot 100 artist of all time.

Otis Ray Redding Jr. (September 9, 1941- December 10, 1967) was an American singer and songwriter. He is regarded as one of the greatest singers in the history of American popular music and a seminal artist in soul music and rhythm and blues. Nicknamed the "King of Soul", Redding's style of singing drew inspiration from the gospel music that preceded the genre. His vocal style influenced many other soul artists of the 1960s.

In March of 1964, Otis Redding released his debut album "Pain In My Heart". Side 2, track 10, is the single "Security". The single peaked at #97 on Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart and #23 on the R&B Chart. It would be the final of 4 singles from the album. It was written by Otis Redding.

Maxine Ella Brown (born August 18, 1939) is an American soul and R&B singer.

Maxine Brown began singing as a child, performing with two New York City based gospel groups called the Angelairs and the Royaltones when she was a teenager.

Brown was poised to become a star and signed to the New York-based uptown soul label, Wand Records, a Scepter Records subsidiary, in 1963.

Brown recorded a string of sizable hits for Wand over the next three years. Among these was the Carole King/Gerry Goffin song "Oh No, Not My Baby", which reached number 24 on the pop chart in 1964.

"Oh No, Not My Baby" is a song written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King. The song's lyrics describe how friends and family repeatedly warn the singer about a partner's infidelities. The song is regarded as an American standard due to its long-time popularity with both music listeners and recording artists.

The first released version of "Oh No, Not My Baby" was by Maxine Brown, according to whom the song had first been recorded by her Scepter Records' roster-mates the Shirelles with the group's members alternating leads, an approach which had rendered the song unreleasable.

Brown says that Scepter exec Stan Greenberg gave her the song with the advisement that she had to "find the original melody" from the recording by the Shirelles: "they had gone so far off by each group member taking their own lead, no one knew any more where the real melody stood."

Brown recalls sitting on the porch of her one-level house in Queens listening to the Shirelles' track play through her open window. A group of children skipping rope on the sidewalk picked up the song's main hook before Brown, hearing the children singing "Oh no, not my baby" as they skipped, gave Brown the idea for the song's melody. Brown recorded her vocal over the Shirelles' track with the group's vocals erased; Dee Dee Warwick provided the harmony vocal on the chorus.

Released in September 1964, Brown's "Oh No, Not My Baby" spent seven weeks in the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1964 - January 1965 with a #24 peak. The song was included on her second studio album Spotlight on Maxine Brown, released in 1965. In Canada the song was #32 for 2 weeks.

"Walk On By" is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David for singer Dionne Warwick in 1963. Warwick's recording of the song peaked at number 6 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and number 1 on the Cash Box Rhythm and Blues Chart In June 1964 and was nominated for a 1965 Grammy Award for the Best Rhythm and Blues Recording.

The original version of "Walk On By" by Dionne Warwick was recorded at Bell Sound Studios in New York City, the same late November/early December 1963 session that yielded her hit "Anyone Who Had a Heart". "Walk On By" was the follow-up to that single, released in April 1964 and reaching number 6 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and number 1 on the Cashbox's R&B chart. (Billboard did not print rhythm and blues charts during 1964, the year of the song's peak performance). The song also reached the top 10 in a run on Billboard's easy listening survey. The song was ranked number 51 on the Rolling Stone list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. "Walk On By" became Warwick's second international million seller, following "Anyone Who Had a Heart" in January 1964. Warwick also recorded a German version of the song, titled "Geh vorbei".

Isaac Hayes recorded the song five years later, in 1969, and his version reached number 30 on the Hot 100 chart and number 13 in the R&B charts. "Walk On By" has since charted numerous times in various countries, with wildly different arrangements, as noted below.

In 1978, the Stranglers recorded a version of "Walk On By" which reached No. 21 on the UK singles chart. This six-minute version of the song features extended Hammond organ and guitar solos which Gene Becker of AllMusic likened to the Doors' "Light My Fire". A music video was produced for the single, parodying Michelangelo Antonioni's 1966 film Blowup. As with key sequences of the film, the Stranglers video was filmed largely in London's Maryon Park. The single's chart performance may have been impaired by the fact that an EP featuring the song had been given away with the first 75,000 copies of the band's album Black and White.

"Dancing in the Street" is a song written by Marvin Gaye, William Stevenson, and Ivy Jo Hunter. It first became popular in 1964 when recorded by Martha and the Vandellas whose version reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for two weeks, behind "Do Wah Diddy Diddy" by Manfred Mann and it also peaked at No. 4 on the UK Singles Chart following a re-release in 1969. It is one of Motown's signature songs and is the group's premier signature song.

Reeves recounted that she initially regarded the song as too repetitive. Gaye and Stevenson agreed and including new Motown songwriter Ivy Jo Hunter added in musical composition. Martha Reeves remembered Marvin Gaye recorded the song first and sang it as though singing to a lover. Reeves, envisioning block parties and Mardi Gras, asked the producers to let her sing it her way. The song was recorded in two takes. The song's writers made sure to include Detroit as one of the cities mentioned with the lyric: "Can't forget the Motor City".

Billboard named the song No. 29 on their list of 100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time.

The Tams are an American vocal group from Atlanta, Georgia, who enjoyed their greatest chart success in the 1960s, but continued to chart in the 1970s, and the 1980s.

"Hey Girl Don't Bother Me" is a popular single by The Tams. Written by Ray Whitley, it was originally released in 1964 and reached number 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 10 on the R&B chart. In Canada it reached number 21.

It later became a favourite on the Northern soul scene in the UK, belatedly reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart for three weeks in September 1971. The single was also number one on the Irish Singles Chart, for one week, the same month. nThe group appeared on BBC's Top of the Pops with the song on eight separate occasions in 1971: August 19 and 26, September 7, 16, 23 and 30, October 7 and December 27.

In 1964, soul music, a genre that evolved from rhythm and blues and gospel , experienced significant growth and popularity. Key artists like Sam Cooke, The Drifters, Otis Redding, and The Supremes released hits that defined the era. Songs like "Mercy, Mercy," "Under the Boardwalk," and "My Guy" became staples of the soul sound.

Here's a more detailed look at the soul music landscape in 1964:

Key artists and songs:

Sam Cooke: His soul-infused gospel style continued to resonate with fans.

The Drifters: They released the iconic "Under the Boardwalk".

Otis Redding: His vocals and songwriting style contributed to the emergence of soul.

The Supremes: They delivered hits like "Baby Love".

Other notable artists and songs: The Temptations with "The Way You Do the Things You Do," "Martha and the Vandellas with "Dancing In the Street," Bobby "Blue" Bland with "Ain't Nothing You Can Do," and Mary Wells with "My Guy".

Genre Development:

Soul music continued to evolve, incorporating elements of gospel, rhythm and blues, and blues.

The term "soul" began to be used more broadly to describe African American popular music.

Impact and Influence:

Soul music gained widespread popularity, influencing other genres and impacting the cultural landscape.

It became a soundtrack for social and political change, reflecting the experiences of African Americans during this period.

In 1964, soul music was evolving, with artists like Otis Redding, Sam Cooke, and the Impressions establishing themselves as key figures in the genre . This year also saw the emergence of influential artists like Martha and the Vandellas, The Supremes, and The Temptations, as well as the continued success of established soul artists like Dionne Warwick. Key Soul Artists and Songs of 1964:

- Aretha Franklin: Although not fully recognized as the "Queen of Soul" yet, her early recordings began to showcase her power and influence.

- James Brown: While not as widely known as some other soul artists in 1964, Brown's influence continued to grow throughout the decade.

- Ray Charles: Continued to be a major figure in soul and R&B, known for his cross-genre approach.

Northern soul, a UK-based music and dance movement, emerged in the late 1960s, drawing inspiration from a particular style of American soul music, particularly from the mid-1960s. While it didn't originate in 1964, the music and styles associated with Northern soul often feature recordings released in that year. Many of the singles and albums that became iconic in the Northern soul scene were indeed released in the mid-1960s, including 1964.

Key aspects of Northern soul in relation to 1964:

Emergence of the scene:

The Northern soul scene started to take shape in the late 1960s, drawing from the British mod scene.

Focus on obscure soul:

The scene was characterized by a love for obscure and rare American soul music, including many releases from 1964.

Dance music:

The music was primarily focused on dance music, often with a fast tempo and heavy syncopated beat.

Cultural phenomenon:

The Northern soul movement became a significant cultural phenomenon in Britain, especially in the North of England.

Recordings from 1964:

Many of the records that became staples of the Northern soul scene were originally released in 1964, such as those from Cameo Parkway, and other labels.

Examples of 1964 Northern Soul releases:

Cameo Parkway Singles:

Several singles from Cameo Parkway, like those by Dee Dee Sharp, The Orlons, and Candy and the Kisses, are considered highlights of the Northern soul scene.

Loma Records:

Loma Records also released several tracks in 1964 that became part of the Northern soul canon, such as those by Billy Storm, Little Jerry Williams, Clyde and the Blue Jays, and others.

In essence, while the Northern soul movement itself emerged later, many of the musical foundations and iconic records that define it were released in 1964.

In 1964, soul music emerged as a prominent genre, often described as the evolution of rhythm and blues, with influences from gospel, jazz, and blues. Key elements included powerful vocals, driving rhythms, and soulful instrumentation, often featuring horns and powerful back-up singers. Major labels like Motown and Stax/Volt played a crucial role in shaping and popularizing the soul sound.

Northern Soul: Out on the Floor - all released in 1964!

This isn’t just about hits, there’s B-sides, obscurities and many hard to find tracks that have gone on to become Northern Soul classics.

So, after months of exhaustive and extensive online research, plus my own recollections and memories, here is my personal compilation of what I consider to be the 164 best and most important soul tracks from 1964.

This fully packed 6CD set contains many rare and extremely hard to find tracks, with a number featured in their original mono 7" single form. Only the original 1964 studio mixes are included. No later remixes, 'stereo enhanced' or live versions here!

*** PLEASE NOTE: A few tracks featured in this collection were actually released at the very end of 1963 but didn't hit their peak chart position (mostly on Billboard) until January or February 1964 and that's why I've included them.

Compiled as always using the very latest and highest quality digital remasters, with a considerable number of tracks sourced from the original master tapes for superior sound quality and enjoyment.


K


PLEASE THANK for this great set.

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Track lists

CD1

1 The Supremes - Baby Love (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:36

2 Martha and the Vandellas - Dancing in the Street (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:40

3 Maxine Brown - Oh No, Not My Baby 2:35

4 Otis Redding - Security 2:35

5 The Temptations - The Way You Do the Things You Do (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:38

6 James Brown and his Orchestra - Out of Sight 2:21

7 Doris Troy - What'cha Gonna Do About It (Original 1964 Atlantic UK 7" Mono Single Version) 1:43

8 Brenda Holloway - Every Little Bit Hurts (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:56

9 Mary Wells - Ain't It the Truth (Original 1964 20th Century Fox Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:57

10 Bobby "Blue" Bland - Ain't Nothing You Can Do 2:37

11 Dionne Warwick - Anyone Who Had a Heart (Original 1964 Pye International UK 7" Mono Single Version) 3:08

12 Irma Thomas - Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) 2:55

13 Garnet Mimms - Anytime You Want Me 2:58

14 The Marvelettes - As Long As I Know He's Mine (Original 1964 Stateside UK 7" Mono Single Version) 2:32

15 Ruby & the Romantics - Baby Come Home 2:21

16 Marvin Gaye - Baby Don't You Do It (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:34

17 Four Tops - Baby I Need Your Loving (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:44

18 Billy Storm - Baby, Don't Look Down (Original 1964 Loma Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:32

19 The Ronettes - (The Best Part of) Breakin' Up 3:02

20 Clyde and the Blue Jays - The Big Jerk, Part 1 (Original 1964 Loma Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:39

21 Irma Thomas - Breakaway 2:45

22 Etta James - Breaking Point 2:26

23 Marvin Gaye - Can I Get a Witness (Original 1964 Stateside New Zealand 7" Mono Single Version) 2:49

24 Otis Redding - Chained and Bound 2:40

25 The Dixie Cups - Chapel of Love (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:47

26 Sugar N' Spice - Come Go with Me (Original 1964 Loma Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:01

27 Barbara Mason - Come to Me 2:23


CD2

28 Dee Dee Sharp - Deep Dark Secret 2:53

29 Shorty Long - Devil with the Blue Dress (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 3:11

30 John Lee Hooker - Dimples (Original 1964 Stateside 7" Mono Single Version) 2:11

31 The Ronettes - Do I Love You? 2:55

32 Bessie Banks - Do It Now (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:17

33 Etta James - Do Right 1:59

34 The 3 Degrees - Do What You're Supposed to Do (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:25

35 Anita Humes - Don't Fight It Baby 2:41

36 Nina Simone - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood 2:45

37 Dee Dee Warwick - Don't Think My Baby's Coming Back 2:47

38 Bettye Swann - Don't Wait Too Long (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:39

39 Candy and the Kisses - The 81 2:32

40 Soloman Burke - Everybody Needs Somebody to Love 2:44

41 Betty Everett - Getting Mighty Crowded (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:07

42 The Temptations - Girl (Why You Wanna Make Me Blue) (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:13

43 The Temptations - The Girl's Alright with Me (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:53

44 Little Anthony and the Imperials - Goin' Out of My Head 2:29

45 Dee Dee Sharp - Good 2:39

46 The Soul Sisters - Good Time Tonight 2:55

47 Sam Cooke - Good Times 2:26

48 The Tiffanys - Happiest Girl in the World 2:39

49 The Breakaways - He Doesn't Love Me (B-side to 'That's How It Goes') 1:58

50 The Marvelettes - He's a Good Guy (Yes He Is) (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:34

51 Irma Thomas - He's My Guy 2:40

52 Dee Dee Sharp - He's No Ordinary Guy 2:17

53 Lucky Carmichael - Hey Girl (Original 1964 Loma Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:31

54 The Tams - Hey Girl Don't Bother Me 2:26

55 Tommy Tucker - Hi-Heel Sneakers 2:51


CD3

56 The Bronzettes - Hot Spot 2:23

57 Lou Rawls - The House Next Door (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:55

58 The Orlons - I Ain't Coming Back (Original 1964 Cameo C-346 7" Mono Single Version) 2:20

59 Rose Batiste - I Can't Leave You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:24

60 James Carr - I Can't Make It 2:20

61 The Soul Sisters - I Can't Stand It 2:43

62 Sugar Pie DeSanto - I Don't Wanna Fuss (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 3:02

63 Mitty Collier - I Had a Talk with My Man 3:42

64 Dusty Springfield - I Just Don't Know What to Do with Myself (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 3:00

65 The Miracles - I Like It Like That (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:35

66 Sugar Pie DeSanto - I Love You So Much 2:49

67 Barbara Green - I Should Have Treated You Right (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:20

68 Magica Brown - I Won't Be Back (Original 1964 20th Century Fox Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:40

69 Brenda Holloway - I'll Always Love You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:50

70 Carolyn Crawford - I'll Come Running (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:38

71 The Dixie Cups - I'm Gonna Get You Yet (Mono Version) 2:31

72 Anita Humes - I'm Making It Over 2:33

73 Little Jerry Williams - I'm the Lover Man (Original 1964 Loma Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:34

74 Sandra Stephens - If You Really Love Me (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:11

75 Martha and the Vandellas - In My Lonely Room (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:31

76 Shorty Long - It's a Crying Shame (The Way You Treat a Good Man Like Me) (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:45

77 The Kolettes - Just How Much (Can One Heart Take) 2:24

78 The Impressions - Keep on Pushing 2:32

79 Maxine Brown - Little Girl Lost 2:15

80 Sugar Pie DeSanto with the Nat Hendrix Band - A Little Taste of Soul 2:20

81 Dusty Springfield - Live It Up 2:20

82 Garnet Mimms - Look Away 2:31


CD4

83 Dusty Springfield - Losing You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:59

84 Etta James - Lovin' You More Every Day 3:21

85 Lou Johnson - Magic Potion 3:10

86 Don Covay & the Goodtimers - Mercy, Mercy 2:25

87 Patty & the Emblems - Mixed-Up, Shook-Up, Girl 2:05

88 Major Lance - The Monkey Time 2:48

89 Ruby & the Romantics - Much Better Off Than I've Ever Been 2:34

90 Mary Wells - My Guy (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:48

91 Carolyn Crawford - My Smile Is Just a Frown (Turned Upside Down) (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 3:02

92 The Marvelettes - A Need for Love (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 1:55

93 Jerry Butler - Need to Belong 2:55

94 The Velvelettes - Needle in a Haystack (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:31

95 The Dixie Cups - No True Love (B-side of 'You Should Have Seen the Way He Looked at Me') (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:35

96 Dee Dee Sharp - Nobody But You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:12

97 Marvin Gaye & Mary Wells - Once Upon a Time (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:33

98 James Carr - Only Fools Run Away 2:50

99 The Dixie Cups - People Say (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:42

100 Doris Troy - Please Little Angel (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:38

101 Maxine Brown - Put Yourself in My Place 2:12

102 Martha and the Vandellas - Quicksand (Original 1964 Stateside UK 7" Mono Single Version) 2:46

103 Brenda Holloway - Sad Song (B-side of 'I'll Always Love You') (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:39

104 The Drifters - Saturday Night at the Movies (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:29

105 Jackie Ross - Selfish One 3:19

106 The Butlers - She Tried to Kiss Me (All I Could Do Is Run) (Original 1964 Liberty Bell 7" Mono Single Version) 1:48

107 Betty Everett - The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss) (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:11

108 Lulu and the Luvvers - Shout (Original 1964 Decca 7" Mono Single Version) 2:54

109 Jimmy Ruffin - Since I've Lost You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:22


CD5

110 Sugar Pie DeSanto - Slip-In Mules (No High Heel Sneakers) 2:49

111 Little Esther Phillips - Some Things You Never Get Used To 2:26

112 Barbara Lewis - Someday We're Gonna Love Again (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:06

113 The Marvellos - Something's Burnin' (Original 1964 Loma Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:44

114 Gene Chandler - A Song Called Soul 2:36

115 Earl Van Dyke - Soul Stomp (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:33

116 Sugar Pie DeSanto - Soulful Dress 2:51

117 Dee Dee Warwick - Standing By 2:32

118 Dusty Springfield - Stay Awhile (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 1:54

119 Jimmy Hughes - Steal Away 2:26

120 Sugar Pie DeSanto - Strange Feeling 2:24

121 The Impressions - Talking About My Baby 2:34

122 Baby Washington - That's How Heartaches Are Made (Original 1964 Sue UK 7" Mono Single Version) 2:42

123 The Breakaways - That's How It Goes (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:28

124 The Miracles - That's What Love Is Made Of (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:57

125 Dee Dee Sharp - There Ain't Nothin' I Wouldn't Do for You 2:23

126 Lou Johnson - (There's) Always Something There to Remind Me 3:14

127 Gene Chandler - Think Nothing About It 2:40

128 Irma Thomas - Time Is on My Side (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:51

129 Barbara Mason and the Tiffanys - Trouble Child 2:43

130 Lois Lane - Turn Me Loose (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:37

131 Major Lance - Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um 2:18

132 The Drifters - Under the Boardwalk (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:41

133 Sugar Pie DeSanto - Use What You Got 2:43

134 Mary Wells - Use Your Head (Original 1964 20th Century Fox Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:07

135 Dionne Warwick - Walk On By (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:53

136 The Ronettes - Walking in the Rain 3:15


CD6

137 The Essex feat. Anita Humes - What Did I Do? 2:31

138 Marvin Gaye & Kim Weston - What Good Am I Without You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:53

139 The Tams - What Kind of Fool (Do You Think I Am?) 2:00

140 Kelli and the Kittens - What Mama Don't Know (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 1:54

141 Marvin Gaye & Mary Wells - What's the Matter with You Baby (B-side of 'Once Upon a Time') (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:22

142 Mary Wells - When I'm Gone (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:20

143 Carolyn Crawford - When Someone's Good to You (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:28

144 The Supremes - When the Lovelight Starts Shining Through His Eyes (Original 1964 Stateside UK 7" Mono Single Version) 3:06

145 Ruby & the Romantics - When You're Young and in Love 2:28

146 Dee Dee Sharp - Where Did I Go Wrong 2:13

147 The Supremes - Where Did Our Love Go (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:33

148 Mary Wells - Whisper You Love Me Boy (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:32

149 The Sapphires - Who Do You Love? 2:41

150 The Kolettes - Who's That Guy? 2:54

151 Magica Brown - A Whole Lotta Lovin' Left in Me (Original 1964 20th Century Fox Records 7" Mono Single Version) 2:18

152 Dee Dee Sharp - Willyam, Willyam 2:10

153 Irma Thomas - Wish Someone Would Care 2:21

154 The Impressions - You Must Believe Me 2:33

155 The Dixie Cups - You Should Have Seen the Way He Looked at Me 2:29

156 Maxine Brown - You Upset My Soul 2:30

157 Dionne Warwick - You'll Never Get to Heaven (If You Break My Heart) (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 3:08

158 The Marvelettes - You're My Remedy (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 3:04

159 Jeanie King - You've Got a Good Thing Going (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:30

160 Johnny Williams - You've Got It (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:29

161 Marvin Gaye - You're a Wonderful One (Original 1964 7" Mono Single Version) 2:50

162 Nella Dodds - Come See About Me 2:39

163 Betty Everett - You're No Good (Original 1964 Stateside UK 7" Single Version) 2:21

164 Baby Washington - It'll Never Be Over for Me 3:07

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5 comments:

  1. K, you're the best! And BB, thanks for continuing to provide K with a home for these incredible surveys!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Maravilloso, un gran trabajo. Gracias!!

    ReplyDelete
  3. My experience of music in 1964 in the UK was limited. I have endeavored to catch up. I know lots of these songs but not all. Thank you K for this amazing collection, I will treasure it. I enjoyed 164 tracks from 1964, clever!
    (so 166 from 1966 next?)
    Hi BB

    ReplyDelete
  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

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