Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Dave Godin

 
Artist: Dave Godin
  • Died: October 15, 2004, England
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Instrument: Compilation Producer

Biography

Music journalist and historian Dave Godin was the heart and soul of Britain's enduring Northern soul collector's culture. Not only did he inadvertently give a genre, scene, and community their name, but he compiled a series of tasteful, illuminating records and CDs that lent enormous meaning and historical meaning to music that might have otherwise slipped through the cracks.

Born in London on June 21, 1936, and raised in nearby Bexleyheath, he earned a scholarship to Dartford Grammar School, which he attended alongside a young Mick Jagger. The white Godin discovered the music of black America at the age of 16 -- while in a local ice cream parlor, he was bowled over by the sound coming out of the establishment's new jukebox, which proved to be Ruth Brown's "Mama He Treats Your Daughter Mean." An older youth recommended several other R&B hits he thought Godin might enjoy, and soon he was sharing his discoveries with Jagger, even sitting in on the tentative jam sessions that would eventually give rise to the Rolling Stones. But Godin later bitterly resented Jagger's easy appropriation and often uncredited exploitation of the R&B music he worshiped: "I introduced [Jagger] to black music, I'm ashamed to say," Godin said in a 1997 interview. "It's ironic that as a result of meeting me he's where he is today." Godin quickly amassed a formidable collection of American R&B sides, an even more impressive accomplishment given that such records were rarely imported by British retailers or broadcast over BBC airwaves. After leaving Dartford Grammar, he worked briefly in advertising. In 1963 he established the Tamla-Motown Appreciation Society, which earned him an invitation from founder Berry Gordy to visit the label's Detroit headquarters. Godin left Motown on the company payroll, becoming a paid promotional consultant, and upon returning home he encouraged U.K. distributor EMI to set up its own proprietary Tamla-Motown imprint. He also worked tirelessly to secure the latest Motown releases airplay on the expanding number of pirate radio stations appearing across Britain. Godin emphasized the overall Motown sound instead of individual artists, a strategy that worked to great success. He remained Gordy's fair-haired boy until a Motown Revue package tour played British venues to half-empty houses. Godin left the label in 1967, soon after setting up his own London record store, Soul City, the first European retailer to specialize in black music. Around that same time, he began writing a popular, thoughtful column in the fledgling magazine Blues & Soul. In June 1970, Godin devoted his column to documenting the evolving rare soul collecting community. Noting the number of Northern-based customers frequenting Soul City in search of little-known Motown knockoffs, he wrote about the "Up-North Soul Groove," giving Northern soul its name in the process. Godin eventually launched his own record labels, Soul City and Deep Soul, but the entire Soul City portfolio went bust in 1971. He soon relocated out of London, first migrating to Lincolnshire and in 1978 to Sheffield, where he earned his degree in the history of art, design, and film at Sheffield Polytechnic. From there Godin co-founded the Anvil Film Theatre, acting as its senior film officer and schedule programmer -- he even became something of a global authority on film censorship.

But music remained his greatest love and his area of greatest expertise, and although he oversaw numerous soul collections in his lifetime, his most outstanding accomplishment was the Kent label's Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures, a series issued occasionally between 1997 and 2004. Compiled and annotated by Godin, each is a remarkable document of the devastatingly emotional, operatic American soul he worshiped above all. The fourth and final volume in the Deep Soul Treasures appeared just weeks prior to Godin's death from lung cancer on October 15, 2004. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Dave Godin
Top

David Edward Godin (21 June 1936, Peckham, London - 15 October 2004 in Rotherham, England) was an English fan of American soul music, who made a major contribution internationally in spreading awareness and understanding of the genre, and by extension African-American culture.

Dave Godin spent his early childhood in Peckham before bombing forced the family to move to Bexleyheath, Kent, where he won a scholarship to Dartford Grammar School. Godin began collecting American R&B records when at school, where he encouraged the younger Mick Jagger's interest in black American music. He said: "..It was at Dartford Grammar School that I met Mick Jagger and introduced him to black music, I'm ashamed to say. It's ironic that as a result of meeting me he's where he is today." Godin played a minor role in the early jam sessions out of which the Rolling Stones emerged, but resented Jagger for what he saw as the Stones' exploitation of black music. [1]

After working at an advertising agency and a hospital, Godin founded the Tamla Motown Appreciation Society, and in time was recruited by Berry Gordy to become Motown's consultant in the UK, setting up its distribution through EMI. At a recording of Ready Steady Go! in 1964, Jagger asked Godin to introduce him to Marvin Gaye. "I told him to fuck off and introduce himself," Godin recalled.[1]

In 1966, he founded Soul City with colleague David Nathan and friend Robert Blackmore, a record shop and label on which he released such then-obscure soul classics as Go Now by Bessie Banks. It was in their shop that Godin coined the term northern soul, a description that he would popularise through his work as a music journalist. In a 2002 interview with Chris Hunt of Mojo, he explained that he had first come up with the term in 1968 as a sales reference to help staff in his shop differentiate the more modern funkier sounds from the smoother, Motown-influenced soul of a few years earlier:

I had started to notice that northern football fans who were in London to follow their team were coming into the store to buy records, but they weren’t interested in the latest developments in the black American chart. I devised the name as a shorthand sales term. It was just to say ‘if you’ve got customers from the north, don’t waste time playing them records currently in the US black chart, just play them what they like - ‘Northern Soul’.[2]

In his career he also coined the term Deep Soul and he promoted the interests of a large number of American musicians whose work had fallen out of favour in their home country.

Cover of Deep Soul Treasures Vol.4, showing Arthur Conley

In the mid 1990s he started to compile a series of CDs of rare (and some not so rare) recordings - Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures - for Ace Records, which featured such artists as Loretta Williams, Eddie and Ernie, Jaibi, Ruby Johnson and Jimmy and Louise Tig. The albums were greeted with universal critical acclaim, and Godin described the series as the proudest achievement of his life.

He went on to show interests in other areas including Esperanto and especially film, becoming involved in the British Film Institute. Having studied art, design and film course at Sheffield Polytechnic, he helped found and was director of the Anvil Cinema (1983-90) in the city, the only cinema in the UK to be funded by a local authority.

Dave was also a vegan and an advocate for animal rights. He was also known for his involvement in anarchist and anti-capitalist organizations, including the Freedom Newspaper and Class War. He was the only atheist in his local pro-life organisation. Towards the end of his life he developed an interest in Jainism.

Contents

Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures : Taken from the Vaults

Volume 1

1.The Knight Brothers - I'm Never Gonna Live It Down 2.Timmy Willis - Easy As Saying 1 2 3 3.Zerben R Hicks & the Dynamics - Lights Out 4.Irma Thomas - Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) 5.Jean Wells - Have A Little Mercy 6.Dori Grayson - Try Love 7.Brendetta Davis - I Can't Make It Without Him 8.Kenny Carter - Showdown 9.Larry Banks - I'm Not The One 10.Jimmy Holiday – The Turning Point 11.The Incredibles - Standing Here Crying 12.The Just Brothers - She Broke His Heart 13.The Untouchables - You're On Top 14.Reuben Bell & the Casanovas - It's Not That Easy 15.Van & Titus - Cry Baby Cry 16.Jean Stanback - I Still Love You 17.Bessie Banks - Try To Leave Me If You Can (I Bet You Can't Do It) 18.Raw Spitt - Songs To Sing 19.Lee Moses - How Much Longer (Must I Wait) 20.Billy Young - Nothing's Too Much (Nothing's Too Good) 21.Sam & Bill - I Feel Like Crying 22.Eddie & Ernie - I'm Goin' For Myself 23.The Knight Brothers - Tried So Hard To Please Her 24.Pearlean Gray & the Passengers - Love Of My Man 25.Jaibi - You Got Me

Volume 2

1.Doris Duke - How Was I To Know You Cared 2.Eddie Holman - I'm Not Going To Give Up 3.The Soul ChildrenThe Sweeter He Is 4.Tony Owens - I Don't Want Nobody But My Baby 5.Bobby Moore & the Formosts - It Was A Lie 6.Jimmy & Louise Tig and Company - A Love That Never Grows Cold 7.Ben E. King - It's All Over 8.Nat Phillips - I'm Sorry I Hurt You 9.Wendy Rene - What Will Tomorrow Bring 10.Arthur Conley - Let Nothing Separate Us 11.Irma Thomas - These Four Walls 12.Johnny Adams - If I Could See You One More Time 13.Ruby Johnson - I'll Run Your Hurt Away 14.The Premiers - Make It Me 15.Eddie Giles - Losing Boy 16.Doris Allen – A Shell Of A Woman 17.Otis Redding - Just One More Day 18.Bessie Banks - Go Now 19.George Perkins & the Silver Stars - Cryin' In The Streets 20.Big John Hamilton - How Much Can A Man Take 21.Barbara West - Anyone But You 22.Carla ThomasStop! Look What You're Doing 23.Toussaint McCall - Nothing Takes The Place Of You 24.Eddie & Ernie - Hiding In Shadows 25.Lisa Richards - Let's Take A Chance

Volume 3

1.Toussaint McCall - I'm Undecided 2.Baby Washington - Breakfast In Bed 3.Dee Clark - In These Very Tender Moments 4.Jean Plum - Look At The Boy 5.James Brown - Lost Someone 6.Eddie & Ernie - Thanks For Yesterday 7.Bessie Banks - It Sounds Like My Baby 8.Bobby Womack - Baby I Can't Stand It 9.Etta James - I'd Rather Go Blind 10.Syl Johnson - Is It Because I'm Black 11.Maxine Brown - All In My Mind 12.Robert Ramsey - Like It Stands 13.Irma Thomas - Wish Someone Would Care 14.Ray Gant & the Arabian Knights - Don't Leave Me Baby 15.Carla Thomas - I Can't Take It 16.J R Bailey - Too Far Gone To Turn Around 17.Bettye LaVette - Let Me Down Easy 18.Bobby Bland - I'm Too Far Gone To Turn Around 19.Barbara & the Browns - I Don't Want To Have To Wait 20.The Enchanters - I Paid For The Party 21.Rozetta Johnson - Who Are You Gonna Love (Your Woman Or Your Wife) 22.Rick James & Friend - Ebony Eyes 23.Doris Duke- He's Gone 24.The Impressions - My Deceiving Heart 25.Loretta Williams - I'm Missing You

Volume 4

1.The Knight Brothers - Temptation 'Bout To Get Me 2.Eddie & Ernie - I Believe She Will 3.Matilda Jones - I've Been Wrong Too Long 4.Bobby Bland - I Pity The Fool 5.Chuck Edwards - I Need You 6.Ruby Andrews - Just Loving You 7.Clarence Carter - Slip Away 8.Black Velvet - Is It Me You Really Love 9.Paul Kelly - The Day After Forever 10.Gladys Knight & the Pips - Giving Up 11.Arthur Conley - I'm A Lonely Stranger 12.Jackie Lee - I Love You 13.The Miracles - The Tracks Of My Tears 14.Roosevelt Matthews - You Got Me Diggin' You 15.Doris Duke - I Don't Care Anymore 16.Lawrence & Jaibi - You Make Me Feel Good 17.Barbara Brown - Can't Find No Happiness 18.Garnet Mimms - My Baby 19.The Webs - It's So Hard To Break A Habit 20.Irma Thomas - Time Is on My Side 21.Tony Owens - This Heart Can't Take No More 22.Jaibi - It Was Like A Nightmare 23.Roy Hamilton - The Dark End Of The Street 24.Jimmy Robins - I Made It Over 25.Bob & Earl - Don't Ever Leave Me

Notes and references

External links


 
 
Learn More
Cheatin' Soul and the Southern Dream of Freedom (2006 Album by Various Artists)
Northern Soul From the City: 30 Legendary Northern Soul Anthems (2005 Album by Various Artists)
Doris Duke (Rhythm & Blues Artist, '60s-'80s)

Why is Amber Godins such a pacey getter? Read answer...
Who is dave the laugh? Read answer...
Dave-what is it? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What is ally godin's real name?
What day was Isabel Godin born?
Who designs Godin guitar pickups?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dave Godin" Read more