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Reissue CDs Weekly: Philadelphia International Records | reviews, news & interviews

Reissue CDs Weekly: Philadelphia International Records

Reissue CDs Weekly: Philadelphia International Records

Low-priced tribute which undervalues one of America’s great imprints

The Jacksons in 1976: no longer The Jackson 5, no longer with Motown and looking forward to new success with Philadelphia International

 

Philadelphia International Records – The CollectionVarious Artists: Philadelphia International Records – The Collection

The O’Jays’ “Love Train”, The Jacksons’ “Show You the Way to Go” and McFadden & Whitehead’s “Ain’t No Stoppin’ Us Now” share an undeniable power. All make the body move and have a potency which could be devotional. Each is also about going forward and could slot into a church service. Despite being products of a musical production line, these were more than simple pop records.

All three were issued by Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff’s Philadelphia International Records and are heard on Philadelphia International Records – The Collection. Rightly cherished as one of the great American imprints, the label has been the subject of many reissues. At least three box sets have been compiled previously, the last of which was 2012’s Philadelphia International 40th Anniversary Box Set. This new reissue takes a different approach. Instead of compiling individual tracks – maybe hits, perhaps remixes or the best cuts by particular artists – it collects 20 separate albums, each in a CD-sized replica card sleeve within a brick-like box.

The O'Jays Ship AhoyPhiladelphia International isn’t widely acknowledged as an albums label. Its meat and potatoes were radio and the singles charts, whether mainstream or specialist listings like the R ‘n’ B rankings. There were no albums from the label with the continuing resonance of Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, Isaac Hayes’s Black Moses or Curtis Mayfield’s debut solo set. Nonetheless, as this collection reveals, the label did release albums addressing social issues. The O’Jays’ extraordinary 1973 set Ship Ahoy takes a slave ship transporting its goods to America as its central theme, and takes a critical overview of financial avarice. Surely, this important album merits a stand-alone release with an in-depth critical analysis integral to its package, rather than being buried in a box with 19 other albums?

All the albums collected – by genre expert Dean Rudland, who contributes short, pointed notes on each album in the accompanying booklet – are as wonderful. From Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes' eponymous 1972 set to Patti LaBelle’s 1983 I’m In Love Again, there isn’t a clunker.

Edwin BirdsongIt's mind-boggling that Gamble & Huff not only ran this label but also produced much of its output and wrote a constant stream of songs for the acts they signed. Moreover, they had an eye for repurposing what appeared to be commercial dead meat. The Jackson 5 were struggling with Motown as the Seventies hit its middle years, but Gamble & Huff picked them up and as The Jacksons (renamed for contractual reasons) they issued their first Philadelphia International album in 1976. The pair produced most of the set and penned half its songs. Michael was the only Jackson to write for the album. His future was being prepared.

Although most of the names collected in the box are well known, a couple of lesser lights crop up. Dexter Wansel’s 1976 album Life on Mars is a funky set which gets DJs going. Edwin Birdsong's eponymous 1978 album is more curious and does not seem to have been reissued before. It's dominated by the synthesizer and, with its fragmented songs, was not a big seller. Yet it resonated: its “Cola Bottle Baby” (listen to it overleaf) was sampled by Daft Punk, whose take on Birdsong was then recycled by Kanye West. Like Ship Ahoy, Birdsong's album needs a proper stand-alone reissue.

This set raises issues about other ways music is being recycled. Sony, the multinational issuing this box, has priced it at just under £40 – around £2 an album. In common with so many major-label, multi-album CD sets currently being marketed, this approach devalues the music, rendering it almost financially worthless. The music deserves more from its custodians.

Visit Kieron Tyler’s blog

Overleaf: Listen to Edwin Birdsong’s “Cola Bottle Baby”

 

Comments

It is not a case of devaluing music. Quite simply CDs are not bought in significant numbers by anyone under 30, and certainly not reissues, and even pre-internet most people would stop buying music around the age of 30 for the usual reasons (career, kids, etc). Therefore even in the pre-internet 'good times' reissue labels would be appealing to the 10% or so of "collectors" who kept purchasing significant amounts of music past age 30. Now in the Spotify era it is probably "10% of 10%" and on a sharply downward trajectory and consequently many of those interested in a release will be the 'fanatics'' who'll likely already have a copy (or two) of the albums they are interested in from this set and so will need 'sweeteners' in the form of the additional music to be tempted again. If Sony can manufacture this set for £20, then £10 goes to the retailer then there is £10 profit (25%) for Sony. If the CDs were sold individually, many would not sell anything and hence would incur a loss on Sony - it is depressing but that is plain economics and since 2006-2007 the record business has changed beyond recognition. In 5-years time major labels won't release CD reissues at all (beyond the major acts; Zep, Beatles, Stones, Davis, Coltrane, Marley, etc) and instead licence them to indies such as Cherry Red, Ace, etc to supply a slowly diminishing market. It has already been happening for years and I've just seen that Sony have started licensing their CTI/Kudu jazz catalogue to Cherry Red for the 1st time. So enough of the "devaluing music" stuff - it isn't the fault of Sony/Columbia/Universal records it is just changing attitudes, if you want to blame anyone blame the internet streamers.

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