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About this product
Product Identifiers
Record LabelReal Gone Music, Rlgm
UPC0848064013419
eBay Product ID (ePID)4053063322
Product Key Features
Release Year2022
FormatRecord
GenreSoul/R & B
ArtistJulian, Don & the Larks
Release TitleSuper Slick
Dimensions
Item Height0.20 in
Item Weight0.50 lb
Item Length12.49 in
Item Width9.91 in
Additional Product Features
Number of Tracks11
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
Tracks1.1 Super Slick 1.2 (Ooh Baby) I Love You 1.3 Shorty the Pimp 1.4 Make It with You 1.5 Side Two: 1.6 Show and Tell 1.7 Just My Imagination 1.8 Schoolin and Foolin 1.9 Respect Yourself 1.10 A Woman Ain't Nothing But a Stone Trip 1.11 Let's Stay Together
Number of Discs1
NotesLimited blue colored vinyl LP pressing. One of the holy grails of '70s soul-funk collectors finally gets a proper reissue (and yes, original copies of this 1974 release on the Money label will cost you a lot of, er, money)! Don Julian was a Los Angeles-based doo wopper who got his start leading The Meadowlarks, who recorded a number of sides for Dootone Records. The Meadowlarks then became The Larks, who, like so many other R&B groups of their era, achieved one hit wonder immortality with a dance craze song, 1964"s 'The Jerk.' They spent the rest of the '60s trying to recapture that magic with tracks like 'Soul Jerk' and 'The Penguin' (on Jerk Records, natch) before resurfacing with a couple of long players on the Money label. But this is where things get a little murky. The group also recorded a soundtrack for a long-rumored, never seen blaxploitation film called Shorty the Pimp (supposedly Quentin Tarantino has the only copy). In 1998, Ace Records assembled tracks from the Shorty the Pimp score on a CD release, but while seven of the ten tracks on Super Slick appear on that collection, many of them differ markedly from their soundtrack incarnations. So, the how, when, and where of this recording remain very much a mystery. But no matter; with it's blend of Isaac Hayes, Curtis Mayfield, 'Papa Was a Rolling Stone'-era Temptations, and '70s sweet soul (e. g a cover of David Gates & Bread's 'Make It with You'), Super Slick wears it's influences very much on it's sleeve while transcending them with soaring, falsetto-filigreed harmonies, percolating bass, and note-perfect arrangements. Trivia note: that's Richard Berry of 'Louie Louie' fame doing the deep-voiced spoken word parts on 'Super Slick' and 'Shorty the Pimp.'