Track Listing 1. Can't Stop a Man in Love - Wilson Pickett (previously unreleased) 2. How Does It Feel - Bobby Womack 3. You Left the Water Running - Sam & Dave 4. Rome Wasn't Built in a Day - Arthur Conley (previously unreleased) 5. Book of Memories - Percy Wiggins 6. That's How It Feels - The Soul Clan 7. I Love You More Than Words Can Say - Otis Redding 8. Baby, Baby, Baby - Percy Sledge (previously unreleased) 9. Hold On - James Carr 10. Pouring Water on a Drowning Man - Otis Clay 11. Lovebones - Mighty Sam 12. Love of My Woman, The - Darrell Banks 13. Coldest Days of My Life - Walter Jackson 14. Whiter Shade of Pale - R.B. Greaves 15. Change With the Seasons - Carl Hall 16. What a Woman Really Means - Donny Hathaway (previously unreleased)
| Details | | Producer: | David Nathan (Compilation) | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Similar to the CELLAR FULL OF MOTOWN volumes, ATLANTIC UNEARTHED collects rare tracks from the label's biggest soul stars and should-have-been-hits from more obscure artists. The SOUL BROTHERS edition naturally focuses on the fellas, and offers previously unreleased and hard-to-find nuggets from legends like Wilson Pickett, Percy Sledge, Otis Redding, and Donny Hathaway. The collection's true worth, however, comes through via the obscurities. Among the standouts are Darrell Bank's "The Love of a Woman," Northern Soul favorite Percy Wiggins's Otis-lite "Book of Memories," and R.B. Greaves's gospelized version of Procol Harum's "Whiter Shade of Pale." Also, soul/R&B lovers will be ecstatic to see the previously unreleased James Carr cut "Hold On." Recorded during a brief session he did for Atlantic, the song--like all of Carr's recordings--drips with both hurt and heart. Culled from recordings made between 1967 and 1972, ATLANTIC UNEARTHED is simply a must-have for soul collectors, and it certainly won't do wrong by casual fans either.
Editorial Reviews [With] many overlooked soul gems....Arthur Conley, Percy Sledge, and Donny Hathaway are also represented with newly released performances. Living Blues
5 stars out of 5 -- Arthur Conley's 1967 cover of Sam Cooke's 'Rome' , inexplicably unreleased, is pure gospel-c**-soul archetype. Uncut
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