![]() ![]() ![]() Each of the 12 volumes compiled 'oldies' style downtempo soul and doo-wop, and were notable for their cover artwork depicting the people and cars of East LA's Chicano culture, of which the compilations have since become a lasting symbol. But it isn't bad as a fairly serious oldies collection. Profile: East Side Story was a bootleg series created by Anthony 'Mr. Loudermilk's "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye" alongside Holman's falsetto-textured "Hey There Lonely Girl" and the Elgins' 1966 Motown debut "Darlin' Baby." It's hard to tell the meaning or the links between the material, as the disc's programming is more akin to what a good oldies DJ would play than to anything that would sell to the public in big numbers, which is why this CD deserves to sell - or, at least, it would if it had more than a dozen songs and maybe some sleeve notes, or a slightly lower list price. The mix is surprisingly compelling, considering the divergence of styles and periods, the Casinos' 1967 Association-style cover of John D. Billy Stewart ("Do I Love You"), the Moonglows ("Sincerely"), the Mello-Kings ("Tonite, Tonite"), the Shells ("Baby Oh Baby") and Eddie Holman ("Hey There Lonely Girl") are all here, representing 15 years of great music. ![]() The Delfonics' "Didn't I Blow Your Mind" shares space with the Premiers' "Duffy's Blues," and a couple of generations of R&B and soul rub shoulders with them. Philadelphia R&B, '70s Chicago soul, and '60s folk-rock harmony meet East Los Angeles on this volume, covering the '50s through the '70s. ![]()
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