Phast Phreddie Patterson is a DJ and the head archivist at the ARChive of Contemporary Music.

Each month we ask a member of the community to tell us what music theyโ€™ve been digging.

As a club DJ who specializes in playing old 45s, there are literally thousands that I dig. Here are a few: Dave Bartholomewโ€™s โ€œShrimp and Gumboโ€ (New Orleans R&B meets Cuban rhythms!); Sidney Barnesโ€™s โ€œYouโ€™ll Always Be in Styleโ€ (a long-elusive Northern Soul acquisition); Bobby Fuller and the Fanaticsโ€™ โ€œOur Favorite Martianโ€ (Before โ€œI Fought the Lawโ€ put him on the map, Fuller and his Texas band cut some fabulous instrumentals); James โ€œRedโ€ Hollowayโ€™s โ€œAla Carteโ€ (Red Holloway was a journeyman jazz saxophonist who also played on blues records; this is a wild novelty record thatโ€™s totally different from what youโ€™d expect from a guy like this); Los Babysโ€™ โ€œJinetes en el Cieloโ€ (a WAY-wacked-out version of โ€œGhost Riders in the Skyโ€ by a group from Mexico; the recording contains all sorts of exciting guitar noisesโ€”feedback, distortion, scraping of strings, etc.โ€”and it was recorded in 1966); Roosevelt Matthews with Billy Ball and the Upsettersโ€™ โ€œTighten Upโ€ (Every version of the Archie Bell and the Drells standard is good, but this rendition beats them all!); the Eddy Jacobs Exchangeโ€™s โ€œPull My Coatโ€ (a fantastic imitation of James Brown); and Lou Courtneyโ€™s โ€œHot Butter โ€™n Allโ€ (another sensational funk record).

These last three are always in my box when I DJ at Salt Box for my โ€œFunky Kingstonโ€ night (the fifth Saturday of the month, when there is one; the next one is January 31). The others may be heard at the โ€œShim Sham Shimmyโ€ night on the first Saturday of the month, also at Salt Box, or at the โ€œDo The 45โ€ night on the second Friday of the month at Quinnโ€™s in Beacon. Iโ€™ve been listening to recent recordings by the Third Mind (Dave Alvin of the Blastersโ€™ psychedelic band); Doctor Moan (with Peter Case of the Plimsouls); a bunch of new stuff on the Daptone label; as well as local acts the Sci-Flies (futuristic surf music) and the Vibeke Sougestad Bandโ€™s Sun Sessions (sheโ€™s the queen of Nordic power pop). Another favorite recent release is the Sure Fire Soul Ensembleโ€™s cover of the Nixon-era classic โ€œImpeach the President.โ€ Some folks feel that itโ€™s better than the original by the Honeydrippers. I wonโ€™t go that far, but itโ€™s goodโ€”and oh so timely.

Phast Phreddie Patterson is a DJ and the head archivist at the ARChive of Contemporary Music. In 1975 he cofounded Back Door Man, one Americaโ€™s first punk fanzines. He lives in Salt Point. Boogaloobag.com

Brian is the editorial director for the Chronogram Media family of publications. He lives in Kingston with his partner Lee Anne and the rapscallion mutt Clancy.

Join the Conversation

2 Comments

  1. Phast Phreddie’s selections are fantastic! Dave Bartholomew’s “Shrimp and Gumbo” sounds like a must-hearโ€”that New Orleans R&B mixed with Cuban rhythms sounds incredibly unique. I’d love to know what other tracks bridge those distinct regional sounds in his collection!

  2. Phast Phreddie’s selection sounds fantastic! Dave Bartholomew’s “Shrimp and Gumbo” blending New Orleans R&B with Cuban rhythms sounds like an incredible groove. I’d love to hear more about finding that elusive Sidney Barnes Northern Soul trackโ€”what made it so hard to track down?

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *