Good day for flea market rummaging today. Here’s the rundown:
Vinyl
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The Brothers Johnson – Right On Time |
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Commodores – Midnight Magic |
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Dazz Band – Keep It Live |
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Earth Wind And Fire – Spirit |
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The Isley Brothers – Shout! (1990 reissue) |
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Jimmy Castor Bunch – Butt Of Course… |
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Newcleus – Jam On Revenge |
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Sly & The Family Stone – Stand! |
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The Best of The Stylistics |
VHS
Now, I’m not really into VHS. As far as home video formats go, it is rather awful, and the tapes don’t age well (although a played out VHS tape has a built-in “back in the day” vibe, it is generally undesirable). With that said, rifling through a ton of decomissioned VHS tapes can often turn up some rare gems if you’re into oddball cult b-movies (I am) that are either unavailable on DVD or need to be special ordered through people that are more obsessed with this stuff than even I. I’ll take a chance on anything that looks truly awful, as I clearly have some sort of weird masochistic relationship with film. Anyway, here’s what I brought home today:
Let it be noted that what I was really after was a copy of Superfly T.N.T. I picked up Friday Foster and Willie Dynamite, which are both readily available on DVD but I don’t have them, but no luck with Superfly. The search continues…
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Friday Foster |
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Willie Dynamite |
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Lady Terminator 1980s Indonesian action film. Ridiculous premise and horrible acting. A winner. |
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The Weird Ones Apparently a retitle of 1971’s The Irv Carlson Show starring Arch Hall, Sr. The one review I’ve found makes it sound painful to watch, so it should be great! |
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Secret Agent 00 Soul Looks like a lousy Billy Dee B-film. Looking forward to checking this one out. |
All in all, some decent loot for 18 bucks.















Most of the records I post will likely be soul/R&B, but I have a wide variety of tastes (and vinyl), so I will be mixing it up regularly. Sunday after Valentine’s Day sounds pretty laid back to me, so here’s some nice out-of-print easy listening to help.
This is the first post in what is to become a series (no, not two years between posts) of postings of not-necessarily-rare but definitely out-of-print and relatively obscure vinyl. Today, it’s the solo debut from Ray Parker Jr, a long-time session musician/songwriter, frontman from ’70s funk group Raydio, and best known for the mega-hit theme from the 1984 film Ghostbusters.