12. Cooke, Sam "That's It - I Quit - I'm Movin' On"
13. Bell, William "You Don't Miss Your Water"
14. Butler, Jerry "Find another girl"
15. Miracles, The "Everybody's Gotta Pay Some Dues"
16. King, Ben E. "Amor"
17. James, Etta "Don't Cry Baby"
18. Knight, Gladys & The Pips "Every Beat Of My Heart"
19. Drifters, The "Some Kind Of Wonderful"
20. Clark, Dee "Raindrops"
Disc 02 01. King, Ben E. "Stand By Me"
02. Jackson, Chuck "I Don't Want To Cry"
03. Holland, Eddie "Jamie"
04. McDaniels, Gene "A Little Bit Of Soap"
05. John, Little Willie "Take my love (I want to give it all to you)"
06. Miracles, The "Mighty Good Lovin'"
07. James, Etta "At last"
08. Brown, James And His Famous Flames "Baby, you're all right"
09. Butler, Jerry "I'm telling you"
10. Jackson, Chuck "I Wake Up Crying"
11. Shirelles, The "Big John"
12. Ikettes, The "I'm Blue (The Gong-Gong Song)"
13. Drifters, The "Sweets for my sweet"
14. Wells, Mary "I Don't Want To Take A Chance"
15. King, Freddy "Hide away"
16. Brown, Maxine "Funny"
17. Gaye, Marvin "Let Your Conscience Be Your Guide"
18. Supremes, The "I Want A Guy"
19. Marvelettes, The "Twistin' Postman"
20. Henry, Clarence "Frogman" "(I don't know why) But I do"
Number of discs:
2
Description:
The year 1961 was a turning point for black American music. Blues and rhythmâ??nâ??blues had been popular for many years, but by and large, the white acts were cherry-picking the best songs and taking them into the charts. By 1961, the black record labels were finding a way to make their own product more commercial so that it would appeal to a bigger audience. The music would take on a different name â?? Soul! It was a great term and even today when you say a record has soul, you mean that it has passion and commitment at its core. -