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Ace Records

by Bob Stanley

Rock On in Camden

Ace Records will be a familiar name to most SOTS listeners. The North London-based company are among the most well-respected in the world of re-issues. Their catalogue includes the mighty Golden Age Of American Rock'n'Roll series; Where The Girls Are, eight volumes (and counting) of classic and obscure girl group singles; the Kent label, specialising in northern (and sometimes southern) soul; and the Songwriter Series.

Ted Carroll at Golborne Road

If I was really pushed, I think my favourite Ace collections are in the Songwriter Series. There are compilations of New York's great Brill Building writers (Leiber and Stoller, Goffin and King, Neil Diamond, Mann and Weil, Barry and Greenwich) as well as the teams who were inspired by the Brill legends: PF Sloan and Steve Barri, on the west coast, gave us Barri McGuire's ‘Eve Of Destruction’ and its sunlit opposite, the Turtles' harmony-packed ‘You Baby’; and New Yorker Chip Taylor (brother of Jon Voight and uncle to Angelina Jolie) wrote hardy perennials ‘Wild Thing’ and ‘Angel Of The Morning’. On the soul front, a Van McCoy set called ‘The Sweetest Feeling’ includes the eponymous Jackie Wilson hit, Teri Thornton's intense and tearful ‘Why Don't You Love Me’, and Gladys Knight's northern soul stormer ‘Stop And Get A Hold Of Myself’. Most recently, they've released ‘Colour My World: The Songs of Tony Hatch’, Ace's first collection by a British songwriter.

Trevor Churchill with Reparata & The Delrons

Is this starting to read like an extended advert? I'm a big fan! Ace's most recent release is Arthur Prysock's ‘The Old Town Singles’. This set goes back to the R&B sound that started the Ace story in 1978. Originally, its founders - Trevor Churchill, Roger Armstrong, and second-hand record dealing legend Ted Carroll, owner of the Rock On stall on West London's Golborne Road - ran the Chiswick label, putting out contemporary records by the Count Bishops, the Damned and Rocky Sharpe and the Razors. After they re-issued Vince Taylor's ‘Brand New Cadillac’, they decided to give their re-issue arm a different name. As their planned releases included Frankie Ford's ‘Sea Cruise’ and an album by Huey 'Piano' Smith, both originally released on Louisiana's Ace Records, they simply borrowed the name - with the kind permission of the original Ace label's owner, Johnny Vincent.

Rock On in Camden

Personally, I can't thank Ace enough for the records and CDs they've put out over the last thirty-odd years. Whether it's been Theola Kilgore's extraordinarily moving ‘This Is My Prayer’ or Mouse and the Traps' organ-led garage-rocker ‘Look At The Sun’, they've introduced me to dozens of mind blowing singles I would probably have never heard otherwise, and which are now among my all-time favourites. I used to spend many hours in Ted Carroll's Rock On shop when it moved to Camden Town (favourite find: the super-rare ‘How Can I Hide It From My Heart’, by Manchester schoolgirl and Freddie Garrity protégée Maxine Darren - a snip at £3!). I miss hanging out in the shop, but the regular flow of Ace CDs makes up for it.