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Classic CountryA Better Classic Country Legends Radio Station plays the kings and queens of country music and the songs that swept America. A great station to bring back the magical memories of Nashville.
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Awesome 80sA Better 80s Radio Station plays your all time favorite Pop, New Wave and Rock Songs.
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Love SongsA Better Love Songs Radio Station plays the music that brings back those magical moments. Whether falling in or out of love, we hope these songs might help you to find words for the experience.
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Motown MagicA Better Motown Radio Station playing all the classic hits from the golden years in the motor city. Motown and nothing but Motown.
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Classic RockA Better Classic Rock Station playing all your favorite songs from the 60s to the Glam Rock 80s.
George Soulé was born in Meridian, Missisippi in 1945. Perhaps best known for his vocal performance on the 1973 single "Get Involved," Soulé has had a remarkable career as a songwriter. He wrote "Shoes," a 1970 hit for Brook Benton, as well as "Can't Stop a Man in Love," which was covered by both Bobby Womack and Carl Carlton. In addition, Soulé wrote "I'll Be Your Everything," a hit single for Percy Sledge. Although he had released several recordings under his own name, and under various pseudonyms such as "George Glenn," he had never made a full-length recording of his own until 2006, when he released Take a Ride, a fine debut. It was recorded in Nashville, Tennessee with Mark Nevers as producer, and includes contributions by Jeb Loy Nichols, Greg Cartwright, Tony Crow and Brian Kotzur. Take a Ride includes Soulé's versions of "Shoes," "My World Tumbles Down," "I'll Be Your Everything" and Cartwright's gospel-tinged "Wait and See," and reveals Soulé as a remarkably accomplished vocalist. He was signed as a songwriter to Nashville's Acuff-Rose Publishing, had recorded a privately released song, "Would You Even Care," at Memphis' Stax Studios in the early '60s, and had seen an early composition, "Someone," cut by Sue Thompson, Etta James, Frank Ifield, and New Orleans artist Floyd Brown. ("Someone" became a minor hit in the Crescent City.) Soulé worked in Jackson, Missisippi during the early days of soul label Malaco. There he wrote "Simon Says" with Paul Davis; this became a small hit for Eddie Houston. He pitched songs to Jerry Wexler in northern Alabama, and relocated to Alabama from Jackson after Wexler gave him the nod. The list of artists who cut Soulé's songs is impressive, and includes Mavis Staples, the Patterson Twins, Archie Bell & the Drells and Dee Dee Warwick. He wrote for Candi Staton and Odia Coates, reviewed and recorded demos, played on sessions (including, interestingly, drumming on recordings by Jerry "Swamp Dogg" Williams) and sang his first national hit with "Get Involved," written by George Jackson and produced by Rick Hall. "Get Involved" became a favorite of fans of "Northern Soul," an amorphous term that basically means records deemed obscure and therefore hip and collectable by English soul-music fans. In 2003, Casual Records released Country Got Soul: Vol. 1, a collection of classic works by blue-eyed Southern soul songwriters and performers that featured "Get Involved." In 2004, Jeb Loy Nichols, along with Casual, created the Country Soul Revue, a group featuring Soulé, Dan Penn, Donnie Fritts, Tony Joe White, Bonnie Bramlett, backed by members of the Muscle Shoals Swampers, the Muscle Shoals and Memphis Horns. George Soulé currently resides in Meridian, and works in a nearby casino. England's Zane Records released Take a Ride in late 2006 to good reviews. www.myspace.com/georgesoule http://www.facebook.com/pages/George-Soule-Soulscape-Records/166002063435464 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.