South, Joe

Vinyl Records and Rare LPs:

A Look Inside
New - LP - ST 11074
Sealed 1972 Orange Label Original With Custom Inner Sleeve. Clean Cut Out Hole. more
A Look Inside
Used - LP - ST 11074
1972 Orange Label Original With Custom Inner Sleeve. Clean Cut Out Hole. Appears Unplayed. more
A Look Inside
New - LP - ST 11074
Sealed 1972 Orange Label Original With Custom Inner Sleeve. Clean Cut Out Hole. more
Don't It Make You Want To Go Home?
Used - LP - ST 392
1968 Green Label With Purple Logo Stereo Original. Appears Unplayed. “Joe South's Second Proper Album Was Perhaps Just A Tad Less Impressive Than The More Well-Known Introspect, If Only Because That Earlier LP Had Included "Games People Play," "Rose Garden," And Some Other Songs That Would Be Among The Singer/Songwriter's Most Enduring. Don't It Make You Want To Go Home? Is A Worthy Follow-Up, However, That Also Adeptly Combines Rootsy Rock, Pop, Country, Soul, Gospel, And Psychedelia Into South's Thoughtful Songs, Which Ooze Both Interior Reflection And Empathetic Concern For The World At Large. The Soulful, Cheering "Walk A Mile In My Shoes" Was The Album's Hit Single, But There Are Other Songs Here Of Similar Quality, Like The Bittersweet "Clock Up On The Wall," The Straight-Ahead Soul Love Song "Shelter," And "Be A Believer," Which Has The Anthemic Exhortatory Chin-Up Feel Typical Of Much Of South's Work Of The Period. It's Definitely An Album Of Its Time, As The Occasional Segues Between Tracks And Trippy Studio Effects Make Clear. Indeed, There's One Downright Experimental Track, "A Million Miles Away," A Nearly Instrumental Gutbucket Psychedelic Blues Groove Under Which Some Radio-Like Voices Can Just About Be Detected. Somehow The Trendy Accoutrements Fit The Mood Fairly Well Instead Of Sounding Like Jarring Misfires, Though They Might Have Ensured That South Remained A Little Bit Too Idiosyncratic To Maintain His Short-Lived Commercial Success.” - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide more
Don't It Make You Want To Go Home?
New - LP - ST 392
Sealed 1968 Stereo Original With Custom Hype Sticker On Shrink. Clean Cut Out Hole. “Joe South's Second Proper Album Was Perhaps Just A Tad Less Impressive Than The More Well-Known Introspect, If Only Because That Earlier LP Had Included "Games People Play," "Rose Garden," And Some Other Songs That Would Be Among The Singer/Songwriter's Most Enduring. Don't It Make You Want To Go Home? Is A Worthy Follow-Up, However, That Also Adeptly Combines Rootsy Rock, Pop, Country, Soul, Gospel, And Psychedelia Into South's Thoughtful Songs, Which Ooze Both Interior Reflection And Empathetic Concern For The World At Large. The Soulful, Cheering "Walk A Mile In My Shoes" Was The Album's Hit Single, But There Are Other Songs Here Of Similar Quality, Like The Bittersweet "Clock Up On The Wall," The Straight-Ahead Soul Love Song "Shelter," And "Be A Believer," Which Has The Anthemic Exhortatory Chin-Up Feel Typical Of Much Of South's Work Of The Period. It's Definitely An Album Of Its Time, As The Occasional Segues Between Tracks And Trippy Studio Effects Make Clear. Indeed, There's One Downright Experimental Track, "A Million Miles Away," A Nearly Instrumental Gutbucket Psychedelic Blues Groove Under Which Some Radio-Like Voices Can Just About Be Detected. Somehow The Trendy Accoutrements Fit The Mood Fairly Well Instead Of Sounding Like Jarring Misfires, Though They Might Have Ensured That South Remained A Little Bit Too Idiosyncratic To Maintain His Short-Lived Commercial Success.” - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide more
Don't It Make You Want To Go Home?
New - LP - ST 392
Sealed 1968 Green Label With Purple Logo Stereo Original. Clean Cut Out Hole. “Joe South's Second Proper Album Was Perhaps Just A Tad Less Impressive Than The More Well-Known Introspect, If Only Because That Earlier LP Had Included "Games People Play," "Rose Garden," And Some Other Songs That Would Be Among The Singer/Songwriter's Most Enduring. Don't It Make You Want To Go Home? Is A Worthy Follow-Up, However, That Also Adeptly Combines Rootsy Rock, Pop, Country, Soul, Gospel, And Psychedelia Into South's Thoughtful Songs, Which Ooze Both Interior Reflection And Empathetic Concern For The World At Large. The Soulful, Cheering "Walk A Mile In My Shoes" Was The Album's Hit Single, But There Are Other Songs Here Of Similar Quality, Like The Bittersweet "Clock Up On The Wall," The Straight-Ahead Soul Love Song "Shelter," And "Be A Believer," Which Has The Anthemic Exhortatory Chin-Up Feel Typical Of Much Of South's Work Of The Period. It's Definitely An Album Of Its Time, As The Occasional Segues Between Tracks And Trippy Studio Effects Make Clear. Indeed, There's One Downright Experimental Track, "A Million Miles Away," A Nearly Instrumental Gutbucket Psychedelic Blues Groove Under Which Some Radio-Like Voices Can Just About Be Detected. Somehow The Trendy Accoutrements Fit The Mood Fairly Well Instead Of Sounding Like Jarring Misfires, Though They Might Have Ensured That South Remained A Little Bit Too Idiosyncratic To Maintain His Short-Lived Commercial Success.” - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide more
Games People Play
New - LP - ST 235
Sealed 1969 Stereo Original. “To Some Degree, Games People Play Was A Rushed Album, Issued To Capitalize On The Unexpected Hit Single Title Track (Which Had First Been Issued As An LP-Only Cut On South's Previous Long-Player, Introspect). Three Songs That Had Appeared On Introspect ("Games People Play," "Birds Of A Feather," And "These Are Not My People") Were Placed On Games People Play As Well, And Some Of The Other Songs (Like "Untie Me" And "Concrete Jungle") Had Been Recorded By Other Artists As Early As 1962. For All That, However, It Was A Pretty Cracking Good Set Of Country-Soul-Rock, And If It Was Hastily Thrown Together, It Certainly Didn't Show In The Songwriting, Production, Or Performances. South's Sage, Humanistic, And Somewhat Outside-Looking-In View Of The Madding Crowd Came Through Forcefully In "Party People," "These Are Not My People," And "Birds Of A Feather." Wholehearted Romantic Lust And Confusion Laced His Energetic Recastings Of "Untie Me" (First A Hit For The Tymes Back In 1963) And "Hush" (Which Had Just Been A Smash For Deep Purple), As Well As The Respectable Elvis Presley-Meets-Neil Diamond-Styled "Heart's Desire," Which Had The Catchiness Of A Hit Single. The Dabs Of Psychedelia Throughout The Record — Some Electric Guitar Here, Some Weird Echo There (Both At Once On "Hole In Your Soul," The Most Avowedly Strange Track) — Might Have Been Trendy, But Were Nonetheless Effective. Quite A Lot Of Fine Music Not Found On Best-Of Compilations Awaits South Fans Who Have Yet To Discover This Record.” - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide more
Games People Play
New - LP - ST 235
Sealed 1969 Stereo Original. Clean Cut Out Hole. “To Some Degree, Games People Play Was A Rushed Album, Issued To Capitalize On The Unexpected Hit Single Title Track (Which Had First Been Issued As An LP-Only Cut On South's Previous Long-Player, Introspect). Three Songs That Had Appeared On Introspect ("Games People Play," "Birds Of A Feather," And "These Are Not My People") Were Placed On Games People Play As Well, And Some Of The Other Songs (Like "Untie Me" And "Concrete Jungle") Had Been Recorded By Other Artists As Early As 1962. For All That, However, It Was A Pretty Cracking Good Set Of Country-Soul-Rock, And If It Was Hastily Thrown Together, It Certainly Didn't Show In The Songwriting, Production, Or Performances. South's Sage, Humanistic, And Somewhat Outside-Looking-In View Of The Madding Crowd Came Through Forcefully In "Party People," "These Are Not My People," And "Birds Of A Feather." Wholehearted Romantic Lust And Confusion Laced His Energetic Recastings Of "Untie Me" (First A Hit For The Tymes Back In 1963) And "Hush" (Which Had Just Been A Smash For Deep Purple), As Well As The Respectable Elvis Presley-Meets-Neil Diamond-Styled "Heart's Desire," Which Had The Catchiness Of A Hit Single. The Dabs Of Psychedelia Throughout The Record — Some Electric Guitar Here, Some Weird Echo There (Both At Once On "Hole In Your Soul," The Most Avowedly Strange Track) — Might Have Been Trendy, But Were Nonetheless Effective. Quite A Lot Of Fine Music Not Found On Best-Of Compilations Awaits South Fans Who Have Yet To Discover This Record.” - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide more
Greatest Hits
Used - LP - SM 450
Beautiful 1969 Yellow Label Compilation In Shrink. more
Greatest Hits
New - LP - SM 450
Sealed 1969 Original. Hard To Find Still Sealed Copies Of This Title. Small Spot Of Sticker Pull On Front Cover, Hence Reduced Price. more
Introspect
New - LP - ST 108
Sealed 1968 Stereo Original, Two Small Cut-Out Holes. Joe South's Debut LP Was Deleted Almost Too Quickly For Most Listeners To Find It, Much Less Hear It. Now Regarded As A Country-Soul Classic (And, Perhaps, The First Country-Soul Album), Introspect Anticipated The Sound That Elvis Presley And Tony Joe White Would Both Bring To The Fore In The Following Year, Except That It Was Even More Ambitious Than Presley Or White, Mixing And Bending Genres In New And Exciting Ways. Country, Eastern Raga, Gutbucket Soul, And Pop All Brush Up Against Each Other Within The Same Songs, Some Of Which Sound Like Elvis Singing With A Backing Band That Included James Burton And Ravi Shankar. And Thanks To South's Use Of Various Electronic Devices In Association With The Considerable Virtuosity In The Playing, And His Exceptional Singing, This Is Still A Bracing Album Four Decades Later. more
Introspect
New - LP - ST 108
Sealed 1968 Stereo Original, Clean Cut Out Hole. Joe South's Debut LP Was Deleted Almost Too Quickly For Most Listeners To Find It, Much Less Hear It. Now Regarded As A Country-Soul Classic (And, Perhaps, The First Country-Soul Album), Introspect Anticipated The Sound That Elvis Presley And Tony Joe White Would Both Bring To The Fore In The Following Year, Except That It Was Even More Ambitious Than Presley Or White, Mixing And Bending Genres In New And Exciting Ways. Country, Eastern Raga, Gutbucket Soul, And Pop All Brush Up Against Each Other Within The Same Songs, Some Of Which Sound Like Elvis Singing With A Backing Band That Included James Burton And Ravi Shankar. And Thanks To South's Use Of Various Electronic Devices In Association With The Considerable Virtuosity In The Playing, And His Exceptional Singing, This Is Still A Bracing Album Four Decades Later. more
Introspect
New - LP - ST 108
Sealed 2017 Stereo Reissue As Part Of Their Reissues Celebrating 75 Years Of Captiol Records. Joe South's Debut LP Was Deleted Almost Too Quickly For Most Listeners To Find It, Much Less Hear It. Now Regarded As A Country-Soul Classic (And, Perhaps, The First Country-Soul Album), Introspect Anticipated The Sound That Elvis Presley And Tony Joe White Would Both Bring To The Fore In The Following Year, Except That It Was Even More Ambitious Than Presley Or White, Mixing And Bending Genres In New And Exciting Ways. Country, Eastern Raga, Gutbucket Soul, And Pop All Brush Up Against Each Other Within The Same Songs, Some Of Which Sound Like Elvis Singing With A Backing Band That Included James Burton And Ravi Shankar. And Thanks To South's Use Of Various Electronic Devices In Association With The Considerable Virtuosity In The Playing, And His Exceptional Singing, This Is Still A Bracing Album Four Decades Later. more
Joe South
New - LP - ST 845
Sealed 1971 Original. Pristine Copy. more
Joe South Story
New - LP - MSG 1100
Sealed 1971 Original. Decent Rubbing On Three Corners, Several Shrink Tears. more
Midnight Rainbows
New - LP - ILPS 9328
Sealed 1975 Original. Shrink Is Partially Torn Along The Mouth But Still Encases The Vinyl. more
So The Seeds Are Growing
New - LP - ST-637
Sealed 1971 Original. Small Cut Out Hole. Unable To Confirm Exact Pressing. “……Wah-Wah Fuzz Guitars, Thick Gauzy Strings, And Tight Funk Rhythms -- Rhythms That Swing Harder And Heavier Than South’s Earlier Records. Its Period Charms Are Considerable And Are One Of The Primary Appeals Of So The Seeds Are Growing -- Particularly On The Over The Top “Revolution Of Love,” Which Piles On Blues Slide Guitar, Gospel Choruses, Soul Horns, Electric Sitars, And Hippie Credos Into A Four-Minute Time Capsule -- Although It Does Possess A Couple Of Overlooked South Compositions In Its Cinematic Title Track And The Defiant R&B Swing Of “No Fence Around Me,” All Of Which Are Enough To Make This An Album Worth Seeking Out.” AMG - Stephen Thomas Erlewine. more
Walkin' Shoes
New - LP - MSG 1100
Sealed 1970 Reissue. Originally Released As The Joe South Story. more

181874 Items in DB

- VINYL RECORDS

SEARCH DATABASE
BY PERFORMER

A B C D E F
G H I J K L
M N O P Q R
S T U V W X
Y Z        
0 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9    

SEARCH DATABASE
BY GENRE

- Accessory
- Bluegrass
- Blues
- Broadway
- Cajun
- Choral
- Christmas
- Classical
- Comedy
- Country
- Disco
- Electronic
- Flamenco
- Folk
- Funk
- Gospel
- Heavy Metal
- Hip Hop
- Indian
- Jazz
- Musical
- New Age
- Opera
- Pop
- Prog
- Psych
- Punk
- Rap
- Reggae
- Rockabilly
- Soul
- Sound Effects
- Soundtrack
- Spoken Word
- Test - LP
- World