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Every second counts with The Middle 3 in this obscure 60s soul vinyl track, brought to you via ai music magic. Part of Fool's Golden Oldies Vol. 5 - available now: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/6d8Mfe... Apple Music: / fools-golden-oldies-volume-5 Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/albums/B0FLJ... Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/us/album/80074... Bandcamp: https://almostvinyl.bandcamp.com/music Tensions ran high in late 1968 and early 1969 as The Middle 3 came back into the studio and set out to finish the decade strong with long-time friend and producer Quarter Brown. The Lewis brothers, not exactly known for their patience, grew agitated as Brown was continuously late or absent for entire sessions, turning a month-long processes into a year-long ordeal. “Quarter was spread thin and stretched wide,” said Gleeful Dreamer Kenny Eddington, “Linda Ferrari got locked up. Julius Orange was almost crushed in a London double-decker bus accident but luckily The Pulp were safely up top. And I ain’t even gonna touch on that crazy Jim Jecko and his band The Floors. But the thing that got all the media attention was our man Johnny Lee Tuppard fightin’ that kid down south. Court ordered him to write a song for the children and go on an apology tour. And Johnny Lee wouldn’t record anything without Quarter since they'd won that brawl backstage at the Grammys.” “It got hot,” Wendel Lewis told Rolling Stone. “Months in, I remember sittin’ around all day when in strolls Quarter like nothin’ happened. We started screamin’ back and forth – the kind of deep, personal sh*t you say to someone you love who pissed you the f*ck off. Quarter left, then we tried to bring in some guy from New York but he quit. Rumor got around it was a racial thing, but he just didn’t want to touch the console or any of the equipment once he found out Quarter only ever wore a vest.” Eventually The Middle 3 returned to the road and scrapped the sessions, giving all parties the chance to cool down. “We thought the tapes got trashed, but a few years later Quarter sent us the demos on our kid’s birthday. He’d salvaged what he could of the audio. We love that sweaty man to death.” “The brothers had attitude, but they were stand-up folks,” Eddington said in a SDR Records documentary. “They played a date in Texas and asked Johnny Lee if he needed help with that child – but he said he’d take care of it himself eventually and bought ‘em a round. Quarter really knew how to bring folks from all walks of life together. And you could say whatever the f*ck you wanted on tape, so he was in high demand.” ***All lyrics for this - and all other content on the channel - written by Almost Vinyl More Middle 3: The Customer Is Always F**kin' Wrong - • The Customer Is Always F**kin' Wrong (obsc... How F**ked Would You Be If I Quit Right Now? - • How F**ked Would You Be If I Quit Right No... Johnny Lee Tuppard: I Fought A Child - • I Fought A Child (Live at Frontera, 1969) ... Quarter Brown: Callin' In Sick (Of Your Sh*t) - • Callin' In Sick (Of Your Sh*t) Just A Vest (No Shirt, No Pants, No Socks) - • Just A Vest (No Shirt, No Pants, No Socks) #aimusic #60s #soulmusic #vinyl