This is but a fraction of the catalogue we offer.
Plenty more where they came from:

Can’t take my eyes off you……………………………Andy Williams
Le Freak…………………………………………………Chic
Rescue Me………………………………………………...Fontella Bass Respect………………………………………………… Aretha Franklin
Knock on wood…………………………………………Wilson Pickett
Dancing in the streets……………………………………Martha & the Vandellas
Venus……………………………………………………Shocking Blue
I want you back…………………………………………Jackson 5
River deep mountain high………………………………Ike & Tina Turner
Lady Marmalade…………………………………………La Belle
We are family……………………………………………Sister Sledge
Son of a preacher man……………………………………Dusty Springfield
Piece of my heart…………………………………………Erma Franklin
Proud Mary………………………………………………Ike & Tina Turner
I feel good……………………………………………… James Brown
Superstition………………………………………………Stevie Wonder
Can’t stand losing you……………………………………The Police
Echo beach……………………………………………Martha & the Muffins
I will survive……………………………………………Cake / Gloria Gaynor
Jumping Jack Flash……………………………………… The Rolling Stones
Crazy…………………………………………………… Gnarles Barkley
Groove is in the heart……………………………………Dee-lite
Shout……………………………………………………Lulu
Black horse & cherry tree……………………………… Kt Tunstall
Love shack………………………………………………B-52s
Fire………………………………………………………Jimi Hendrix Exp
Ain’t nobody………………………………………………Rufus & Chaka Khan
I love rock’n’roll…………………………………………Joan Jett
Masterblaster………………………………………………Stevie Wonder
Fever……………………………………………………… Peggy Lee
Sexy back…………………………………………………Justin Timberlake
Family affair………………………………………………Mary J Blige
Seven nation army…………………………………………The White Stripes
Dub be good to me…………………………………………Beat International
Hey ya………………………………………………………Outkast
Daytripper…………………………………………………The Beatles


 

     
 

When Atlantic Records session guitarist Steve Cropper was told that a little known singer named Wilson Pickett was coming in to the Memphis studio to record, he went to the nearest record shop and began searching through the record bins, looking for something Pickett had done. “I found two or three things...some spiritual things that he had sung lead on,” Cropper says. Cropper noticed that at the end of each song, Wilson would launch into an improvised rap about 'the midnight hour’. “In every song in the fade-out, he’d go into this ritual, ‘I’m going to wait till the midnight hour, oh in the midnight hour,’ and he’d start preaching this ‘midnight hour’ thing, and I said ‘That’s it!’ When Wilson and Cropper got together, the phrase ‘In the Midnight Hour’ was the first one that came up.

It took just one hour to write the soul/rock classic that would established Wilson Pickett as a star. "In The Midnight Hour" reached the top of the R&B chart and hit #21 on the pop chart in 1965. The song has since became a soul standard... even Wolfman Jack would adopt it as his theme song.
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