donderdag 23 oktober 2025

A funky plea for peace by DeRobert & The Half-Truths

DeRobert & The Half-Truths
Peace On Earth / Peace On Earth (Instrumental)
(Ged Soul Records, GED-027, US, 2024)
When I think of Nashville, Tennessee, country music is the first thing that comes to mind. After all, the city is the world capital of country music. Every artist who wants a career in country music seems to have to move there to stand a chance of success. I have never been to Nashville, but I imagine you'd hear country music everywhere. Well, almost everywhere. Some people prefer other styles of music. People like Nick DeVan and Dave Singleton, for example. DeVan and Singleton prefer soul and funk. They especially like soul from the time when Bakersfield, California, not Nashville, had the biggest country stars. There were more people like DeVan and Singleton in Nashville. Some of them even played in bands. These bands like to record their music and share it with the world. For that, you need a record label. So, in 2007, Singleton and DeVan decided to start a label to release their own music and that of their friends' bands. They called their label G.E.D. Soul, and their mission was, in their own words: "Put out as much soulful music as humanly possible".

The first record released on the label was by their own project, The Grip, and came out on June 8, 2008. It was a 45 with two mostly instrumental tracks: 'Tennessee Strut' and 'Fancy Roll The classic soul and funk format is the 45 rpm 7" record, which is also what G.E.D. Soul focused on in the label's early years. The label's releases in this format reflected traditional soul and funk, as did the way DeVan and Singleton recorded the music they released on their label at their own "Poor Man Studios". They described their approach as "using a similar technical and aesthetic approach that celebrates the very best qualities of what made soul music great all those years ago" The 45s sounded like long-lost gems from the 1960s or early 1970s. The label designs of the 45s were inspired by obscure soul and funk labels from the '60s and '70s, and each new 45 came with a new design.

The label's second 7" was released in 2009 by a band called DeRobert & The Half-Truths. DeRobert Adams was the lead singer and the namesake of the group. Adams grew up in Covington, a small suburb of Memphis, where he sang in the church choir. In 2000, at age 19, he moved to Murfreesboro, a small university town southeast of Nashville, to attend Middle Tennessee State University. There, he met DeVan and Singleton, and the three men formed DeRobert & The Half-Truths. They were joined by experienced musicians from the Nashville soul and funk scene. The group released several 45s, played gigs, and, in 2010, G.E.D. Soul released the group’s first album, 'Soul In A Digital World'.

In 2012, G.E.D. Soul released the 'Super Soul Christmas EP', a five-song, 33-rpm, 7-inch record featuring Christmas songs by the five bands that were part of G.E.D. at the time: DeRobert & The Half-Truths, The Coolin' System, Sky Hi, Magic In Threes, and A.J. & The Jiggawatts. DeRobert & The Half-Truths opened the EP with 'Christmas Kisses', a mid-tempo soul song in which Adams explained that the only thing he wanted for Christmas was love. The Coolin' System and Magic In Threes performed instrumental versions of two Christmas classics, while the other two bands offered soulful originals. The EP was limited to 300 hand-numbered copies and came in a stylish, silkscreened sleeve.



DeRobert & The Half-Truths released their second album, 'I'm Trying', in 2014. G.E.D. Soul became less active after 2014, with no new releases between 2017 and 2020. In 2021, the label returned to its roots by releasing its first 45 in seven years, again by DeRobert & The Half-Truths, who were still active. In November 2024, G.E.D. Soul released its second Christmas record, the 45 'Peace On Earth', featuring the second Christmas song recorded by DeRobert & The Half-Truths. The group's line-up for the recording of 'Peace On Earth' consisted of DeRobert Adams on vocals and Nick DeVan, who also served as the engineer and producer for the record, handling everthing else: drums, bass, guitar, Rhodes organ, and percussion. They were joined by a small horn section comprising Roy Leierzapf and Joe Jordan on trumpet and Dave Eckman on alto saxophone. Unlike the group’s first Christmas song, the groove-laden, horn-heavy 'Peace On Earth' was clearly aimed at the dance floor. The song's lyrics mirrored the shifting times: the longing for Christmas kisses had given way to a more significant yearning, as expressed in the song's lyrics: "This Christmas / No gifts / Let's just give the gift / Of peace on Earth". The label sums it up best: "Perfect for those who'd rather trade in Christmas bells for blasting trumpets and a heartfelt plea for world peace. This one's pure funky goodness”. So there are no Christmas bells on 'Peace On Earth', nor gifts, trees, lights, toys, or sales — "just peace / peace on Earth". Unfortunately, one year later, we all still have to ask the same question: "Can we get some peace on Earth / Peace on Earth!".

The single is still available through the bandcamp of G.E.D. Soul Records.

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