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David Edward Godin (21 June 1936 – 15 October 2004) was an English fan of American soul music, who made a major contribution internationally in spreading awareness and understanding of the genre, and by extension African-American culture.

Biography[edit]

Deep Soul Treasures Raritan Township

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Raritan

Born in Peckham, London, the son of a milkman,[1] Dave Godin spent his early childhood in Peckham before bombing forced the family to move to Bexleyheath, Kent, where he won a scholarship to Dartford Grammar School. Godin began collecting American R&B records when at school, where he encouraged the younger Mick Jagger's interest in black American music. He said:[2] '..It was at Dartford Grammar School that I met Mick Jagger and introduced him to black music, I'm ashamed to say. It's ironic that as a result of meeting me he's where he is today.' Godin played a minor role in the early jam sessions out of which the Rolling Stones emerged, but resented Jagger for what he saw as the Stones' exploitation of black music.[3]

After working at an advertising agency, and as a hospital porter in place of National Service (he was a conscientious objector),[3] Godin founded the Tamla Motown Appreciation Society, and in time was recruited by Berry Gordy to become Motown's consultant in the UK, setting up its distribution through EMI. At a recording of Ready Steady Go! in 1964, Jagger asked Godin to introduce him to Marvin Gaye. 'I told him to fuck off and introduce himself', Godin recalled.[3]

In 1967 he founded Soul City, a record shop which in 1967 developed into a record label on which he released such then-obscure soul classics as 'Go Now' by Bessie Banks, with colleague David Nathan and friend Robert Blackmore. It was in their shop that Godin coined the term 'northern soul',[4] a description that he would popularise through his work as a music journalist. In a 2002 interview with Chris Hunt of Mojo, he explained that he had first come up with the term in 1968 as a sales reference to help staff in his shop differentiate the more modern funkier sounds from the smoother, Motown-influenced soul of a few years earlier:

'I had started to notice that northern football fans who were in London to follow their team were coming into the store to buy records, but they weren't interested in the latest developments in the black American chart. I devised the name as a shorthand sales term. It was just to say ‘if you've got customers from the north, don't waste time playing them records currently in the US black chart, just play them what they like – ‘Northern Soul'.'[5]

In his career he also coined the term Deep Soul and he promoted the interests of a large number of American musicians whose work had fallen out of favour in their home country.

His second career was in cinema exhibition. Having studied art, design and film course at Sheffield Polytechnic, he became a senior film officer for the British Film Institute[4] and helped found and was the manager of the Anvil Cinema, Sheffield (1983–90), the only cinema in the UK to be funded by a local authority.

In the mid 1990s he started to compile a series of CDs of rare (and some not so rare) recordings – Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures – for Ace Records, which featured such artists as Loretta Williams, Eddie and Ernie, Jaibi, Ruby Johnson and Jimmy and Louise Tig. The albums were greeted with universal critical acclaim, and Godin described the series as the proudest achievement of his life.

Godin, a vegan, was an advocate of animal rights and Esperanto. He was also known for his involvement in anarchist and anti-capitalist organisations, including Freedom Newspaper and Class War. He was the only atheist in his local pro-life organisation. Towards the end of his life he developed an interest in Jainism. He died in Rotherham in 2004, aged 68.

Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures : Taken from the Vaults[edit]

Volume 1[edit]

1.The Knight Brothers – I'm Never Gonna Live It Down 2.Timmy Willis – Easy As Saying 1 2 3 3.Zerben R Hicks & the Dynamics – Lights Out 4.Irma Thomas – Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) 5.Jean Wells – Have A Little Mercy 6.Dori Grayson – Try Love 7.Brendetta Davis – I Can't Make It Without Him 8.Kenny Carter – Showdown 9.Larry Banks – I'm Not The One 10.Jimmy Holiday – The Turning Point 11.The Incredibles – Standing Here Crying 12.The Just Brothers – She Broke His Heart 13.The Untouchables – You're On Top 14.Reuben Bell & the Casanovas – It's Not That Easy 15.Van & Titus – Cry Baby Cry 16.Jean Stanback – I Still Love You 17.Bessie Banks – Try To Leave Me If You Can (I Bet You Can't Do It) 18.Raw Spitt – Songs To Sing 19.Lee Moses – How Much Longer (Must I Wait) 20.Billy Young – Nothing's Too Much (Nothing's Too Good) 21.Sam & Bill – I Feel Like Crying 22.Eddie & Ernie – I'm Goin' For Myself 23.The Knight Brothers – Tried So Hard To Please Her 24.Pearlean Gray & the Passengers – Love of My Man 25.Jaibi – You Got Me

Volume 2[edit]

1.Doris Duke – How Was I To Know You Cared 2.Eddie Holman – I'm Not Going To Give Up3.The Soul Children – The Sweeter He Is4.Tony Owens – I Don't Want Nobody But My Baby 5.Bobby Moore & the Formosts – It Was A Lie 6.Jimmy & Louise Tig and Company – A Love That Never Grows Cold7.Ben E. King – It's All Over 8.Nat Phillips – I'm Sorry I Hurt You 9.Wendy Rene – What Will Tomorrow Bring10.Arthur Conley – Let Nothing Separate Us 11.Irma Thomas – These Four Walls 12.Johnny Adams – If I Could See You One More Time 13.Ruby Johnson – I'll Run Your Hurt Away14.The Premiers – Make It Me 15.Eddie Giles – Losing Boy 16.Doris Allen – A Shell of a Woman 17.Otis Redding – Just One More Day 18.Bessie Banks – Go Now 19.George Perkins & the Silver Stars – Cryin' In The Streets 20.Big John Hamilton – How Much Can A Man Take 21.Barbara West – Anyone But You 22.Carla Thomas – Stop! Look What You're Doing 23.Toussaint McCall – Nothing Takes The Place Of You 24.Eddie & Ernie – Hiding in Shadows 25.Lisa Richards – Let's Take A Chance

Volume 3[edit]

1.Toussaint McCall – I'm Undecided 2.Baby Washington – Breakfast in Bed 3.Dee Clark – In These Very Tender Moments 4.Jean Plum – Look at the Boy 5.James Brown – Lost Someone 6.Eddie & Ernie – Thanks For Yesterday 7.Bessie Banks – It Sounds Like My Baby 8.Bobby Womack – Baby I Can't Stand It 9.Etta James – I'd Rather Go Blind10.Syl Johnson – Is It Because I'm Black 11.Maxine Brown – All in My Mind 12.Robert Ramsey – Like It Stands 13.Irma Thomas – Wish Someone Would Care 14.Ray Gant & the Arabian Knights – Don't Leave Me Baby 15.Carla Thomas – I Can't Take It 16.J R Bailey – Too Far Gone To Turn Around 17.Bettye LaVette – Let Me Down Easy 18.Bobby Bland – I'm Too Far Gone To Turn Around 19.Barbara & the Browns – I Don't Want To Have To Wait 20.The Enchanters – I Paid for the Party 21.Rozetta Johnson – Who Are You Gonna Love (Your Woman Or Your Wife) 22.Rick James & Friend – Ebony Eyes 23.Doris Duke- He's Gone24.The Impressions – My Deceiving Heart 25.Loretta Williams – I'm Missing You

Volume 4[edit]

1.The Knight Brothers – Temptation 'Bout To Get Me 2.Eddie & Ernie – I Believe She Will 3.Matilda Jones – I've Been Wrong Too Long 4.Bobby Bland – I Pity The Fool 5.Chuck Edwards – I Need You 6.Ruby Andrews – Just Loving You 7.Clarence Carter – Slip Away 8.Black Velvet – Is It Me You Really Love 9.Paul Kelly – The Day After Forever 10.Gladys Knight & the Pips – Giving Up 11.Arthur Conley – I'm A Lonely Stranger 12.Jackie Lee – I Love You 13.The Miracles – The Tracks of My Tears 14.Roosevelt Matthews – You Got Me Diggin' You 15.Doris Duke – I Don't Care Anymore 16.Lawrence & Jaibi – You Make Me Feel Good17.Barbara Brown – Can't Find No Happiness 18.Garnet Mimms – My Baby 19.The Webs – It's So Hard To Break A Habit 20.Irma Thomas – Time Is on My Side 21.Tony Owens – This Heart Can't Take No More 22.Jaibi – It Was Like A Nightmare23.Roy Hamilton – The Dark End of the Street 24.Jimmy Robins – I Made It Over 25.Bob & Earl – Don't Ever Leave Me

Volume 5[edit]

1. The Soul City – 'Who Knows'2. Ronnie Taylor – 'Without Love'3. Big Maybelle – 'Don't Pass Me By' 4. Helena Ferguson – 'Where Is The Party'5. Carolyn Sullivan – 'Dead!'6. Esther Phillips – 'Home Is Where The Hatred Is'7.The Masqueraders – 'I Ain't Got To Love Nobody Else'8.Mark IV – 'I'll Be Right There (To Make Love To You)'9.Kenny Carter – 'I'm Not The One'10.The Emotions – 'Somebody New'11.Barbara Lynn – '(Until Then) I'll Suffer'12.Dee Dee Warwick – 'Foolish Fool'13.George Jackson – 'My Desires Are Getting The Best Of Me'14.James Carr – 'These Ain't Raindrops'15.Eddie & Ernie – 'Standing at the Crossroads'16.Betty Harris – 'Can't Last Much Longer'17.Gladys Knight & The Pips – 'Lovers Always Forgive'18.The Chantels – 'Every Night (I Pray)'19.Judy White – 'Satisfaction Guaranteed'20.Jerry Washington – 'Right Here Is Where You Belong'21.Lattimore Brown – 'I Will'22.René Bailey – 'It's Too Late (For Tears)'23.Zilla Mayes – 'All I Want Is You'24.Linda Jones – 'What Can I Do (Without You)'25.Z.Z. Hill – 'Nothing Can Change The Love I Have For You'

Raritan

References[edit]

  1. ^Richard Williams Obituary: Dave Godin, The Guardian, 20 October 2004
  2. ^'Jon Savage: interview with Dave Godin, February 1995'. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2013.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ abcPhil Johnson Obituary: Dave Godin, The Independent, 20 October 2004]
  4. ^ abObituary: Dave Godin, The Daily Telegraph, 28 October 2004
  5. ^For Dancers Only by Chris Hunt, Mojo [2002]

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dave_Godin&oldid=1005845446'

2016 awardees, left to right. Front row: Walter Lane and Tara Kenyon of Somerset County Planning Division; Jim Waltman and Kate Hutelmyer of Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association; Bill Schultz, Raritan Riverkeeper; Rosana Da Silva and Chris Obropta of Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program; Julia Somers of the Highlands Coalition; Larry Jacobs and Beth Davisson; and Eric Zwerling. Second row: Cody Obropta, Maithreyi Thukaram, Dominick Cardella, Tyler Obropta, Adam Cucchiara, Kaylene Campbell and Tekla Pontius-Courtney with Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program. Third row: Brittany Musolino, Erin Stretz and Mike Pisauro of Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association; Debbie Mans; Bill Kibler; and Michael Catania. Not shown: Candace Ashmun. Photo credit: Nick Romanenko.

Extension specialist Chris Obropta and the Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program Team, along with director of the Rutgers Noise Technical Assistance Center Eric Zwerling—in his capacity as a Readington Township Board of Education member and chairperson of the Green Committee—were among eight individuals and organizations to receive 2016 Sustainable Raritan River Awards at the 8th Annual Sustainable Raritan Conference and Awards Ceremony held at Rutgers on June 10.

'The purpose of these awards is to recognize some of the more creative and impressive accomplishments by genuine leaders throughout the Raritan Watershed,' said Michael Catania, executive director of Duke Farms Foundation and a member of the Sustainable Raritan Awards Committee.

Each year at its Annual Conference, the Sustainable Raritan River Collaborative and the Sustainable Raritan River Initiative give awards to recognize outstanding achievement in efforts to revitalize, restore and protect the Raritan resources and promote the area as a premiere place to live, work and raise a family.

Rutgers University launched the Sustainable Raritan River Initiative in 2009 to bring together concerned scientists, environmentalists, engineers, businesses, community leaders and governmental entities to craft an agenda that meets the goals of the U.S. Clean Water Act to restore and preserve New Jersey's Raritan River, its tributaries and its bay. The Initiative, a joint program of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy and the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, partners with other Rutgers schools, centers and programs to ensure the best contributions from the sciences, planning and policy.

The Sustainable Raritan Awards were established in 2010 to promote innovation and energize local efforts to restore and protect the rivers, streams and habitat of the Raritan River and Bay. There were originally six categories of awards: Government Innovation, Leadership, Public Access, Public Education, Remediation and Redevelopment, and Stewardship. Due to the breadth of nominees, additional awards have been added over the years. The awards have highlighted extraordinary accomplishments and inspired other groups across the watershed to achieve comparable levels of excellence; 2016 was no exception.

Debbie Mans, Baykeeper and Executive Director of the NY/NJ Baykeeper – also a member of the Awards Committee – noted, 'Given the level of dedication and range of activities by so many people this past year, it was both a pleasure and a challenge to select winners.'

This year's recipients and a description of their achievements are as follows:

Government Innovation Award – Somerset County Green Leadership Hub. The mission of the Green Leadership Hub, which is the first of its kind and a pilot program being undertaken in cooperation with Sustainable Jersey, is to serve as facilitator intermediary, educator and connector for municipalities that are in the process of obtaining or renewing Sustainable Jersey certification. The Hub has already: (1) formed an expert Steering Committee to provide advice to municipal officials and Green Teams; (2) created inventories of resources in the government, corporate and non-profit sectors; (3) hosted a number of forums and networking events where Green Team members can compare notes and obtain advice from experts; and (4) launched the Hub Assistance Program, which is designed to provide assistance to municipalities with specific questions and tasks.

Leadership Award – Bill Schultz, Raritan Riverkeeper. Bill Schultz provides key leadership along the length of the Raritan River, acting as the 'voice' for the waterbody in his role as Raritan Riverkeeper. Schultz works with multiple communities and stakeholders along the River, providing technical expertise, on-the-ground assistance, and pollution enforcement support.

Deep

Images For Deep Soul Treasures Raritan

Raritan Riverkeeper advocates for unrestricted access to the River's shores for boating, swimming, fishing and other recreational activities; a clean River for the health of the community and surrounding habitats; and for the remediation of Superfund and other toxic sites along the River. Schultz has been the Raritan Riverkeeper for over a decade.

See Full List On Allmusic.com

Leadership Award – Candace Ashmun. Candy Ashmun is widely recognized as, simply, a state treasure. She has provided leadership for the past five decades here in the Raritan watershed, where she resides, as well as statewide, on a wide array of environmental and planning issues. Her leadership in the original creation and early years of the Association of New Jersey Environmental Commissions has helped create several generations of local environmental leaders, while her service on the Pinelands Commission and the State Planning Commission have made New Jersey a national leader in regional planning. And, last but not least, Ashmun has served as a mentor to the leaders of many statewide and local non-profit organizations. Through all of these actions, Ashmun has personified the very best of leadership, while creating a genuine legacy which will benefit both the current generation as well as many future generations.

Public Education Award – Dr. Chris Obropta and the Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program Team. Chris Obropta and the Water Resources Program Team are responsible for the innovative and ambitious work on the project, 'Incorporating Green Infrastructure Resiliency in the Raritan River Basin'. This project is laying the foundation to reduce future flooding impacts from the impervious surfaces in the Raritan River Basin, improve water quality, enhance wildlife habitat, and increase resiliency. The team has created impervious cover assessments, impervious cover reduction action plans, web pages, and completed designs for demonstration projects for 54 municipalities in the Raritan River Basin.

Obropta and his team have produced an impervious cover reduction 'how-to' manual in the form of two e‑learning tools and the 'Green Infrastructure Guidance Manual for New Jersey'. Finally, the team hosted a conference, Fixing Flooding: One Community at a Time, Innovative Solutions Using Green Infrastructure, this past year in Sayreville, NJ. To learn more, please visit: www.water.rutgers.edu.

Public Education Award – Eric Zwerling, Readington Township Board of Education Member and Chairperson of the Green Committee. As a member of the Readington Township Board of Education and Chairperson of the Green Team, Eric Zwerling has shown a deep devotion to the environment and sustainability. Zwerling's accomplishments include providing leadership and support in drafting the school district's Energy Conservation Policy and selection of an Energy Efficiency Coordinator to promote environmental education, sustainable practice and energy conservation. Most recently, Zwerling served as the primary district evaluator on a solar energy project, which will bring solar panels to three of the district's four school buildings. He is Director of the Rutgers Noise Technical Assistance Center in the Department of Environmental Sciences.

Sustainability Award – Stony Brook Millstone Watershed Association's Watershed Center for Environmental Advocacy, Science and Education. Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association's Watershed Center for Environmental Advocacy, Science and Education, completed in 2015, facilitates a new organizational strategy and program to encourage understanding and replication of the 'best practices' demonstrated there. The LEED-Platinum Center is located on a previously developed site. The landscape design interprets the ecological resources of the Stony Brook Millstone Watershed focusing on water and native plantings and emphasizes the organization's informality while providing a gateway to the site. The Center is a fine example of Stony Brook Millstone Watershed Association's leadership role in environmental protection and provides a compelling platform from which the organization can advance its mission.

Stewardship Award – Beth Davisson and Larry Jacobs. Beth Davisson and Larry Jacobs demonstrated vital leadership and dogged determination in the preservation of the 172 acre Lana Lobell Farm in Bedminster Township. This preservation effort took more than ten years of planning and negotiations to complete and included federal, state, county, municipal, and non-profit partners and funding sources. The preservation of Lana Lobell Farm helps secure important local and regional conservation objectives. The project will help protect water quality in the Lamington River, sustain the rural character of western Somerset County, and preserve a working farm that has a significant place in New Jersey's rich equine history.

Non-Profit Innovation Award – New Jersey Highlands Coalition's Small Grants Program. The New Jersey Highlands Coalition's Small Grants Program awards a number of grants to assist grassroots organizations working on projects located within the New Jersey Highlands or associated with protecting New Jersey Highlands environmental, cultural, and historic resources, including within the Raritan River's watershed, whose headwaters rise in the New Jersey Highlands. The Highlands Coalition has funded grants every year since its inception in 2007. These grants have successfully supported a variety of organizations throughout the Raritan Highlands region, including in Roxbury, Bedminster, and Mine Hill, among others. This program has been an essential element in the success of many grassroots organizations.

Deep Soul Treasures Raritan

Born in Peckham, London, the son of a milkman,[1] Dave Godin spent his early childhood in Peckham before bombing forced the family to move to Bexleyheath, Kent, where he won a scholarship to Dartford Grammar School. Godin began collecting American R&B records when at school, where he encouraged the younger Mick Jagger's interest in black American music. He said:[2] '..It was at Dartford Grammar School that I met Mick Jagger and introduced him to black music, I'm ashamed to say. It's ironic that as a result of meeting me he's where he is today.' Godin played a minor role in the early jam sessions out of which the Rolling Stones emerged, but resented Jagger for what he saw as the Stones' exploitation of black music.[3]

After working at an advertising agency, and as a hospital porter in place of National Service (he was a conscientious objector),[3] Godin founded the Tamla Motown Appreciation Society, and in time was recruited by Berry Gordy to become Motown's consultant in the UK, setting up its distribution through EMI. At a recording of Ready Steady Go! in 1964, Jagger asked Godin to introduce him to Marvin Gaye. 'I told him to fuck off and introduce himself', Godin recalled.[3]

In 1967 he founded Soul City, a record shop which in 1967 developed into a record label on which he released such then-obscure soul classics as 'Go Now' by Bessie Banks, with colleague David Nathan and friend Robert Blackmore. It was in their shop that Godin coined the term 'northern soul',[4] a description that he would popularise through his work as a music journalist. In a 2002 interview with Chris Hunt of Mojo, he explained that he had first come up with the term in 1968 as a sales reference to help staff in his shop differentiate the more modern funkier sounds from the smoother, Motown-influenced soul of a few years earlier:

'I had started to notice that northern football fans who were in London to follow their team were coming into the store to buy records, but they weren't interested in the latest developments in the black American chart. I devised the name as a shorthand sales term. It was just to say ‘if you've got customers from the north, don't waste time playing them records currently in the US black chart, just play them what they like – ‘Northern Soul'.'[5]

In his career he also coined the term Deep Soul and he promoted the interests of a large number of American musicians whose work had fallen out of favour in their home country.

His second career was in cinema exhibition. Having studied art, design and film course at Sheffield Polytechnic, he became a senior film officer for the British Film Institute[4] and helped found and was the manager of the Anvil Cinema, Sheffield (1983–90), the only cinema in the UK to be funded by a local authority.

In the mid 1990s he started to compile a series of CDs of rare (and some not so rare) recordings – Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures – for Ace Records, which featured such artists as Loretta Williams, Eddie and Ernie, Jaibi, Ruby Johnson and Jimmy and Louise Tig. The albums were greeted with universal critical acclaim, and Godin described the series as the proudest achievement of his life.

Godin, a vegan, was an advocate of animal rights and Esperanto. He was also known for his involvement in anarchist and anti-capitalist organisations, including Freedom Newspaper and Class War. He was the only atheist in his local pro-life organisation. Towards the end of his life he developed an interest in Jainism. He died in Rotherham in 2004, aged 68.

Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures : Taken from the Vaults[edit]

Volume 1[edit]

1.The Knight Brothers – I'm Never Gonna Live It Down 2.Timmy Willis – Easy As Saying 1 2 3 3.Zerben R Hicks & the Dynamics – Lights Out 4.Irma Thomas – Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) 5.Jean Wells – Have A Little Mercy 6.Dori Grayson – Try Love 7.Brendetta Davis – I Can't Make It Without Him 8.Kenny Carter – Showdown 9.Larry Banks – I'm Not The One 10.Jimmy Holiday – The Turning Point 11.The Incredibles – Standing Here Crying 12.The Just Brothers – She Broke His Heart 13.The Untouchables – You're On Top 14.Reuben Bell & the Casanovas – It's Not That Easy 15.Van & Titus – Cry Baby Cry 16.Jean Stanback – I Still Love You 17.Bessie Banks – Try To Leave Me If You Can (I Bet You Can't Do It) 18.Raw Spitt – Songs To Sing 19.Lee Moses – How Much Longer (Must I Wait) 20.Billy Young – Nothing's Too Much (Nothing's Too Good) 21.Sam & Bill – I Feel Like Crying 22.Eddie & Ernie – I'm Goin' For Myself 23.The Knight Brothers – Tried So Hard To Please Her 24.Pearlean Gray & the Passengers – Love of My Man 25.Jaibi – You Got Me

Volume 2[edit]

1.Doris Duke – How Was I To Know You Cared 2.Eddie Holman – I'm Not Going To Give Up3.The Soul Children – The Sweeter He Is4.Tony Owens – I Don't Want Nobody But My Baby 5.Bobby Moore & the Formosts – It Was A Lie 6.Jimmy & Louise Tig and Company – A Love That Never Grows Cold7.Ben E. King – It's All Over 8.Nat Phillips – I'm Sorry I Hurt You 9.Wendy Rene – What Will Tomorrow Bring10.Arthur Conley – Let Nothing Separate Us 11.Irma Thomas – These Four Walls 12.Johnny Adams – If I Could See You One More Time 13.Ruby Johnson – I'll Run Your Hurt Away14.The Premiers – Make It Me 15.Eddie Giles – Losing Boy 16.Doris Allen – A Shell of a Woman 17.Otis Redding – Just One More Day 18.Bessie Banks – Go Now 19.George Perkins & the Silver Stars – Cryin' In The Streets 20.Big John Hamilton – How Much Can A Man Take 21.Barbara West – Anyone But You 22.Carla Thomas – Stop! Look What You're Doing 23.Toussaint McCall – Nothing Takes The Place Of You 24.Eddie & Ernie – Hiding in Shadows 25.Lisa Richards – Let's Take A Chance

Volume 3[edit]

1.Toussaint McCall – I'm Undecided 2.Baby Washington – Breakfast in Bed 3.Dee Clark – In These Very Tender Moments 4.Jean Plum – Look at the Boy 5.James Brown – Lost Someone 6.Eddie & Ernie – Thanks For Yesterday 7.Bessie Banks – It Sounds Like My Baby 8.Bobby Womack – Baby I Can't Stand It 9.Etta James – I'd Rather Go Blind10.Syl Johnson – Is It Because I'm Black 11.Maxine Brown – All in My Mind 12.Robert Ramsey – Like It Stands 13.Irma Thomas – Wish Someone Would Care 14.Ray Gant & the Arabian Knights – Don't Leave Me Baby 15.Carla Thomas – I Can't Take It 16.J R Bailey – Too Far Gone To Turn Around 17.Bettye LaVette – Let Me Down Easy 18.Bobby Bland – I'm Too Far Gone To Turn Around 19.Barbara & the Browns – I Don't Want To Have To Wait 20.The Enchanters – I Paid for the Party 21.Rozetta Johnson – Who Are You Gonna Love (Your Woman Or Your Wife) 22.Rick James & Friend – Ebony Eyes 23.Doris Duke- He's Gone24.The Impressions – My Deceiving Heart 25.Loretta Williams – I'm Missing You

Volume 4[edit]

1.The Knight Brothers – Temptation 'Bout To Get Me 2.Eddie & Ernie – I Believe She Will 3.Matilda Jones – I've Been Wrong Too Long 4.Bobby Bland – I Pity The Fool 5.Chuck Edwards – I Need You 6.Ruby Andrews – Just Loving You 7.Clarence Carter – Slip Away 8.Black Velvet – Is It Me You Really Love 9.Paul Kelly – The Day After Forever 10.Gladys Knight & the Pips – Giving Up 11.Arthur Conley – I'm A Lonely Stranger 12.Jackie Lee – I Love You 13.The Miracles – The Tracks of My Tears 14.Roosevelt Matthews – You Got Me Diggin' You 15.Doris Duke – I Don't Care Anymore 16.Lawrence & Jaibi – You Make Me Feel Good17.Barbara Brown – Can't Find No Happiness 18.Garnet Mimms – My Baby 19.The Webs – It's So Hard To Break A Habit 20.Irma Thomas – Time Is on My Side 21.Tony Owens – This Heart Can't Take No More 22.Jaibi – It Was Like A Nightmare23.Roy Hamilton – The Dark End of the Street 24.Jimmy Robins – I Made It Over 25.Bob & Earl – Don't Ever Leave Me

Volume 5[edit]

1. The Soul City – 'Who Knows'2. Ronnie Taylor – 'Without Love'3. Big Maybelle – 'Don't Pass Me By' 4. Helena Ferguson – 'Where Is The Party'5. Carolyn Sullivan – 'Dead!'6. Esther Phillips – 'Home Is Where The Hatred Is'7.The Masqueraders – 'I Ain't Got To Love Nobody Else'8.Mark IV – 'I'll Be Right There (To Make Love To You)'9.Kenny Carter – 'I'm Not The One'10.The Emotions – 'Somebody New'11.Barbara Lynn – '(Until Then) I'll Suffer'12.Dee Dee Warwick – 'Foolish Fool'13.George Jackson – 'My Desires Are Getting The Best Of Me'14.James Carr – 'These Ain't Raindrops'15.Eddie & Ernie – 'Standing at the Crossroads'16.Betty Harris – 'Can't Last Much Longer'17.Gladys Knight & The Pips – 'Lovers Always Forgive'18.The Chantels – 'Every Night (I Pray)'19.Judy White – 'Satisfaction Guaranteed'20.Jerry Washington – 'Right Here Is Where You Belong'21.Lattimore Brown – 'I Will'22.René Bailey – 'It's Too Late (For Tears)'23.Zilla Mayes – 'All I Want Is You'24.Linda Jones – 'What Can I Do (Without You)'25.Z.Z. Hill – 'Nothing Can Change The Love I Have For You'

References[edit]

  1. ^Richard Williams Obituary: Dave Godin, The Guardian, 20 October 2004
  2. ^'Jon Savage: interview with Dave Godin, February 1995'. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2013.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ abcPhil Johnson Obituary: Dave Godin, The Independent, 20 October 2004]
  4. ^ abObituary: Dave Godin, The Daily Telegraph, 28 October 2004
  5. ^For Dancers Only by Chris Hunt, Mojo [2002]

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dave_Godin&oldid=1005845446'

2016 awardees, left to right. Front row: Walter Lane and Tara Kenyon of Somerset County Planning Division; Jim Waltman and Kate Hutelmyer of Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association; Bill Schultz, Raritan Riverkeeper; Rosana Da Silva and Chris Obropta of Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program; Julia Somers of the Highlands Coalition; Larry Jacobs and Beth Davisson; and Eric Zwerling. Second row: Cody Obropta, Maithreyi Thukaram, Dominick Cardella, Tyler Obropta, Adam Cucchiara, Kaylene Campbell and Tekla Pontius-Courtney with Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program. Third row: Brittany Musolino, Erin Stretz and Mike Pisauro of Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association; Debbie Mans; Bill Kibler; and Michael Catania. Not shown: Candace Ashmun. Photo credit: Nick Romanenko.

Extension specialist Chris Obropta and the Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program Team, along with director of the Rutgers Noise Technical Assistance Center Eric Zwerling—in his capacity as a Readington Township Board of Education member and chairperson of the Green Committee—were among eight individuals and organizations to receive 2016 Sustainable Raritan River Awards at the 8th Annual Sustainable Raritan Conference and Awards Ceremony held at Rutgers on June 10.

'The purpose of these awards is to recognize some of the more creative and impressive accomplishments by genuine leaders throughout the Raritan Watershed,' said Michael Catania, executive director of Duke Farms Foundation and a member of the Sustainable Raritan Awards Committee.

Each year at its Annual Conference, the Sustainable Raritan River Collaborative and the Sustainable Raritan River Initiative give awards to recognize outstanding achievement in efforts to revitalize, restore and protect the Raritan resources and promote the area as a premiere place to live, work and raise a family.

Rutgers University launched the Sustainable Raritan River Initiative in 2009 to bring together concerned scientists, environmentalists, engineers, businesses, community leaders and governmental entities to craft an agenda that meets the goals of the U.S. Clean Water Act to restore and preserve New Jersey's Raritan River, its tributaries and its bay. The Initiative, a joint program of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy and the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, partners with other Rutgers schools, centers and programs to ensure the best contributions from the sciences, planning and policy.

The Sustainable Raritan Awards were established in 2010 to promote innovation and energize local efforts to restore and protect the rivers, streams and habitat of the Raritan River and Bay. There were originally six categories of awards: Government Innovation, Leadership, Public Access, Public Education, Remediation and Redevelopment, and Stewardship. Due to the breadth of nominees, additional awards have been added over the years. The awards have highlighted extraordinary accomplishments and inspired other groups across the watershed to achieve comparable levels of excellence; 2016 was no exception.

Debbie Mans, Baykeeper and Executive Director of the NY/NJ Baykeeper – also a member of the Awards Committee – noted, 'Given the level of dedication and range of activities by so many people this past year, it was both a pleasure and a challenge to select winners.'

This year's recipients and a description of their achievements are as follows:

Government Innovation Award – Somerset County Green Leadership Hub. The mission of the Green Leadership Hub, which is the first of its kind and a pilot program being undertaken in cooperation with Sustainable Jersey, is to serve as facilitator intermediary, educator and connector for municipalities that are in the process of obtaining or renewing Sustainable Jersey certification. The Hub has already: (1) formed an expert Steering Committee to provide advice to municipal officials and Green Teams; (2) created inventories of resources in the government, corporate and non-profit sectors; (3) hosted a number of forums and networking events where Green Team members can compare notes and obtain advice from experts; and (4) launched the Hub Assistance Program, which is designed to provide assistance to municipalities with specific questions and tasks.

Leadership Award – Bill Schultz, Raritan Riverkeeper. Bill Schultz provides key leadership along the length of the Raritan River, acting as the 'voice' for the waterbody in his role as Raritan Riverkeeper. Schultz works with multiple communities and stakeholders along the River, providing technical expertise, on-the-ground assistance, and pollution enforcement support.

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Raritan Riverkeeper advocates for unrestricted access to the River's shores for boating, swimming, fishing and other recreational activities; a clean River for the health of the community and surrounding habitats; and for the remediation of Superfund and other toxic sites along the River. Schultz has been the Raritan Riverkeeper for over a decade.

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Leadership Award – Candace Ashmun. Candy Ashmun is widely recognized as, simply, a state treasure. She has provided leadership for the past five decades here in the Raritan watershed, where she resides, as well as statewide, on a wide array of environmental and planning issues. Her leadership in the original creation and early years of the Association of New Jersey Environmental Commissions has helped create several generations of local environmental leaders, while her service on the Pinelands Commission and the State Planning Commission have made New Jersey a national leader in regional planning. And, last but not least, Ashmun has served as a mentor to the leaders of many statewide and local non-profit organizations. Through all of these actions, Ashmun has personified the very best of leadership, while creating a genuine legacy which will benefit both the current generation as well as many future generations.

Public Education Award – Dr. Chris Obropta and the Rutgers Cooperative Extension Water Resources Program Team. Chris Obropta and the Water Resources Program Team are responsible for the innovative and ambitious work on the project, 'Incorporating Green Infrastructure Resiliency in the Raritan River Basin'. This project is laying the foundation to reduce future flooding impacts from the impervious surfaces in the Raritan River Basin, improve water quality, enhance wildlife habitat, and increase resiliency. The team has created impervious cover assessments, impervious cover reduction action plans, web pages, and completed designs for demonstration projects for 54 municipalities in the Raritan River Basin.

Obropta and his team have produced an impervious cover reduction 'how-to' manual in the form of two e‑learning tools and the 'Green Infrastructure Guidance Manual for New Jersey'. Finally, the team hosted a conference, Fixing Flooding: One Community at a Time, Innovative Solutions Using Green Infrastructure, this past year in Sayreville, NJ. To learn more, please visit: www.water.rutgers.edu.

Public Education Award – Eric Zwerling, Readington Township Board of Education Member and Chairperson of the Green Committee. As a member of the Readington Township Board of Education and Chairperson of the Green Team, Eric Zwerling has shown a deep devotion to the environment and sustainability. Zwerling's accomplishments include providing leadership and support in drafting the school district's Energy Conservation Policy and selection of an Energy Efficiency Coordinator to promote environmental education, sustainable practice and energy conservation. Most recently, Zwerling served as the primary district evaluator on a solar energy project, which will bring solar panels to three of the district's four school buildings. He is Director of the Rutgers Noise Technical Assistance Center in the Department of Environmental Sciences.

Sustainability Award – Stony Brook Millstone Watershed Association's Watershed Center for Environmental Advocacy, Science and Education. Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association's Watershed Center for Environmental Advocacy, Science and Education, completed in 2015, facilitates a new organizational strategy and program to encourage understanding and replication of the 'best practices' demonstrated there. The LEED-Platinum Center is located on a previously developed site. The landscape design interprets the ecological resources of the Stony Brook Millstone Watershed focusing on water and native plantings and emphasizes the organization's informality while providing a gateway to the site. The Center is a fine example of Stony Brook Millstone Watershed Association's leadership role in environmental protection and provides a compelling platform from which the organization can advance its mission.

Stewardship Award – Beth Davisson and Larry Jacobs. Beth Davisson and Larry Jacobs demonstrated vital leadership and dogged determination in the preservation of the 172 acre Lana Lobell Farm in Bedminster Township. This preservation effort took more than ten years of planning and negotiations to complete and included federal, state, county, municipal, and non-profit partners and funding sources. The preservation of Lana Lobell Farm helps secure important local and regional conservation objectives. The project will help protect water quality in the Lamington River, sustain the rural character of western Somerset County, and preserve a working farm that has a significant place in New Jersey's rich equine history.

Non-Profit Innovation Award – New Jersey Highlands Coalition's Small Grants Program. The New Jersey Highlands Coalition's Small Grants Program awards a number of grants to assist grassroots organizations working on projects located within the New Jersey Highlands or associated with protecting New Jersey Highlands environmental, cultural, and historic resources, including within the Raritan River's watershed, whose headwaters rise in the New Jersey Highlands. The Highlands Coalition has funded grants every year since its inception in 2007. These grants have successfully supported a variety of organizations throughout the Raritan Highlands region, including in Roxbury, Bedminster, and Mine Hill, among others. This program has been an essential element in the success of many grassroots organizations.

Bill Kibler, Director of Policy for the Raritan Headwaters and a member of the Awards Committee said, 'We noted this year that there has been an increase in citizen involvement in projects throughout the watershed, and we received several nominations for these actions, which did not fit neatly into the existing award categories. So, beginning in 2017, we will add a new award category – Citizen Action – in order to encourage and recognize these types of individual commitments to projects such as stream clean ups, water quality monitoring, and similar critical citizen actions.'

The Awards Committee for this year's awards included, Michael Catania, executive director of the Duke Farms Foundation, William Kibler, director of Policy for the Raritan Headwaters, and Debbie Mans, Baykeeper and Executive director of the NY/NJ Baykeeper. All three of the organizations that they represent are members of the Sustainable Raritan River Collaborative. Catania and Mans also serve on the Steering Committee for the Sustainable Raritan River Initiative.

The Sustainable Raritan River Collaborative is a growing network of over 130 organizations, governmental entities and businesses in the Raritan River region working together to balance social, economic and environmental objectives towards the common goal of restoring the Raritan River, its tributaries and its estuary for current and future generations. Each member organization in the Collaborative contributes to the overall restoration and preservation of the River.

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To learn more about the Sustainable Raritan Awards, the Sustainable Raritan River Initiative, or the Sustainable Raritan River Collaborative, visit www.raritan.rutgers.edu.





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