Booker T
and the M.G.’s was the house band for Stax Records in Memphis, Tennessee, and
as such they appeared on virtually every single that Stax released during its
heyday in the Sixties and early Seventies. The band can be heard backing Stax’s
star vocalists on recordings by Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, William Bell, Eddie
Floyd, Carla Thomas and others.
The band
consisted of Booker T. Jones on organ/piano; Steve Cropper on guitar; Donald
“Duck” Dunn on bass; and Al Jackson on drums. This versatile and talented ensemble
was equally comfortable providing accompaniment for blues or ballads, rock, or R&B.
In addition to providing Stax singers with a backing band, they released
instrumental singles under their own name including “Groovin,” Hip Hug Her,”
“Time is Tight,” and their biggest hit, “Green Onions.”
With the
addition of the Memphis horns, the band also recorded instrumental tracks as
the “Mar-Keys.”
In the
early Eighties, the surviving members of the band, Steve Cropper and Duck Dunn
were members of Dan Ackroyd and John Belushi’s Blues Brothers band and were
featured in the movie, “The Blues Brothers.” They returned with Ackroyd in
“Blues Brothers 2000.”
The band
recorded several fine studio albums in the Sixties including “Green Onions”
(1962), “Soul Dressing” (1965) and “Hip Hug Her” (1967), but “The Best of
Booker T and the M.G.’s” (1968) may be all you require.
Drummer Art
Blakey and his band, The Jazz Messengers, are the pioneers of a jazz sub-genre
called “hard bop”. Hard bop takes the fundamentals of be-bop and adds elements
of rhythm and blues. The idea behind hard bop was to make be-bop music more
danceable and perhaps, more palatable to mainstream music fans.
Art
Blakey was born in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, in 1919, and by the
Fifties, his virtuosic and incessant drumming would put him at the forefront of
the be-bop genre along with Dizzy Gilliespie, Thelonious Monk and others.
In 1954,
he formed the band, The Jazz Messengers, which became a training ground for up
and coming young jazz musicians. New
Orleans trumpet prodigy Wynton Marsalis would get his
professional start as a member of the band. Among the best of the Art Blakey
and The Jazz Messengers albums are “A Night at Birdland” (Volumes 1-3) (1954), “The
Jazz Messengers” (1956), “A Night in Tunisia” (1957), “Drum Suite” (1957), “Art
Blakey’s Jazz Messengers with Thelonious Monk” (1958), “Ritual” (1959),
“Moanin’”(1959), “The Big Beat”
(1960),“Mosaic” (1961) “Free for All,”
“A Night in Tunisia” (1961), and “Indestructible” (1965).
Southern rock and blues rock legends the Allman Brothers were formed in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1969. The band was named after brothers Greg and Duane Allman, the band’s lead singer and lead guitarist, respectively. The Allman Brothers are perhaps the quintessential example of “Southern Rock.”
Southern rock bands such as the Allman Brothers, Lynyrd Skynard, and the Marshall Tucker Band all hailed from below the Mason-Dixon Line and infused their hard rock with elements of the blues and country music and often expressed the conservative or “redneck” outlooks.
The Allman Brothers were perhaps the most blues-influenced of southern rock bands. Their first two albums, “The Allman Brothers Band” (1968) and “Idlewild South” (1970) contained several blues cover tunes each. The ragged, soulful voice of Greg Allman and bluesy slide guitar of Duane Allman and Dickie Betts enabled the band to produce some of the best blues rock of the era.
The Allman Brothers Band was a tremendous live act, and live performances allowed the band’s instrumental highlight, Duane Allman to display his prodigious slide guitar technique. Two of the band’s finest albums, “Live at the Fillmore East” (1971) and “Eat a Peach” (1972) are live albums which feature long tracks which serve as vehicles for Duane Allman’s and Dickie Betts’ impressive chops.
Duane Allman died tragically in a motorcycle accident in 1971, at the age of 23, when the motorcycle he was riding collided with a peach truck. Following the death of Duane Allman, Dickie Betts became the instrumental centerpiece of the band, and the Allman Brothers Band continued to record and tour.
The band reached the height of their commercial success with the classic album, “Brothers and Sisters” (1973) ,which featured two of their best known tunes, “Ramblin’ Man” and the instrumental, “Jessica.”
Badfinger
was a superb pop/rock band that formed in Abertawe,
England, in
1969. The band was initially notable as the first band signed to the Beatles’
Apple Records. The music that Badfinger produced reminded many of the Beatles
and the band’s presence on the Apple label had many dismiss them as Beatles
wannabes.
Badfinger
recorded the excellent album, “Straight Up,” (1971), that saw the band fulfill
the promise that they had shown in getting signed to Apple. The album contained the classic tracks and
minor hits, “Day After Day” and “Baby Blue.”
The
Straight Up album is one of the earliest examples of what would later be coined
“power pop,” with the amplified guitar sound, perfect vocal harmonies and
catchy melodies. Power pop bands such as Big Star and The Raspberries would
follow in their wake.
Badfinger’s
story would end sadly as the group would never shake their image as a
second-rate Beatles clone. The members would wind up in financial hardship
driving leader Pete Ham to commit suicide in 1975.
When guitar heroes of rock music are
discussed, Jimi Hendrix’s name is often mentioned as perhaps the best of them
all. Of course, the topic is highly subjective, and Hendrix status as a rock
star who died while still in his twenties can prejudice any such discussion. It
is clear, however, that he is among an elite group of rock guitarists, and his
prodigious technical skill and showmanship rendered him the first true guitar
god of rock.
Hendrix was born in Seattle, Washington,
in 1942. Following a less than stellar stint in the army, he got his start in
music as a session guitarist for R&B acts such as King Curtis and the Isley
Brothers, and in live performances with the likes of Slim Harpo, Jackie Wilson,
Curtis Knight and the Squires, and Sam Cooke. By the mid-Sixties, Hendrix had
dubbed himself, “Jimmy James” and with his band, The Blue Flames, was playing
the club scene in New York’s Greenwich
Village.
In a fortuitous turn, Hendrix met the
girlfriend of The Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards, Linda Keith, at a New York City club. Keith
recommended Hendrix to the Stones’ manager, Andrew Loog Oldham and Chas
Chandler of the Animals. Chandler was impressed
with Hendrix’s song, “Hey Joe,” and brought him to London in the fall of 1966.
Chandler brought in two Englishmen, bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch
Mitchell as Hendrix’s sidemen and named the newly formed trio, “The Jimi
Hendrix Experience.” Hendrix and his new band would soon make rock music
history by recording three albums that would all go down in history as ground-breaking
classics in the annals of rock.
The first album,
“Are You Experienced,” was released in the United
Kingdom in the spring of 1967, and shortly thereafter in North America. It was an instant commercial and critical
success and contained the classic tunes, “Are You Experienced,” “Fire,” “Hey
Joe,” and “Purple Haze.” The album is now hailed as one of the greatest rock
albums ever recorded.
Hendrix would follow-up
his outstanding debut with “Axis: Bold as Love,” also from 1967. This album
contained fewer “hits,” but featured some technical innovations previously
unheard on popular music recordings. The opening track, “EXP,” contains channel-switching
stereo effects which have the guitar sound fading in one channel and re-emerging
in the other. Hendrix also uses the “wah-wah” pedal for the first time on this
recording.
For his third
effort, “Electric Ladyland” (1968), Hendrix brought in Steve Winwood, Dave Mason
and Chris Wood from Traffic and Al Kooper from The Blues Project. The ambitious
double album featured the epic tracks, “All Along the Watchtower,” probably the
best and most original Bob Dylan cover ever, and “Voodoo Chile (slight return).”
Hendrix and the
Experience would break-up and later reunite as “They Band of Gypsys,” and a
live album of the Gypsys would appear in 1970. Hendrix died of an apparent drug
overdose in London,
in September of 1970.
Buffalo Springfield formed as a result of a
famous chance meeting on the Sunset Strip between Neil Young and Steven Stills.
After driving his 53’Pontiac hearse from Toronto to Los
Angeles with his friend, bassist Bruce Palmer, Neil
Young encountered Stills on that famous street. Stills was with his friend,
singer and guitarist Ritchie Furay, at the time. Stills and Young had
previously met in Toronto
and instantly recognized each other. The four musicians stopped, chatted, and
decided to form a band. Americans Stills and Furay and Canadians Young, Palmer,
and drummer Dewey Martin would become famous as “Buffalo Springfield” in 1966.
Buffalo Springfield released their debut
album, “Buffalo Springfield” in 1966 and found instant critical acclaim and
popularity. Their music could best be described as folk-rock, but this talented
assemblage of musicians played a variety of styles including folk, country,
rock, and pop. “For what it’s Worth,” “Go and Say Goodbye,” Flying on The
Ground Is Wrong,” and “Nowadays Clancy Can Even Sing” are all classic tracks
from the debut album.
With their next effort, “Buffalo
Springfield Again” (1967), the band would produce their masterpiece. This album
was more consistent than the debut and featured more studio polish courtesy of
producer Jack Nitzche. “Expecting to Fly” and “Broken Arrow,” two songs by Neil Young, are
the albums’ highlights.
The band would produce one more solid
album, “Last Time Around” (1968), featuring outstanding tracks in “Kind Woman,”
“One the Way Home,” and “I Am a Child” before disbanding.
Despite their brief run of just two years,
Buffalo Springfield was a hugely influential band that spawned the solo careers
of Young and Stills and future country-rock bands Poco, Manassas
and Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young.
The Byrds are among the greatest bands in
the history of American pop music. The band is the original folk-rock outfit
and was the first band to play country-rock. Pioneered by folk singer turned
rocker, Roger McGuinn, the Byrds saw many lineup changes throughout the years,
but despite the turnover of musicians, the band always produced original and
inspired music. Originally called the “Beefeaters,” the Byrds formed in early
1964 with members, McGuinn on guitar; David Crosby on guitar; Gene Clark on
guitar; Michael Clarke on drums; and Chris Hillman on bass.
The Byrds “jangly” sound was derived from
McGuinn’s 12-string Rickenbacker guitar. This trademark sound was in full
evidence on their first album, “Mr. Tambourine Man” (1965). The album opens
with the title track, a rocking hit version of the Bob Dylan classic. Dylan
songs would be covered often by the Byrds and be infused with that unmistakable
Byrds sound.
The Byrds next recorded the very solid,
“Turn, “Turn, “Turn” album in 1965. The title track of this album also became a
big hit.
Two excellent albums came next: “Fifth
Dimension” (1966) and “Younger than Yesterday” (1967) spawning hits with “Eight
Miles High” and “So You Want to Be a Rock and Roll Star,” respectively.
It was at this point, seemingly at the peak
of the band’s commercial and critical success, when Gene Clark and David Crosby
departed to pursue solo careers. For their next project, “The Notorious Byrd
Brothers” (1968), the band was reduced to a trio. No matter it seems when the
listening to the result-a brilliant album of stunning experimental music. The
album is inspired from start to finish, especially on numbers like, “Draft
Morning,” “Wasn’t Born To Follow,” “Natural Harmony,” and “Get to You.”
Now a trio, the Byrds added new members,
country-hippie Gram Parsons from the International Submarine Band and the
superb country guitarist Clarence White. With the overt country influence of
its new members, the Byrds produced the first true country-rock album, the
excellent “Sweetheart of the Rodeo” (1968). Parsons soon left the band to form
the Flying Burrito Brothers.
The Byrds had reached the peak of their
creative powers and would continue to record until 1973, but only the
“Untitled” album released in 1970 would approach the heights they achieved in the
Sixties.