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.
Captain
Beefheat, also know as Don Van Vliet, was one of the strangest artists in the
history of rock music. His music might be off-putting for those whose tastes
are limited to the mainstream, but for the initiated, his quirky and often
downright bizarre music is a source of infinite amusement. Beefheart has been
critically-praised for decades for his highly original music which incorporates
rock, blues, and avant-garde jazz. Beefheart was always supported on recordings
by various versions of his “Magic Band.”
Born Don
Glen Vliet, Beefheart started out with childhood friend Frank Zappa in local
groups such as The Omens and The Blackouts. Around this time he added “Van” to
his name and was thus named Don Van Vliet. His colorful moniker, “Captain
Beefheart,” came from Zappa who observed that he sang as if he had a “beef in
his heart.”
In 1965,
the first Magic Band was formed. They played blues and R&B, both covers
& original material, and scored a contract with A&M Records with whom
they released two singles. The first, “Diddy Wah Diddy,” became a minor hit,
but the label discarded them anyway.
In 1967,
Beefheart and the Magic Band landed a contract with Buddah Records and recorded
their brilliant debut, “Safe as Milk” (1967). The album was rooted in blues and
R&B, and while containing moments of slight weirdness like the track,
“Electricity,” the sound of the band was still palatable to mainstream
listeners.
This
changed with the release of the great and sometimes controversial, “Trout Mask
Replica” (1969), Beefheart’s masterpiece. It is one of the strangest recordings
in the history of popular music. The music is a synthesis of pure avant-garde
jazz and rock almost devoid of melody and harmony, featuring songs not so much
sung, as croaked by Beefheart, whose voice, at the best of times, could be
described as grating. As such, the album is unlistenable for mainstream music
fans, but it is over-flowing with creativity and humour.
Beefheart
would continue to release albums for the next 15 years which followed in a
similar vein. The best of Beefheart’s post-Sixties work is: “Lick My Decals
Off, Baby” (1970), “Mirror Man” (1971), “Clear Spot” (1972), “Shiny Beast (Bat
Chain Puller)” (1978), and “Doc at the Radar Station” (1980).
Beefheart,
one of the true originals of rock music, died in 2010.
Singer/songwriter
Ben E. King is one of the best performers of the smooth soul singer set. King,
who was born Benjamin Earl Nelson in Henderson,
North Carolina, in 1938, got his
start in music with a revamped version of the Drifters, in 1958.
As the
lead singer of this new incarnation of the Drifters, King lent his velvet pipes
to the hits, “There Goes My Baby,” (which he co-wrote) “Save the Last Dance for
Me,” and “This Magic Moment.”
Due to a
contract dispute with Drifters manager George Treadwell, King left the group
and embarked on a solo career in 1960. King would soon find solo success with a
number of classic hits including the Phil Spector-produced “Spanish Harlem” and
“Stand by Me.” Both of these songs are among the finest pop records made in the
decade. King would score a number of lesser hits in the early Sixties with the
songs, “Young Boy Blues,” I (Who Have Nothing),” and “Hear Comes the Night.”
King’s
classic hits can be found on the compilations, “Stand By Me-The Best of Ben E.
King and Ben E, King and the Drifters” (1986), “Stand By Me (The Ultimate
Collection” (1987), and “Anthology” (1993).
Julia Lee
was among the best female jazz singers and pianists of the Thirties and Forties.
Lee was born in Boonville, Missouri, in 1902, and grew up in Kansas City.
Lee began
her career in the Twenties as a pianist with several bands including the band
of her brother, George Lee. She made her recording debut in 1927 as a pianist
for Jesse Stone. In 1935, Lee embarked on her own solo career and made her
first recordings on for Capitol Records in 1945.
During the
Forties, Lee scored a number of R&B hits including, “Gotta Gimme Whatcha
Got,” “Snatch and Grab It,” “King Size Papa,” and “My Man Stands Out.” She was
accompanied on these recordings by the likes of Red Nichols, Jay McShan, Benny
Carter, and Red Norvo.
Lee’s
classic recordings can be found on the following albums: Classics Julia Lee
1927-1946” (1995) and “Classics Julia Lee 1947” (1995).
Al Green
is a southern soul singer from Forrest
City, Arkansas who
embodies the smoother and sweeter side of soul music which in the hands of the
likes of James Brown, Ray Charles and Otis Redding was a far grittier genre. Green’s
songs tell tales of true love and extol the virtues of fidelity. His biggest
hit, “Let’s Stay Together,” is a primary example Green’s brand of sweet soul.
Green
would become one of the biggest soul stars of the Seventies with a steady
string of hits which included, “I Can’t Get Next to You,” “Tired of Being
Alone,” “Let’s Stay Together,” “I’m Still in Love with You,” and “Call Me.”
Green’s hits were recorded for Hi Records in Memphis under the deft direction of producer
Willie Mitchell.
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Them was perhaps the best of the British
blues-rock bands that emerged during the Sixties. The band covered much of the
same blues/R&B terrain as bands such as the Rolling Stones and Yardbirds,
yet they possessed the best white blues shouter of the era, Van Morrison.
Them was formed in Belfast, Ireland, in
1964, and the band quickly gained a reputation for its hard drinking and
brawling as well as music.
The band’s first album, “Here Comes the Night” (1965), was a brilliant debut which combined inspired covers of blues standards
and original material. The title track, “Here Comes the Night,” would become a
hit. “Mystic Eyes” and “Gloria” are also standout tracks. The band’s sophomore album,
“Them Again” (1966), continued in the same rave-up R&B vein with
outstanding covers of “Turn On Your Love Light,” “I Put a Spell on You,” and “I
Got a Woman.”
Van Morrison left the group after Them
Again to pursue a solo career and the band continued without him. Despite the
loss of Morrison, Them produced two more solid albums featuring a new
psychedelic sound, “Now and Them” (1968) and “Time Out! Time in for Them”
(1968). Complete Them (1964-1967)
is a fine compilation of the band’s work
Riley B. King was born in Itta Bena, Mississippi,
in 1926. He is still active today as a blues performer well into his eighties.
He is currently a resident of Memphis,
Tennessee, the city he came to in
the Forties to play music and work as a radio DJ.
King arrived in Memphis
with his cousin, the country blues guitarist Bukka White, and landed a job as a
disc jockey on the Memphis
radio station, WDIA. It was here that he was coined “BB,” a moniker which
means, “blues boy.” In 1949, he landed a recording contract with RPM Records.
Many of his early recordings were produced by Sam Philips who would later found
Sun Records. He also assembled a band which came to be known as the BB King
Review.
During 1949, King played at a honky-tonk
where a fire broke out during one of his shows. As the patrons, musicians, and
King fled the bar, King realized that he had forgotten his guitar inside. He
battled the flames as he reentered the burning structure in order to save his
forgotten guitar. He later heard that the fight in the bar was about a girl named,
“Lucille.” King named his guitar after the girl and Lucille, the guitar has
been with him ever since.
By the Fifties, King had become one of the
biggest names in the blues, amassing numerous hit recordings and touring almost
constantly. Among his hits during the Fifties were, “3 O Clock Blues,” “Woke Up
This Morning,” “Please Love Me,” Whole Lotta Love,” “Everyday I Have the Blues,”
“Ten Long Years,” and “Bad Luck.” He gained a reputation as one of the best
guitarists in popular music with his economical style which featured string
bending and heavy vibrato. Every rock guitarist that followed would be
influenced directly or indirectly by King’s style of playing.
In late 1964, King would perform a show at
the Regal Theatre in Chicago.
The performance was recorded, and the resulting album, “Live at the Regal,”
would be hailed as one of the best live blues or rock recordings of all-time.
King had a huge hit in 1970 with the song, “The Thrill is Gone.” The song would
appear on both the pop and R&B charts. By 1964, King had signed with ABC
Records which would be absorbed into MCA Records and then Geffen Records, his
current label.
In addition to Live at the Regal, “Live in
Cook Country Jail” (1971) is an excellent live album. “Completely Well” (1969)
and “Indianola Mississippi Seeds” (1970) are outstanding studio albums. Several
greatest hits collections are also recommended especially for his earliest
work. Among these albums are: “The Best of B.B. King” (1973), “The Best of B.B.
King Volume One” (1986), “The Best of B.B. King Volume Two” (1986), “The
Vintage Years” (2002), “Original Greatest Hits” (2005), and “Gold” (2006).
Larry Williams
is one of the almost forgotten fathers of rock and roll. Williams, a pianist,
had a number of huge hits during the mid-Fifties as rock and roll was beginning
to dominate American popular music. Several of Williams’ songs would be
recorded by more famous bands and singers, and become forever associated with
them. The Beatles recorded Williams’ songs, “Slow Down,” “Bad Boy,” and “Dizzy
Miss Lizzy” during the earliest phase of their recording career.
Williams was
born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1935. He made his recording
debut in 1957 for Specialty Records with a ballad, “Just Because.” Williams’
forte, however, was up-tempo rockers, and he scored a hit later the same year
with the rocker, “Bonie Maronie.” A slew of hits would soon follow including,
“Dizzy Miss Lizzy,” Bad Boy,” and “Short Fat Fanny.”
Williams didn’t
enjoy much success after 1957, and he fell back into the underworld life of
drug-peddling that consumed much of his time prior to his music career. In the
mid-Sixties, he made a comeback with an R&B band which included guitarist
Johnny Guitar Watson, and he produced a couple of albums for his friend, Little
Richard.
This success
would not last as his drug addiction kept dragging him down. In 1977, he pulled
a gun on Little Richard and threatened to kill him over a drug debt. Shortly
thereafter, Williams was found dead of a gunshot wound to the head, in his Los Angeles home. His
death was officially deemed a suicide. He was 44-years-old at the time of his
demise.
Williams’ best
recordings are found on the albums, “Here’s Larry Williams” (1959), “The Larry
Williams Show (ft.Johnny Guitar Watson)”
(1965), and “The Best of Larry Williams” (1988).
Little Richard was probably the most
flamboyant of the early fathers of rock and roll. Richard’s flamboyance, which
usually manifested itself in colorful clothing and animated behavior, also
found expression through Richard’s claims that he had invented rock and roll
music. Nevertheless, he was a singer, pianist, and songwriter of the highest
order, and one of the most influential figures in rock and roll history
Richard was born Richard Wayne Penniman in Macon, Georgia,
in 1932. He started his career as an R&B singer/pianist, making his first
recording in 1951 with the single, “Taxi Blues,” for RCA. Richard recorded
several more singles before he scored his first big hit with “Tutti Fruitti” in
1955. The next year, 1956, would see Richard record a slew of hits including
the classic songs, “Long Tall Sally,” “Slippin’ and Slidin’,” “Ready Teddy,”
and “Rip it Up.”
In 1957, a full-length album of Richard’s
songs would appear, “Here’s Little Richard,” one of the first rock album
masterpieces. The album contained all of Richard’s hit singles up to that point
and other fine tracks. Another classic album would follow in 1958, with “Little
Richard,” featuring the classic songs, “Keep-A-Knockin,” “Good Golly Miss Molly,”
“Lucille,” and “The Girl Can’t Help It.” Richard’s popularity and fine piano chops
helped to position the piano as an important instrument in early rock and roll.
In the Fifties, Richard disappeared from
the pop music scene as quickly as he had appeared, turning to bible studies at
a theological college. He would record only gospel music for the next four
years. Little Richard eventually returned to rock and roll and is still active
today.
David Allen Coe, born in Akron, Ohio,
in 1939, along with Waylon Jennings and Merle Haggard, helped to pave the way
for a country subgenre of music called “outlaw country.” The subgenre featured
longhaired, denim-wearing heroes like Coe who embraced and expressed a
rule-breaking philosophy of life.
Coe, like Merle Haggard, came by his outlaw
image honestly. Both Coe and Haggard did lengthy stretches in prison prior to
the start of their music careers. Coe’s debut album, released shortly after his
release from prison, is a bluesy masterpiece. The album was titled,
“Penitentiary Blues.” With songs like “Cell 33,” Dear Warden,” and “Death Row,”
the album is musically and lyrically riveting.
Coe released many fine country albums
during the Seventies including, “The Mysterious Rhinestone Cowboy” (1974),
“Longhaired Redneck” (1976), “Texas Moon” (1977), and “Tattoo” (1978). In 1975,
Coe scored a major country hit with a cover version of Steve Goodman’s, “You
Never Even Call Me by My Name.”
Jackie Wilson was among the first soul
singers who followed in Ray Charles footsteps after Charles created the music in
the mid-Fifties. Wilson, also known as “Mr. Excitement,” for his ebullient performing
style, was born in Detroit,
Michigan, in 1934. Wilson was a boxer and
gymnast prior to the start of his music career. Wilson was known for his temperamental nature
and willingness to use his boxing skills.
Wilson originally came to prominence in 1953, as a member of the vocal
R&B group, Billy Ward and the Dominoes as a replacement for Clyde McPhatter
who had left the group to form the Drifters. Wilson would serve as the Dominoes lead
singer for the next three years. Upon leaving the Dominoes, Wilson soon found solo success with the hit
single, “Reet Petite,” in 1957.
Throughout the remainder of the Fifties and
Sixties, Wilson
recorded numerous R&B hits and the occasional pop hit. Wilson’s biggest pop hit came in 1958 with
“Lonely Teardrops.” In 1967, Wilson
would again score a huge hit with the song, “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me)
Higher and Higher.”
Wilson’s
best studio albums include “Soul Time” (1965), “Whispers” (1966), and “Higher
and Higher” (1967). His best compilations include “The Jackie Wilson Story”
(1983) and “The Very Best of Jackie Wilson” (1987). Wilson died in 1984.
Isaac Hayes had a long career as a soul
songwriter and session musician prior to the launch of his own solo career in
the early Seventies. Hayes was born in Covington,
Tennessee, in 1942.
Hayes began his professional career as part
of the Stax Records songwriting team of David Porter and Isaac Hayes that
produced soul hits for Stax Records’ legendary roster of singers. The songs
that Hayes and Porter produced for Stax include, “B-A-B-Y” by Carla Thomas,
“I've Got to Love Somebody’s Baby” by Johnnie Taylor, and “Hold On! I'm Coming!”
“You Got Me Hummin’,” “Soul Man,” and “When Something Is Wrong With My Baby” by
Sam and Dave.
Hayes recorded his first solo album,
“Presenting Isaac Hayes,” in 1967. The album contained pleasant soul numbers,
but it was a tame effort compared to what was to come. When Atlantic Records
bought out the Stax Records catalogue in 1968, Hayes was under pressure to
write and record new material to replace what had been lost. He hurled himself
into the task and while producing material for other artists, he also came up with
the material for his brilliant sophomore album, “Hot Buttered Soul,” one of the
greatest soul albums ever recorded.
The album contained four superb tracks-all
of which clocked in at least five minutes. Covers of Burt Bacharach’s “Walk on
By” and Jimmy Webb’s “By the Time I get to Phoenix” ran at 12 minutes and 18 and a half
minutes, respectively. Hayes’ extended takes on these songs transcended the
originals with their dreamy instrumental passages.
Hayes recorded two more fine albums in
1970, “The Isaac Hayes Movement” and “…To Be Continued.” Hayes’ excellent
soundtrack for the film, “Shaft,” would appear in 1971 with the title track
becoming a hit. Another quality Hayes album, “Black Moses,” would be released
in 1971, featuring lush string accompaniments to soulful songs such as a cover
of another Bacharach song, “Close to You,” and a cover of Curtis Mayfield’s
“Man’s Temptation.”
Hayes would continue to record throughout
the Seventies and sporadically in the Eighties with lesser results. Hayes died
in 2008 having achieved the status of a master among soul music figures.
James Brown,
born in Macon, Georgia, in 1938 was known by a number of titles including “The
Godfather of Soul,” “The Hardest Working Man in Show Business,” “Soul Brother
Number One,” and “Mr. Dynamite.” Brown is considered one of the most
influential figures in the history of American popular music. In addition to
being a major figure in the creation of funk music, Brown was a businessman and
an inspirational leader in the American civil rights movement.
A number of musicians spent time in his back-up bands before finding success as
solo artists including, Bootsy Collins,
Maceo Parker, and Hank Ballard.
Brown is frequently cited as an influence by hip hop artists, and he may be the
single most sampled artist by hip hop producers.
James
Brown was born in Barnwell, North Carolina, in 1933. He was born into abject
poverty and was sent to live with an aunt. He dropped out of school in the seventh
grade and began working odd jobs such as shoe shining and singing for the World
War Two troops that were stationed at Camp Gordon near his aunt’s home. During
this time, Brown taught himself to play the harmonica and received guitar
lessons from the legendary bluesman, Tampa Red.
When he
saw a film of the great jump blues master Louis Jordan performing his hit,
“Caledonia,” Brown resolved to pursue a professional music career. However,
when he was sixteen, Brown was charged with armed robbery and sent to a
juvenile detention center. While serving a three-year sentence in a detention
center, Brown became acquainted with Bobby Byrd, a future R&B star whose
family arranged for Brown’s release from the center. After stints as a
semi-professional baseball player and boxer, Brown focused his attention back
on music.
In 1955,
Brown joined his friend Bobby Bird as a member of Byrd’s singing group, the
Avons. With Brown now a member, the Avons changed their name to the Flames and
signed to Federal Records. Brown’s first recording, “Please. Please, Please”
would come as a member of the Flames and present him as a soul singer of great
depth and intensity.
Brown
would record several more singles with the Flames during the Fifties, and the
group would eventually become known as “James Brown and the Famous Flames.”
Among thier big hits were the songs, “I’ll Go Crazy,” “Think,” “Lost Someone,”
“Night Train,” and “Caledonia.” In 1965, Brown, in the opinion of many, would
invent funk music with his hit, “Papa’s got a Brand New Bag.” For its
recording, Brown told his band to “play it on the one,” transforming the
traditional 2/4 beat heard in R&B recordings and giving the world something
new.
Brown
continued recording hit singles and albums consistently until the Nineties.
Among Brown’s later hits were the songs, “I Got You (I Feel Good),” “It’s a Man’s
Man’s Man’s World,” “Licking Stick,” “Say it Loud-I’m Black and I’m Proud,”
“Cold Sweat,” “Sex Machine,” and “Living in America.”
Brown
died on Christmas Day, 2006, leaving behind him an awesome catalogue of
recorded work.
Among
Brown’s best studio albums and compilations are: “Please Please Please” (1956),
“Live at the Apollo” (1963), “Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag” (1965), “I Got You (I
Feel Good)” (1966), “James Brown Live at the Garden” (1967), “I Can’t Stand
Myself When You Touch Me” (1968), “Say it Loud-I’m Black and I’m Proud” (1969),
“Sex Machine”(1970), “Revolution of the Mind” (1971), “The Payback” (1974),
“Love Power Peace, Live at the Olympia, Paris1971” (1992), “James Brown Soul
Classics” (1972), “Solid Gold 30 Golden Hits” (1977), “In the Jungle Groove”
(1986), “Star Time” (1991), and “Gold” (2005)
The Rolling Stones are, save the Beatles,
the most famous rock band of all time. The Stones emerged from London around
the same time that the Beatles were breaking out from their hometown,
Liverpool. While the Beatles have long ago parted, The Rolling Stones are still a
functioning rock band, although with its members now in their seventies, the
band is now only occasionally productive.
The Stones current lineup consists of Mick
Jagger on lead vocals; Keith Richards on guitar; Charlie Watts on drums; and
Ron Wood on guitar. All the current members except Wood have been with the band
from the beginning, and the band has seen limited personnel changes despite its
long run of 50 years.
The Stones started out in the early Sixties
as one of the finest white blues bands of the day, led at that time, by the
late blues guitarist, Brian Jones. In the band’s earliest incarnation, they
were a blues and R&B band, and Jones was the driving force and resident
blues expert. The band’s name came from the Muddy Waters song, “Rollin’ Stone.”
The band played their first gig at London’s Marquee Club before landing a
regular gig at the Crawdaddy Club. Former Beatles publicist, Andrew Loog Oldham
became the Stones manager around this time.
Oldham’s first act was to secure a
lucrative recording deal for his new band. Decca Records, which was still
reeling from their failure to sign the Beatles, offered Oldham a sweet deal for
the Stones. Oldham, then began to publicize the Stones as the anti-Beatles, a
band of louts who were the polar opposite of the clean and decent Beatles. In
spring 1963, Decca released the first Stones’ single, a cover of Chuck Berry’s,
“Come On.”
The Stones recorded their debut album, “The
Rolling Stones,” in 1964. The album only contained one song written by Jagger
and Richards, with the rest of the songs being blues cover songs. Oldham
encouraged Jagger and Richards to work on their songwriting, as he believed
that the band would have limited appeal if it continued to just perform songs
by “middle-aged blacks.” Two more albums relying heavily on covers of R&B
and blues, “The Rolling Stones Number 2” and “The Rolling Stones Now,” were
released in 1965. The songwriting team of Jagger and Richards were beginning to
produce results with their first self-written hit, “Heart of Stone,” appearing
in 1964.
The Stones first album with a significant
amount of original material, “Out of Our Heads,” was released in 1965. This
album contained the Stones first big international hit single, “Satisfaction,” and
the single turned the band into bona-fide pop stars. The album contained
several other excellent tracks such as, “Play with Fire” and “The Last Time.”
The Stones would continue to improve on
their next release, “Aftermath” (1966), an album of mostly original songs that
includes the early classic songs, “Mother’s Little Helper,” “Lady Jane,” and
“Under My Thumb.” The latter track riled feminists and helped to solidify the
band’s “bad boy” image.
In early 1967, the band’s next album,
“Between the Buttons,” was released. This album saw the band moving away from
the blues and R&B they had long focused on, and further into the realm of
rock and the psychedelia that was so pervasive at the time. Later in 1967, the
band would dive headlong into psychedelia with “Their Satanic Majesties Request,”
a full-blown psychedelic freak out which was panned by many critics, but is
still an interesting offering with the excellent tracks, “She’s A Rainbow” and
“2000 Light Years from Home.”
Between 1968 and 1972, the band would enjoy
a golden period that would see the band record an outstanding string of albums
which are all now considered among the very best albums of 20th
century popular music.
The first, “Beggar’s Banquet,” appeared in
1968, and featured some of the best rock and blues tracks ever recorded by a
rock band. “Sympathy for the Devil” is the most famous track on the album,
followed closely by ”Street Fighting Man.” The blues chops of the band,
especially in the case of Brian Jones, are on full display on tracks such as
“No Expectations” which features fine slide blues guitar by Jones. “Prodigal
Son” is a fine country blues cover. Brian Jones would die tragically from
drowning in his swimming pool shortly after the release of the album.
In 1969, “Let it Bleed” appeared, and like
its predecessor, it contained excellent tracks of rock and blues. Several of
the band’s most famous songs are found here such as, “You Can’t Always Get What
You Want,” “Gimme Shelter,” and the title track. The cover of Robert Johnson’s
“Love in Vain” is one of the highlights of the band’s recording career.
After a two-year hiatus from the studio,
during which time the excellent live album, “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” (1970)
appeared, another classic album, “Sticky Fingers” (1971), was released. The
album was the hardest rocking Stones album yet, and featured new guitarist,
Mick Taylor, who was brought in to replace the deceased Brian Jones. Taylor’s
presence on the album gave the band a fuller rock sound that was exploited on
the numbers, “Bitch,” “Can’t You Hear Me knocking,” and “Brown Sugar.” A fine
country-rock moment can be heard with “Wild Horses,” a song that Keith Richards
wrote with Gram Parsons of the Flying Burrito Brothers.
In 1972, the comprehensive and outstanding
double album, “Exile on Main Street,” was released, and it is considered by
many as the band’s definitive work. A slew of blues, R&B, and even gospel
tunes populate the album along side rock songs such as the hits, “Happy” and
“Tumbling Dice.”
The Stones’ work started to slide in the mid-Seventies,
with the band recording several albums which were several notches below the
superb work of the past. Keith Richard’s drug use would become an issue,
especially following his arrest at a Toronto hotel. It was not until 1978 that
the band would finally make an album worthy of their reputation. That album was
“Some Girls” (1978), featuring the stellar tracks, “Shattered” and “Beast of
Burdon.”
The band’s work from the Eighties to
present has been spotty, but there have always been fine moments such as the
album releases, “Tattoo You” (1981), “Stripped” (1995), “The Rolling Stones
Rock and Roll Circus” (1996), and “Shine a Light” (2008).
The band is still a touring unit and they
have ventured into new territory, playing concerts in Shanghai, China, in 2009.
Sam and Dave are perhaps the finest vocal
duo in the history of soul music. The duo was part of Stax Records’ fine roster
of soul recording artists. Sam Moore was born in Miami, Florida, in 1935, while
his partner, Dave Prater, was born in Ocilla, Georgia, in 1937. The two men
joined forces and formed Sam and Dave in 1961. At Stax records, the duo was
supported on recordings by the Stax house band, Booker T and the MG’s, and was
often provided with stellar songs by the songwriting team of Issac Hayes and
David Porter.
After the duo had recorded a series of
unsuccessful singles for Roulette Records, Jerry Wexler of Atlantic Records
sent them to Memphis, Tennessee, to try their luck with Stax.Between 1965 and 1968, Sam & Dave would
establish themselves as the most exciting duo in soul music, scoring big hits
with tunes such as “Hold On! I’m Comin’,” “Soul Man,” “Soothe Me,” “You Got Me
Hummin’,” and “I Thank You.”
By the late Sixties, the duo’s waning
commercial success and increasing in-fighting led to Sam & Dave splitting
up in 1970.
Prater and Moore embarked on ill-fated solo
careers before the first of many Sam & Dave reunions. The 1980 film, “The
Blues Brothers,” which featured the Sam and Dave hits, “Soul Man” and “Soothe
Me,” regenerated interest in the duo, but continuing conflict prevented the men
from taking full advantage of their second chance at success.
During the Eighties, Prater actually hired
another singer to pose as “Sam” and together they toured the country as Sam
& Dave much to the frustration of Sam Moore. David Prater sadly died in a
car accident in Georgia, in 1988, at the age of 50.
The duo recorded several superb albums for
Atlantic/Stax including, “Hold On, I’mComin’” (1966), “Double Dynamite” (1966), “Soul Men” (1967), and “I
Thank You” (1968).
Otis was
one of the most important artists in R&B history. He was a bandleader,
promoter, vocalist, club owner, drummer, and producer, and he helped launch the
careers of such R&B legends as Johnny Ace, The Robins, Little Esther, Etta James
and many others. These singers recorded with his band and toured as part of his
entourage.
Most of Johnny Otis’ records were released as the “Johnny Otis Quintette” or
“The Johnny Otis Show. Otis’s biggest hit was, “Willie and the Hand Jive,” a
song which has been covered by scores of other artists.
That song
and others are best heard on the compilation albums, “The Original Johnny Otis
Show” (1978), and a number of other compilations of early rock and roll such as
the terrific compilation featuring Otis and many others, “Loud, Fast and Out of
Control: The Wild Sounds of ‘50s Rock” (1999).