Category: Memphis

Judy Clay – It Takes a Lotta Good Love b/w You Can’t Run Away From Your Heart

By , May 31, 2015 11:09 am

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Judy Clay

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Listen/Download – Judy Clay – It Takes a Lotta Good Love

Listen/Download – Judy Clay – You Can’t Run Away From Your Heart

 

Greetings all.

What better way to start off the week, than with a very solid slice of Memphis soul?

I’ve been a fan of Judy Clay for a years. Most of that time, I only really knew her late-60s duet work with the mighty Billy Vera, like ‘Country Girl, City Man’ and ‘Storybook Children’, and her duets with William Bell, like ‘Private Number’.

She got her start in the the famed gospel group the Drinkard Singers, alongside Cissy Houston and Dionne and Dee Dee Warwick, moving into the world of secular music in 1961 for the Ember label.

Clay spent the next few years recording for Ember, Choice, Scepter, and Lavette, before landing at Stax in 1967.
The two songs you see before you today represent both sides of her amazing debut single for Stax.

‘It Takes a Lotta Good Love’, co-written by Al Bell and Booker T Jones, and produced (both sides) by Isaac Hayes and David Porter, is a soulful powerhouse, with a punchy, radio-friendly arrangement, and a wonderful vocal by Clay. This is one of those records that just kind of kicks you in the ass and makes you wonder why it wasn’t a hit.

Interestingly enough, I can only find one chart reference to ‘It Takes a Lotta Good Love’, and the station was also playing the flipside, ‘You Can’t Run Away From Your Heart’.

A killer Hayes/Porter ballad, with a beautiful melody, and an incongruous, yet perfect guitar opening, had a little more success than its flipside, showing up in four different markets. The performance is a testament to the fact that Judy Clay should have had a bigger career. She maneuvers from her very solid middle range, into high notes and back again with perfect control, and brings a lot of gospel flavor into her delivery.

She had her last hit in 1970, and spent the next decade performing as a backing singer for a variety of performers, including Ray Charles and Wilson Pickett.

She passed away following a car accident in 2001.

I hope you dig the tunes, and I’ll see you on Wednesday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Danny White – Taking Inventory

By , April 28, 2015 12:23 pm

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Danny White

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Greetings all.

Today’s mystery is: why would one of the preeminent soul singers of the 1960s write an amazing song but never record it himself?.

Now, the origins of the recording I bring you today are not in question.

Danny White is a New Orleans singer (the man behind the mighty ‘Natural Soul Brother’, one of my all time favorite 45s) who recorded a string of 45s for local (Frisco, Atlas) and national (ABC, Decca, SSS Intl) labels between 1961 and 1969.

He recorded today’s selection in a 1966 Memphis session arranged and produced by Gene ‘Bowlegs’ Miller, with the extra-groovy ‘Cracked Up Over You’ on the flipside.

Where the mystery (as it is) starts is the song I bring you today, the most excellent ‘Taking Inventory’.

A stomping soul number, with an excellent vocal by White, ‘Taking Inventory’ was written by none other than Stax star and 60s soul legend Eddie Floyd.

The crazy thing is, it would appear that no matter the excellence of the song, Floyd does not to have ever recorded the song himself.

That didn’t stop the song from getting around, though, with additional cover versions laid down by the Ferris Wheel (on the Pye label in the UK) and none other than Vic Waters and the Entertainers (for Capitol here in the US).

I can’t imagine why Floyd never recorded the song himself, but the version by Danny White is solid enough on its own.

Though White stopped recording after the 60s, according to the always excellent Sir Shambling, he went on to manage the Meters, and eventually died in 1996.

I hope you dig the track, and I’ll see you all on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Rufus Thomas- Sister’s Got a Boyfriend

By , February 24, 2015 2:17 pm

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Mister Rufus Is Back!

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Greetings all.

I come to you today, yet again, to preach a chapter from the gospel of the World’s Oldest Teenager.

If the mighty Rufus Thomas ever made a bad record, I have yet to encounter it, and as is often the case, I usually endeavor to crowbar as much of his groove juice into the mix here at Funky16Corners as I can without overplaying my (or his) hand.

The banger I bring you today is another bit of evidence that a record need not be funk, to be funk-y, and that the Stax ‘factory’ (if you will) was turning out product of unquestionably high quality during their peak years.

Written by Porter, Hayes and Jones (David, Isaac and Booker T), ‘Sister’s Got a Boyfriend’ hits on all of the required Rufus Thomas bullet points, i.e. fun, funny, heavy, soulful and danceable.

The record is also a lesson in dynamics, opening with a little call and response between Rufus and the backup singers, not unlike a dumptruck backing up slowly, beeping to warn you of its approach, and then at around 11 seconds, lifting up and unloading a ton of bricks on your head.

The combination of bass and drums (and that bass drum is as deep and wide as Grand Canyon) creates a seismic shift in the record (and hopefully in the dancers as well), abetted by a simple piano line and some tasty horns.

Rufus wails over it all, bringing you the tale of young love/lust moving forward in the face of armed parental resistance. At some point in the song (and I have no idea why) the dog gets pneumonia. It’s a wild time all around.

So, as is always my presecription, if you haven’t got any Rufus, go out and get you some, and if you do (have some) go and get some more, because there’s no such thing as too much.

See you on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Funky16Corners Thanksgiving Feast!

By , November 27, 2014 8:11 am

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Mmmmmmmm!

Greetings all!

I first gathered these food-related mixes together for Thanksgiving 2011.

Since the Grogans will be chilling together this extended weekend, I thought I’d repost them for you to stuff into your ears/iPods/whatever.

There’s even a turkey song!

Don’t forget to tune into the Funky16Corners Radio Show this Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you can’t dig it at airtime, make sure to subscribe to the show as a podcast in iTunes, listen in on your mobile device through the TuneIn app, or grab an MP3 here at the blog.

Enjoy your Thanksgiving, have a great weekend with your friends and family, and I’ll see you all on Monday.

 

Keep the faith

Larry

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Funky16Corners Radio v.3 – Soul Food (That’s What I Like) Pt1

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Track listing

Brother Jack McDuff – Hot Barbecue (Prestige)

 Soul Runners – Chittlin’ Salad Pt1 (MoSoul)

Lionel Hampton – Greasy Greens (GladHamp)

Albert Collins – Cookin’ Catfish (20th Century)

Andre Williams – Rib Tips (Avin)

Maurice Simon & The Pie Men – Sweet Potato Gravy (Carnival)

Mel Brown – Chicken Fat (Impulse)

Lonnie Youngblood – Soul Food (That’s What I Like) (Fairmount)

Prime Mates – Hot Tamales (Sansu)

Just Brothers – Sliced Tomatoes (Music Merchant)

Leon Haywood – Cornbread and Buttermilk (Decca)

Bobby Rush – Chicken Heads (Galaxy)

Booker T & The MGs – Jelly Bread (Stax)

Gentleman June Gardner – Mustard Greens (Blue Rock)

West Siders – Candy Yams (Infinity)

Hank Jacobs – Monkey Hips and Rice (Sue)

George Semper – Collard Greens (Imperial)

Billy Clark & His Orchestra – Hot Gravy (Dynamo)

Listen Download Mixed MP3

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Funky16Corners Radio v.9 – Soul Food Pt2

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Playlist

1. Simtec Simmons – Tea Box (Maurci)

2. Johnny Barfield & The Men of S.O.U.L. – Soul Butter (SSS Intl)

3. Ronnie Woods – Sugar Pt2 (Everest)

4. Stan Hunter & Sonny Fortune – Corn Flakes (Prestige)

5. Fabulous Counts – Scrambled Eggs (Moira)

6. Watts 103rd St Rhythm Band – Spreadin Honey (Keymen)

7. Freddie Roach – Brown Sugar (Blue Note)

8. Albert Collins – Sno Cone Pt1 (TCF Hall)

9. Chuck Edwards – Chuck Roast (Rene)

10. Willie Mitchell – Mashed Potatoes (Hi)

11. Booker T & The MGs – Red Beans & Rice (Atlantic)

12. Righteous Brothers Band – Green Onions (Verve)

13. George Semper – Hog Maws & Collard Greens (Imperial)

14. Lee Dorsey – Candy Yam (Amy)

15. Roosevelt Fountain & his Pens of Rhythm – Red Pepper Pt1 (Prince Adams)

16. Bad Boys – Black Olives (Paula)

17. Willie Bobo – Spanish Grease (Verve)

18. American Group – Enchilada Soul (AGP)

DOWNLOAD – 39.3 MB Mixed MP3

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Funky16Corners Radio v.60 – Finger Lickin’ Good!

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Funky16Corners Radio v.60 – Finger Lickin’ Good!

Playlist

Louis Chachere – The Hen Pt1 (Paula)
James Brown – The Chicken Pt1 (King)
The Meters – Chicken Strut (Josie)
Willie Henderson & the Soul Explosions – The Funky Chicken Pt1 (Brunswick)
Clarence Wheeler & the Enforcers – Broasted or Fried (Atlantic)
Jerry O – The Funky Chicken Yoke (Jerry O)
Unemployed – Funky Rooster (Cotillion)
Okie Duke – Chicken Lickin (Ovation)
Rufus Thomas – Do the Funky Chicken (Stax)
Mel Brown – Chicken Fat (Impulse)
Lou Garno Trio – Chicken In the Basket (Giovannis)
Chants – Chicken and Gravy (Checker)
Art Jerry Miller – Finger Licken Good (Enterprise)
Bobby Rush – Chicken Heads (Galaxy)
E Rodney Jones & Larry & the Hippies Band – Chicken On Down (Double Soul)
NY Jets – Funky Chicken (Tamboo)
Radars – Finger Licken Chicken (Yew)*
*Bonus Platter
Andre Brasseur – The Duck (Palette)
Butch Cornell Trio – Goose Pimples (RuJac)
Nie Liters – Serenade To a Jive Turkey (RCA)

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

An Answer Record: Five Great Live Soul Performances

By , November 23, 2014 12:47 pm

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Otis Redding Live at Monterey Pop

Listen/Download – Sam and Dave – Hold On I’m Comin’ (Live in Norway)

Listen/Download – Ike and Tina Turner Revue – Big TNT Show Medley

Listen/Download – Sly and the Family Stone – Woodstock Medley

Listen/Download – James Brown and the Famous Flames – Night Train (Live on the T.A.M.I. Show)

 

Greetings all.

This past week, my social media flow (sounds like something you ought to see a doctor about) was filled with links to a piece that the esteemed Peter Guralnick had penned for Okayplayer on his ‘Top 7 Moments of Live Soul’.

I clicked on the link with great anticipation. I hold Guralnick in very high regard indeed, as the preeminent soul historian of our time, and a guy that knows his stuff.

When I was done reading the article, I found myself both unsatisfied and puzzled.

While all of his examples were arguably great, all I could think of were the examples he did not include, some of the omissions being frankly mind-boggling.

I would never say that Mr Guralnick is “wrong”, since opinion is subjective and he certainly comes to his choices for a variety of good reasons, and with a lifetime of study to back them up.

However, the performances I would add to the list (or substitute as the case may be) came to me immediately. These weren’t things that I had to go back to the vault to find, they were all right there at the front of the line.

When you talk about what makes a great live performance, I am of the opinion that the performance itself does not exist in, and cannot fairly be evaluated in a vacuum, and that the connection with the audience must also be factored in.

In the introduction to his piece, Guralnick takes the time to mention that he does not consider Otis Redding (or Aretha Franklin, or Al Green) to have been “adequately captured in the full flowering of an unvarnished live performance”, and fairly allows that this may be considered heretical (and I think that – especially in the case of Otis – it is).

When making an alternate list (or in this case, an “answer record”) , I tried to look beyond whether a performance was of historical importance (which a few of these are) and was actually great on its own.

I’m also taking into consideration the visual impact of the performance, simply because as great as an audio performance is, we’re dealing with people who were able to captivate an audience with their show. Though I’m sure there was someone in the history of soul who was able to walk out on a stage and put on a great show standing still, I can’t think of one. Even someone like Ray Charles, by and large relegated to his piano bench by his blindness had a visual component to his performance (on his own, and with the Raelettes).

I say this too, since some of the performances I list were never (as far as I know) issued on vinyl, and as a result have only been appreciated by those that were able to see it in person, or watch it on film (which is perfectly acceptable).

One can only imagine also the countless amazing performances that were only ever witnessed with eyes and ears, out of the reach of cameras and recording equipment, their memory passed down by word of mouth (or written down) over the years.

None of these are performances that have grown on me over the years, their nuances revealed over time, but rather instances that knocked me back on my heels immediately and demanded that I return, again and again, ultimately just as satisfied as I was the first.

A few of these (Otis and Sly) have been written about in this space before, and I’ll make sure to link back to those pieces where applicable.

I’d like to begin with the performance that I can trace back to the very beginning of my love for soul music, Otis Redding at the Monterey Pop Festival.

His appearance at Monterey Pop has long been considered important as a moment when soul music – and Otis specifically – crossed over to a mainstream pop audience.

By the time he took the stage at Monterey, Otis had been burning up stages (for mostly black audiences) for half a decade. He had made incursions into the pop charts, but nothing of serious note until 1965 (‘Respect’) and no major crossover hit until 1968, after his death (‘Sitting On the Dock of the Bay’).

Otis Redding at Monterey Pop, backed by Booker T and the MGs and the Memphis Horns is a remarkable snapshot of a truly great performer (the one I consider the greatest soul singer of the classic era) really connecting with an audience.

The entire performance lasts less than 20 minutes, but it is a case study in dynamics, capturing Otis delivering heart-rending ballads and uptempo groovers with equal power.

Redding devotes the last five minutes of the show to ‘Try a Little Tenderness’. When he introduces the song he seems both overwhelmed by the audience response, and out of breath, yet he manages to recover through the slower opening of the song, eventually building to an explosive climax that is at least to my ears one of the greatest of all time, in any genre.

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Sam Moore

The second performance on the list is one that only saw official release in 2007 on the DVD release ‘Stax/Volt Revue Live in Norway 1967’.

Like any kid that came of age in the 70s, I was always aware of Sam and Dave via their hits, especially after the Blues Brothers took their cover of ‘Soul Man’ into the charts in 1979. As I got older, and listened to more (and read about) soul music, I repeatedly encountered mentions of the extraordinary power of Sam and Dave as live performers.

The Stax/Volt Revue (Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, Eddie Floyd, Booker T and the MGs, the Mar-Keys, Arthur Conley) toured Europe in the Spring of 1967, stopping in Oslo, Norway near the end of the trip.

The entire Revue was captured on film, and while they are all worth watching, the performance by Sam and Dave is absolutely stunning.

The pair, backed by almost the exact same band as Otis was at Monterey, comes out to ‘You Don’t Know Like I Know’, moves on into their cover of the Sims Twins ‘Soothe Me’ and then into the ballad ‘When Something Is Wrong With My Baby’ (on the DVD but omitted from the YouTube clip).

By the time the band kicks off ‘Hold On I’m Comin’’ the duo have shed their jackets and are dancing all over the stage, trading lines and dripping sweat.

Watching this performance it is immediately apparent why they were given the nickname ‘Double Dynamite’. They interact in ways that seem casual, yet must have been honed to razor sharpness, night after night on the road, and by the time they’re three minutes into the song, they drop down into a cross between a revival meeting and near riot.

With the MGs vamping in the background, Sam Moore moves to the front of the stage and starts preaching. The band gradually picks up steam, as Sam and Dave turn from the crowd and face each other trading lines.

This is where the real fun begins. They start to tease the crowd, leaving the stage, only to return and start unleashing some fancy footwork, then leaving yet again (at one point facing each other and casually shaking hands before they exit).

The way they whip the previously staid audience into a frenzy, first bringing them to their feet time and time again, then causing them to swarm the stage (having to be restrained by what looks like the Norwegian army, who look a little scared) as Sam leaps down off of the stage into the crowd is something to behold.

The first time I watched this I was reduced to tears. I’ve been to some great shows in my life, but not a one that came within a thousand miles of what that lucky audience in Norway were treated to that night in 1967.

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Ike and Tina Turner

I came to a deeper appreciation of Ike and Tina Turner rather late in the game. I was well aware of their late 60s hits, but only really understood the greatness of their early-to-mid 60s material fairly recently.

Ike and Tina were hopping from label to label during these years, and getting a handle on the material from this era can be difficult unless you spend some time (and money) digging for the original records.

Fortunately, the Ike and Tina Turner Revue were included in the line-up of ‘The Big TNT Show’ a sequel to ‘The TAMI Show’ that was filmed in Los Angeles in November of 1965.

Their set in the film is a testament to the greatness of the group during this period, when they were crossing over from R&B into pure soul, and one of the hottest acts in the land.

Opening their (extended medley) set with Sam Cooke’s ‘Shake’, Tina and the Ikettes take full command of the stage, and the band is like rolling thunder behind them (it’s all about the rhythm guitar flowing like lava out of those big Fender amps). They quickly segue into ‘A Fool In Love’, ‘I Think It’s Gonna Work Out Fine’, ‘Please Please Please’, and then ‘Goodbye So Long’ which is like a juggernaut, especially with Ike and Tina sharing the mic for the “OOHWAH’s” (the pair look like they’re actually having fun), and then Tina and the Ikettes start whipping out the synchronized dance moves and the whole thing goes off like nitro.

The show comes to a conclusion as Revue member Jimmy Thomas takes the stage and Tina dances off.

It should be noted, that as good as their 1964/1965 live albums are, they were never captured as well as they were on ‘The Big TNT Show’. Tina proves here that she was one of the truly great soul singers of the classic era (even with that crazy hat on her head).

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Sly Stone

Sly and the Family Stone were by any measure one of the great acts of the late 60s/early 70s.

I should preface this section by mentioning that the performance that really needs to be seen is what I think is a 1968 set from the Ohio State Fair (it may very well have been a battle of the bands). I saw the set years ago and was amazed, but sadly it appears that the clip has been pulled from Youtube.

That said, the band’s performance at Woodstock in the summer of 1969, arguably the only real ‘soul’ group on the bill, is just as remarkable.

The one piece of context that needs to be laid out at the very beginning, is that this explosive performance took place between 3:30AM and 4:20AM!?!

Opening with ‘Dance to the Music’ and moving into ‘Music Lover’ (a great tune that as far as I can tell was never recorded outside the confines of a medley) and then ‘I Want To Take You Higher’, the medley is a textbook example of a band at the peak of their powers. I don’t know about you, and I’m sure there were all kinds of stimulants involved, I can’t imagine being able to muster this kind of performance in the middle of the night, and the amazing thing is, as hyped up as the band is, the audience is right there with them.

You have to listen closely to the way Sly runs the show, and especially to the pulse of the rhythm guitar and the way Greg Errico’s snare shoots through the mix over and over again.

It kind of blows my mind that a band this good never released a live album (at least until their entire Woodstock set was reissued in a package with the ‘Stand’ LP as ‘The Woodstock Experience’ in 2009 (you can get the live set by itself on iTunes).

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James Brown and the Famous Flames

Where Guralnick chose a James Brown cut from the ‘Live at the Apollo’LP (one of the greatest live recordings ever), I’d refer you instead to James and the Famous Flames set from the 1964 ‘T.A.M.I. Show’.

Following a little light comedy from Jan and Dean, James and the Flames launch into one of the most intense performances ever captured on film.

There’s a lot of James Brown footage out there (make sure to check out the recent HBO doc), but there’s something special about the ‘T.A.M.I. Show’.

Like Otis at Monterey, we’re witnessing an artist who had been almost exclusively performing for black audiences being whipped on a white crowd that had no idea what was coming.

The 18 minute set runs from ‘Out of Sight’, through ‘Prisoner of Love’,’Please Please Please’ (during which James does the cape routine) which is stretched out into an epic performance. Naturally, you’d expect any sane person to say goodnight, but this is where James Brown takes a hard left turn, dialing up the intensity several notches with ‘Night Train’.

Taking the sleepy old strippers standard and laying on the gas pedal, the band is firing at 100MPH, and  James and the Famous Flames are all over the stage (look at Bobby Byrd doing the Monkey!). Brown uses the song’s starts and stops to pour even more fuel on the fire, getting faster, and heavier with each and every break.

These kids have NEVER seen anything like this, and even their adolescent hysteria over longhairs like the Stones pales in comparison to their awe at James Brown, who measurably has no equal in the history of stage performance, in ANY genre.

He is tireless, driving (and driven by) one of the tightest bands ever assembled, dropping to his knees, falling in splits and then crossing the floor on one heel like some kind of dervish.

Make sure to watch to the very end where an exhausted Brown sits down on the bandstand to take a breath and the Blossoms collectively wave him back out onto the floor, where in a final flourish he whips off his tie, makes like he’s going to throw it into the crowd, but then tucks it into his vest with a sly grin and marches offstage.

It is every bit as thrilling to watch as it was the first time I saw it, on Beta more than 30 years ago.

I’d love to hear what you would add to (or delete from) the list, so make sure to drop some knowledge in the comments.

So dig it, and I’ll see you all on Wednesday.

 

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Happy Birthday Otis Redding

By , September 9, 2014 11:10 am

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Otis Redding

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Listen/Download Otis Redding – Good To Me

Greetings all

Seventy-three years ago today, the greatest soul singer that ever was, Otis Redding, was born in Dawson, Georgia.

I have previously recounted in this space the story of how Otis was my gateway into the world of soul almost 40 years ago, and have reiterated many times that I hold no singer (soul or otherwise) in higher esteem.

Though his career only lasted for six years, it spanned most of the classic soul era, and influenced countless performers.

Redding was possessed of a mighty voice, a dynamic stage presence and was also a gifted songwriter.

I came to today’s selection the long way ‘round, as it were.

The first version I picked up was by Irma Thomas* (recorded in Muscle Shoals in 1968), and it was a while before I realized that it had been co-written (with Julius Green of the Mad Lads) and originally recorded by Otis in 1966.

The arrangement on Redding’s original is fairly spare, fitting since the structure of the songs is deceptively simple. The verse builds slowly, shifting ever so much when he states:

I’m going to keep loving you woman
For 20 more years
After that I’m going for 40
‘Cause I’ve got my will to try

The song has an almost gospel feel to it, a song of praise, not to God, but rather to a woman.

It moves at an almost glacial pace, but that’s the kind of environment where Otis redding thrived.

Unlike so many that came after him, he was able to fill what would seem like an insurmountably empty space, not with theatrics, but with concise, perfectly delivered emotion.

That’s why he was the man.

Happy Birthday Otis.

Keep the faith

Larry

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* There’s also a very nice instrumental version by Odell Brown 

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Artie Christopher – Stoned Soul

By , August 7, 2014 11:07 am

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Listen/Download Artie Christopher – Stoned Soul

Greetings all

The week is coming to its conclusion (logical, or not) and that means that it’s Funky16Corners Radio Show time again. This and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio, I bring you the finest in funk, soul, jazz and rare groove, all on original vinyl. If you can’t fall by at airtime, you can always keep up at your leisure by subscribing to the show as a podcast in iTunes, or by grabbing yourself an MP3 here at the blog.

The tune I bring you today is a little bit of Memphis funk.

I can’t tell you much about Artie Christopher, aside from the fact that he seems to have laid down a pair of 45s for the Atlantic label in 1968 (at least one of them originally released on the 5-High imprint).

He was one of many similarly inclined soulful Caucasians operating in the south at around the same time (see South, Joe and White, Tony Joe for starters), and was the brother of guitarist/songwriter Johnnie Christopher, who co-wrote Elvis Presley’s smash ‘Always On My Mind’ (covered by many, many others).

That’s pretty much where the obtainable facts run out.

The tune you see before you today, the instrumental ‘Stoned Soul’ was released in 1968 as the flipside of Christopher’s version of ‘Hello LA, Bye Bye Birmingham’, the song that led me to seek out this 45 in the first place.

Interestingly enough, it’s ‘Stoned Soul’ for which most folks grab this disc, it having been included on Rhino’s ‘What It Is’ boxed set.

A funky, guitar and organ led instro, the tune features a great (Philly sounding) horn line, wild effects laden guitar (or keyboard, I’m not sure, but was eventually sampled by Method Man) and a very nice bass breakdown as well.

The groovy thing is, both of Christopher’s Atlantic 45s are relatively easy to find, and fairly inexpensive as well.

Unfortunately, according to Sir Shambling’s site, Christopher passed away some time ago.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll see you all on Monday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

William Bell & Mavis Staples – I Thank You

By , July 29, 2014 1:21 pm

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William Bell and Mavis Staples

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Listen/Download William Bell and Mavis Staples – I Thank You

Greetings all

A couple of weeks ago, not long after I finished reading Greg Kots’ most excellent ‘I’ll Take You There: Mavis Staples, the Staple Singers, and the March up Freedom’s Highway’, it just happened to be Ms. Mavis’ 75th birthday.

I have been listening to a LOT of Staple Singers ish the last few years – especially the Epic era gospel stuff – and consistently marveling at the pure, soulful power of Mavis Staples’ voice.

It just so happens that a few months before (I’ve been reading a lot, you see) I had read Robert Palmer’s also excellent ‘Respect Yourself: Stax Records and the Soul Explosion’.

Palmer’s book is an indispensable guidebook to the history of that mighty soul label, especially his coverage of Stax’s late 60s rebirth.

Having been left in the lurch thanks to a shady deal with Atlantic Records, which cost the label their masters (and one of their top-selling acts, Sam and Dave), Stax, led by Al Bell, regrouped with the intention of reestablishing their market presence/dominance.

Part of Bell’s ambitious plan was a huge wave of new releases, which brought the label’s talent to the very edge of exhaustion.

One of Stax’s recent acquisitions, was the Staple Singers.

Having departed Epic records, the Staples came to Stax, already having loosened up a little bit.

Their catalog had already started to include non-religious (yet still inspirational) material, like their 1967 cover of the Buffalo Springfield’s ‘For What It’s Worth’, and their original songs, like ‘Why Am I Treated So Bad’ had been covered by the likes of the Sweet Inspirations, Bobby Powell and Brian Auger and the Trinity.

One of the cornerstones of Stax/Bell’s big push was a two-LP set composed of duets, mixing and matching the label’s male talent, like Eddie Floyd, William Bell, Johnnie Taylor and Pervis Staples, with its female stars like Carla Thomas, and Mavis and Cleotha Staples.

Composed of 22 tracks, the ‘Boy Meets Girl’ collection is, despite the daunting size (and the fact that these were all new recordings) actually quite good.

With the recording spread between Memphis, Detroit and Muscle Shoals, and a number of arrangers and writers, the resulting tracks are not consistently ‘Stax-like’ – there are a number of cuts that sound Motown-ish – but there’s lots to dig.

My favorite track from the collection is William Bell and Mavis Staples funky duet on ‘I Thank You’.

Originally recorded the previous year by Sam and Dave, the 1969 recording – produced by Al Bell and Isaac Hayes – is a something of a lost classic.

The arrangement is unusual – the first 45 seconds consist of Bell and Staples trading lines over just congas and tambourines – but when the band kicks in things get funky.

The clavinet from the OG is still there, but it gets some company from fuzz guitar, and the drums keep up the heat through the whole record.

Bell sounds great, and it’s cool to hear Mavis in one of her earliest purely soulful outings.

The power of her voice was always a revelation, but especially so here. She never soars, or showboats, choosing instead to add subtle but perfectly chosen turns here and there.

She really is a singer that demands your attention, and her performance here ought to be better known.

Unfortunately – though Stax released six singles from the collection – ‘I Thank You’ was not among them.

It doesn’t help that the reissues (including the version currently on iTunes) of the ‘Boy Meets Girl’ collection have often been changed to exclude some of the original tracks and add new ones.

Fortunately for those of you with turntables, the original vinyl version of the set seems to be in plentiful supply and can usually be scored for less than twenty bucks.

I hope you dig the track, and I’ll see you all on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Sam and Dave – I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down

By , July 20, 2014 11:45 am

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Sam and Dave

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Listen/Download Sam and Dave – I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down

Greetings all

The summer is in full swing.

The thickness of the air does however force one to slow down a bit, and in times like these I develop a taste for deep soul.

Earlier this year I had the great honor to meet and DJ for the mighty David Porter.

Alongside Isaac Hayes, Porter was part of one of the great songwriting teams of the classic soul era.

As it happens, not long after that night, I got my hands on Robert Gordon’s ‘Respect Yourself: Stax Records and the Soul Explosion’ (highly recommended).

The combination of these two things had me digging deep in my own crates and doing some intense listening to all things Stax and Stax-related.

Aside from the pure pleasure of digging all that amazing music, I came out of it with a new, deeper appreciation for Sam Moore.

I have always had a pet peeve of sorts in regard to amazing soul singers – Levi Stubbs especially – who ought to be placed in the pantheon of the greats, alongside Otis Redding and Wilson Pickett, yet seem trapped withing the group identity.

No matter how great he was, Levi Stubbs will forever be ‘Levi Stubbs of the Four Tops’, and Sam Moore, will always be ‘Sam’ of Sam and Dave.

This is not to cast aspersions on Dave Prater, a great singer in his own right, but rather to focus on the fact that Sam Moore was possessed of a voice that had few equals, at Stax or anywhere else.

The fact that what we consider to be soul music would not exist without deep and strong gospel roots is something that a lot of people need to be reminded of.

Though gospel music is in the midst of a collector’s renaissance, the average listener rarely makes the connections between the amen corner and the soulful sounds they hear on their favorite oldies station.

Both Sam Moore and Dave Prater got their start singing in church, and their vocal stylings, as individuals and in their interplay as a duo, brought that training to the fore.

The record I bring you today is a tune that I first came to know via the (much faster) 1980 cover by Elvis Costello and the Attractions.

The first time I heard the original 1967 version by Sam and Dave, the radical difference in presentation gave me pause.

Co-written by the mighty Homer Banks and Allen Jones, the song is the deep, gospel confessional channeled through romantic regret. Instead of confessing their sins before the congregation, Sam and Dave deliver a sermon about broken hearts.

‘I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down’ is a great window into the duo’s technique, both individually and in tandem.

Moore takes the opening verse, with its amazing line ‘I’ve tasted the bitterness of my own tears’ and his clear, high tenor soars into the rafters.

Prater follows in the second verse, his grittier voice (punctuated by Moore’s cries) coming from another place entirely.

The singers join together on the chorus, and then in the bridge, where the record finds its only odd note, with Moore taking the line ‘But that won’t stop me from loving you’ and changing it to ‘But that can’t stop Sam and Dave from loving you.’*

‘I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down’ is hardly the only great performance in the Sam and Dave discography, but it is one of the finest, as well as one of the greatest ballads in the entirety of the Stax catalog.

If you haven’t given them a good listen lately, take your Sam and Dave 45s out, dust them off and dig in.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll see you on Wednesday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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*Listen, it’s none of my business what Sam and Dave did in their free time…

 

 

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Bobby Womack 1944-2014

By , June 29, 2014 11:56 am

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Bobby Womack

Listen/Download The Valentinos – It’s All Over Now

Listen/Download Percy Sledge – Baby Help Me

Listen/Download Bobby Womack – Take Me

Listen/Download Bobby Womack – A Simple Man

Listen/Download Sammy Gordon and the Hip Huggers – Breezin’

Listen/Download Bobby Womack and Peace – Across 110th Street

 

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Greetings all

Last week ended on a down note, with news of the passing of the mighty Bobby Womack.

Womack, who was 70, had fought multiple health-related battles over the past few years.

As has been stated in this space a few times in the past, I came to the music of Bobby Womack fairly late in the game.

Womack’s was one of those names that I ‘knew’ (that much was unavoidable) but his music was always just outside of my view.

Typical of my musical wandering, it was via his singing with his brothers in the Valentinos that I first heard his voice.

As an inveterate seeker of all things ‘original’, it was the Valentinos’ ‘It’s All Over Now’, covered by the Rolling Stones, that I had to put my hands on, and I was very happy to do so.

Over the years, thanks to reading about his exploits in a number of books, I became better acquainted with his life, and by picking up his records when I could, his music.

Discussing his passing with a friend on Facebook, I described Bobby Womack as a kind of ‘Zelig’ of soul (referencing the omnipresent Woody Allen character), popping up all over the musical landscape, working with artists like Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin and Janis Joplin over the years.

He got his start singing gospel with The Womack Brothers, that group evolving (much to their father’s consternation) into the R&B Valentinos.

Womack worked closely with Sam Cooke, and after that giant’s untimely death, eventually married his widow, a move that was reportedly so unpopular in the music business that it all but torpedoed his career at the time.

Through the 1960s Womack worked steadily as a guitarist (for Ray Charles, among others) and songwriter, composing a number of Wilson Pickett’s big hits (‘I’m In Love’ and ‘I’m a Midnight Mover’ among others), yet didn’t make it onto the charts under his own name until 1968 and ‘What Is This’, which started long string of R&B hits that lasted all the way until 1986.

The more I listen to his music, the more I realize that Bobby Womack should have been a much, bigger star. I think, had his string of hits started a few years earlier, he would be spoken of in the same breath as Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Solomon Burke and the like.

He was a prodigiously talented artist, as able a composer and musician as he was a singer, able to mix and match those talents as needed.

That he was already held in that high esteem by soul fans is without question. The outpouring of sadness and respect I have seen over the past few days attests to that.

I have posted a number of Bobby Womack (and related) tracks in this space over the last half-dozen years. As I was digging through the archives, I pulled a number of those out, as well as something I’d been wanting to feature for a while.

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The first track is – of course – the Valentinos ‘It’s All Over Now’. Released in 1964 on Sam Cooke’s SAR label, but soon pushed out of the spotlight by the Rolling Stones cover, ‘It’s All Over Now’ is a fantastic piece of early West Coast soul, and maybe the grooviest record ever to feature both the glockenspiel and the tuba. It wasn’t the Valentinos biggest hit – ‘Lookin’ For a Love’ made it into the R&B Top 10 in 1962 – but it is nonetheless amazing.

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Percy Sledge

Next up is a track from Womack’s songwriting days, just prior to his own chart ascendancy. ‘Baby Help Me’ was a minor hit for Percy Sledge in early 1967. It is a departure for Sledge, seeing him working the uptempo, soul shouting side of the street.

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‘Take Me’ from 1968, was the flipside of his Top 20 R&B hit cover of ‘Fly Me To the Moon’. I am here to tell you – though you’d be able to pick up as much listening to the song – that this is not only one of Bobby Womack’s best (though, strangely enough, composed not by him, but by Big Dee Erwin/Ervin) but one of the finest soul records laid down in the 1960s.

Recorded in Memphis with the American Studios band (of whom Womack had been a part), ‘Take Me’ (this is the 45 mix, noticeably different from, and superior to the LP track) is a mid-tempo epic, with a powerful ascending horn chart, and an epic vocal by Bobby. There are times when this record can bring me to tears, it’s so good.

1971 found Womack in the studio with another Funky16Corners favorite, Gabor Szabo on the ‘High Contrast’ LP (Womack writing four of the album’s seven tracks). He presented Szabo with a new composition entitled ‘Breezin’, and the two of them grazed the R&B Top 40 with their version of the song.

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A year later, NY-based Sammy Gordon and the Hiphuggers covered ‘Breezin’ for the Archives label. Gordon, who had come to New York (as did his cousin Benny, of Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers) from the Carolinas, recorded a couple of excellent, funky 45s. Their amazing version of ‘Breezin’ went nowhere near the charts, but its loopable drum and bass opening (try to keep from nodding your head) and mellow groove is fantastic, and for me far superior to the better known, 1976 hit by George Benson.

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The very funky ‘Simple Man’ (co-written with Joe Hicks) is one of my favorite tracks from Womack’s 1972 LP ‘Understanding, which also included ‘Woman’s Gotta Have It’ his first R&B #1 hit. The cut features a wild vocal by Bobby, some rolling electric piano and plenty of fuzz guitar.

I wanted to include Womack’s 1973 cover of Bob Dylan’s ‘All Along the Watchtower’. Recorded with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section for the ‘Facts of Life’ album, it’s a hard rocking take on the tune, which sounds more like Neil Young than Jimi Hendrix, and is a great window into the complexity and variety of Womack’s sound.

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The last track I’m posting today is Bobby Womack’s famous entry into the Blaxploitation world, 1973’s title track from the film ‘Across 100th Street’. A funky cut, with just enough strings (co-written with jazz trombonist JJ Johnson, who created much of the instrumental music on the soundtrack), it is pushed along by percussive keyboards and heavy bass. The song had a second life when Quentin Tarantino used it in his film ‘Jackie Brown’.

He continued to record through the 80s and 90s (having some of his biggest hits with the LPs ‘The Poet’ and ‘The Poet II” in 1981 and 1984 respectively), eventually guesting on the Gorillaz ‘Stylo’ in 2009 (the year he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Bobby Womack was a master.

He will be missed.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Megatons – Shimmy Shimmy Walk Pt1

By , February 9, 2014 12:17 pm

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Billy Lee Riley

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Listen/Download Megatons – Shimmy Shimmy Walk Pt1

Greetings all

I thought we’d get the week rolling with something from the pride of Pocahontas, Arkansas, the great Billy Lee Riley.

If you have even a passing knowledge of classic rockabilly, the name Billy Lee Riley ought to be familiar.

Riley laid down legendary sides like ‘Flyin’ Saucers Rock and Roll’ and ‘Red Hot’ for Sun Records, both in 1957.

‘Red Hot’ would be revived in the late 70s by Robert Gordon and Link Wray (which is where I first heard it).

Riley and his band the Little Green Men also did a lot of work backing other artists.

In 1962, Riley and his new band (featuring several of the Little Green Men) went into the studio in Memphis, and as the Megatons recorded the record you see before you, ‘Shimmy Shimmy Walk’.

Initially released on the Dodge label, it was eventually picked up and reissued by Checker, where it made it into the Hot 100 later that year.

If the tune sounds familiar, it is because it is a reworking of the R&B standard ‘You Don’t Love Me’.

Originally recorded under that title in 1960 by Willie Cobbs for Mojo records (his version was basically a reworking of Bo Diddley’s 1955 ‘She’s Fine She’s Mine’), it was a local hit n Memphis and was picked up for national distribution by VeeJay.

The song went on to become a rock/blues standard in the 1960s, being recorded by a wide variety of artists, including the Kaleidoscope, John Mayall’s Blues Breakers, The Al Kooper/Stephen Stills Super Session, Junior Wells and the Allman Brothers Band as well as the legendary 1967 Jamaican version by Dawn Penn.

The Megatons version features rolling guitar, a very nice reverbed harmonica solo and some groovy combo organ.

It was also released in the UK on Sue, where it became popular with the Mod/soul crowd.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll see you all on Wednesday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Booker T and the MGs – Boot-Leg

By , January 28, 2014 1:44 pm

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Booker T and the MGs

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Listen/Download Booker T and the MGs – Boot-Leg

Greetings all

Welcome to the middle of the week, in which we endeavor to assist you in your journey over the hump.

The tune I bring you today is an old favorite of mine that I recently pulled from the crates, dropped into my playbox and reappraised, as it were.

I have always dug Booker T and the MGs ‘Boot-Leg’, but it was one of those sides that I never really listened to closely, or at least closely enough that I really ‘got’ it.

The tune, which made it into the R&B Top 10 in 1965, and was one of the 45s in John Lennon’s famed portable jukebox, is classic, down and dirty Stax groove.

Written by Packy Axton (of the Mar-Keys, Packers etc), Duck Dunn, Isaac Hayes and Al Jackson Jr., ‘Boot-Leg’ opens with some remarkably distorted guitar from Steve Cropper which then drops down into a positively booming guitar/bass tandem line. The bass sound is crazy deep.

Al Jackson is – as was the norm – screwed right down into the pocket, and there’s even a groovy sax solo (not sure if it’s Packy or Andrew Love of the Memphis Horns).

It is a particularly tasty Booker T and the MGs side, and worthy of your attention.

I hope you dig it as much as I do, and I’ll see you all on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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NOTE: Reading Robert Gordon’s Stax history ‘Respect Yourself’ and discovered that this recording has Isaac Hayes replacing Booker T (who was away at college) on organ, and features the very first appearance by Duck Dunn (replacing Lewie Steinberg) on bass!

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

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