I always did wonder if the Stax and Motown people ever met up...you know, get to know the competition (without giving away your secrets). Did Al Bell and Berry Gordy ever go to lunch and compare strategies? Did Duck Dunn and James Jamerson ever sit around and talk shop about hip bass patterns? Did Hayes & Porter ever chew the fat with HDH? I reckon that since these were the two biggest soul labels in the sixties, they would have crossed paths at some point.
And if they did meet up like that, wouldn't you have fucking killed to be a fly on the wall at the meetings?
Loved the show. I missed some of the end because after Bono Duprie and Costello I up and left the room in disgust.
I'm sure you know that Stax recorded some in Detroit and leased some Detroit recordings. I'm trying to think of artists who recorded for both labels. There must be at least someone like Homer Banks who shows up on both. There is no way that touring Memphis artists never met touring Detroit artists on the road.
it was great showing Otis singing My Girl right after the the Temps. Did Motown ever cover any Stax songs? What other Motown songs made their way to Stax records?
I can't think of any.
Doesn't Jim Stewart still own East Memphis Publishing? That catalog is off the hook. Not only all the great Stax songs (including Wilson Pickett's collabs with Cropper and others) but also Hi studio stuff from Al Green and Willie Mitchell. If he still has ownership in that we can stop crying.
I think people are a little hard on Al Bell. Stax is just one of a long list of indepents that went under. Good times people spend money, banks loan money, bad times you wonder where it went. Remember that Atlantic show a few weeks ago. They sold out cheap to Warner the first time they came knocking because they saw so many independants go under. All that gangster stuff was bs, and too sad. Did you see at the end it said that one gangster is now the minister at a church in Harlem? It might have been Abyssnian Baptist.
I'd love to see two hours just on:
Al Bell
Sir Mack Rice
Booker T Jones
Rufus Thomas
Staple Singers
They talked about Otis singing the horn parts to all the musicians. Check out Otis records and other Stax records from the same time. The horn parts are always better on the Otis records.
Columbia is a big reason for the collapse of Stax. Stax gave them product and they never released it. Fantasy has now released a lot of that stuff.
OK, that is all for now. I thought it was great, I'm still thinking about it. I love Stax. Just think how bad it would have been if they had kept cutting to Bono and Nora Jones explaining the meaning of soul like some docs do. I just wish it was longer. A lot longer.