Группа, выступающая в стиле соул, рассвет которой был в 60х и 70х годах прошлого столетия. Booker T. & the M.G.'s принадлежат к так называемой школе memphis soul и очень ассоциируются с компанией Stax Records. Самая известная работа команды – инструментальная композиция “Green Onions”. Booker T. & the M.G.'s являются также основателями оригинального звучания Stax и в середине 60х многие исполнители по обе стороны Атлантики хотели на них походить.
Основные участники: Booker T. Jones (орган, клавиши), Steve Cropper (гитара), Donald “Duck” Dunn или Lewie Steiberg (бас) и Al Jackson (барабаны). В разные периоды в группе также выступали Issac Hayes, Carson Whitsett и Willie Hall.
Летом 1962 года 17-летний клавишник Booker T. Jones, 21-летний гитарист Steve Cropper, басист Lewie Steinberg и Al Jackson работали на Sun Records и записывались для Billy Lee Riley. Когда у ребят не было работы, то они подрабатывали, играя кавер версии произведений Ray Charles, и в это время им улыбнулась удача, и их заметил президент компании Stax Jim Stewart. Jim’у настолько понравилось творчество молодой команды, что он предложил записать пару песен. Но для того, чтобы сделать запись нужно было придумать название группы и Jackson предложил The MG's. Названием всем понравилось и президент Stax хотел даже заключить контракт с одноименной автомобильной компанией о взаимной раскрутке, но они отказались и музыканты стали расшифровывать MG как "Memphis Group."
Вначале Stewart хотел выпустил пластинку с заглавной песней "Behave Yourself", а в качестве B-side взять другую, но диск жокей Steve Cropper думал иначе, и в результате вышла пластинка с заглавной композицией "Green Onions" и "Behave Yourself" на обратной стороне. "Green Onions" мгновенно взелетела на верхние строчки хит парадов и скоре группа выпустила целый альбом под названием be"Green Onions".
Последующие два года Cropper, Jackson, Jones и Steinberg, а также Donald "Duck" Dunn и клавишник Isaac Hayes задавали стиль в соул музыке. В то же время группа работала на студии и помогала при записи других исполнителей, а так как Jones учился в университете и часто пропускал работу, то вместо него играл Isaac Hayes. Они помогали Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, Akbert King, Johnnie Taylor, Eddie Floyd, The Staple Singers и Wilson Pickett. Они спродюсировали и сыграли сотни композиций, среди которых была такая классика как "Walkin' the Dog," "Hold On! (I'm Coming)", "Soul Man," "Who's Making Love," "I've Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)" и "Try a Little Tenderness". Именно они создали неповторимый «южный соул», где на первое место выходил грув, а лирика была не столь важна. Booker T. & the M.G.'s стали популярны и в Европе, где они были с туром, организованным Stax. После “Hip Hug-Her” вышел альбом “Doin' Our Thing and Soul Limbo”. Композиция "Soul Limbo" стала хитом и позднее BBC взяла ее как заставку для своих передач. А в апреле 1969 года многие заслушивались "Time is Tight", написанной к саундтрэку кинофильма Up Tight!.
В 1969 Duck Dunn и Booker T. Jones работали вместе с The Beatles над альбомом “Abbey Road”. Во время записи участники The Beatles стали настоящими поклонниками стиля игры Booker T. & the M.G.'s. Когда они расставались в аэропорту Booker T. & the M.G.'s даже понятия не имели какое влияние они оказали на мировую историю музыки.
В начале 70х Booker T. Jones покинул Stax и стал работать на Hi Records, кстати именно он был автором самых известных хитов Al Green. Остальные же участники продолжали издавать альбомы, но они не имели коммерческого успеха. О них услышали лишь в 1978 году, когда они начали выступать вместе с The Blues Brothers, потом они опять оставались в тени и тольков 1992 Bob Dylan пригласил их с собой в турне, после этого они играли у Stevie Wonder, Johnny Cash, Eric Clapton, Neil Young и даже Pearl Jam. Также в 1992 году их имена попали в зал славы рок-н-ролла. А в 1994 оставшиеся участники команды выпустили первый студийный альбом за последние 20 лет “That’s the Way It Should Be”.
В 2004 журнал Rolling Stone Magazine составил список 100 величайших артистов нашего времени и Booker T. & the M.G.'s заняли 93 место, а в 2007 они получили награду Grammy о заслугах на музыкальном поприще. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Formed in 1962 in Memphis, Tennessee, Booker T and the MG's ("MG" officially stood for "Memphis Group", and is usually punctuated correctly on LP covers as "M.G.") became one of the most important soul outfits in the history of music. They were indispensable as the house band for Stax Records, backing many rising artists (Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, Albert King, and many others), but it was the MGs themselves that put Stax on the map with such singles as "Green Onions", which reached number three on the Pop Charts, and "Hip Hug-Her", which reached number six on the Pop Charts.
The group consisted of four core members: Booker T. Jones on keyboards and organ (as well as many other instruments), Steve Cropper on guitar, Al Jackson Jr. on drums, and Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass. Cropper and Dunn were originally in the first house band for Stax, The Mar-Keys, and later were part of the Blues Brothers, both in the band and in the movie. Various others added horns and other instruments, and a young Isaac Hayes covered the keys on at least one session.
Not only were they blazing new trails with their funky instrumental soul music, but also with their integration of races, as two of them were white (Donald "Duck" Dunn and Steve Cropper) and two of them were black (Booker T. Jones and Al Jackson), which was very unusual for 1962.
In 2007 the documentary Respect Yourself: The Stax Records Story was released, with interviews and footage in which Booker T. Jones, Steve Cropper, Wayne Jackson and Donald Duck Dunn are interviewed about the history and successes of Stax, among many others Stax' people.
Donald Duck Dunn died in his sleep at age 70 on Sunday, May 13, 2012.
(2) As the house band at Stax Records in Memphis, Tennessee, Booker T. & the MG's may have been the single greatest factor in the lasting value of that label's soul music, not to mention Southern soul as a whole. Their tight, impeccable grooves could be heard on classic hits by Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Carla Thomas, Albert King, and Sam & Dave, and for that reason alone, they would deserve their subsequent induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. But in addition to their formidable skills as a house band, on their own they were one of the top instrumental outfits of the rock era, cutting classics like "Green Onions," "Time Is Tight," and "Hang 'em High."
The anchors of the Booker T. sound were Steve Cropper, whose slicing, economic riffs influenced many other guitar players, and Booker T. Jones himself, who provided much of the groove with his floating organ lines. In 1960, Jones started working as a session man for Stax, where he met Cropper. Cropper had been in the Mar-Keys, famous for the 1961 instrumental hit "Last Night," which laid out the prototype for much of the MG's (and indeed Memphis soul's) sound with its organ-sax-guitar combo. With the addition of drummer Al Jackson and bassist Lewis Steinberg, they became Booker T. & the MG's. Within a couple years, Steinberg was replaced permanently by Donald "Duck" Dunn, who, like Cropper, had also played with the Mar-Keys.
The band's first and biggest hit, "Green Onions" (a number three single in 1962), came about by accident. Jamming in the studio while fruitlessly waiting for Billy Lee Riley to show up for a session, they came up with a classic minor-key, bluesy soul instrumental, distinguished by its nervous organ bounce and ferocious bursts of guitar. For the next five years, they'd have trouble recapturing its commercial success, though the standard of their records remained fairly high, and Stax's dependence upon them as the house band ensured a decent living.
In the late '60s, the MG's really hit their stride with "Hip Hug-Her," "Groovin'," "Soul-Limbo," "Hang 'em High," and "Time Is Tight," all of which were Top 40 charters between 1967 and 1969. Since the presence of black and white musicians made them a biracial band, the MG's set a somewhat under-appreciated example of both how integrated, self-contained bands could succeed, and how both black and white musicians could play funky soul music. As is the case with most instrumental rock bands, their singles contained their best material, and the band's music is now best appreciated via anthologies. But their albums were far from inconsequential, and occasionally veered into ambitious territory (they did an entire instrumental version of the Beatles' Abbey Road, which they titled McLemore Avenue in honor of the location of Stax's studios).
Though they'd become established stars by the end of the decade, the group began finding it difficult to work together, not so much because of personnel problems, but because of logistical difficulties. Cropper was often playing sessions in Los Angeles, and Jones was often absent from Memphis while he finished his music studies at Indiana University. The band decided to break up in 1971, but were working on a reunion album in 1975 when Al Jackson was tragically shot and killed in his Memphis home by a burglar. The remaining members were active as recording artists and session musicians in the following years, with Cropper and Dunn joining the Blues Brothers for a stint in the late '70s.
The MG's got back into the spotlight in early 1992, when they were the house band for an extravagant Bob Dylan tribute at Madison Square Garden. More significantly, in 1993 they served as the backup band for a Neil Young tour, one which brought both them (and Young) high critical marks. The following year, they released a comeback album, arranged in much the style of their vintage '60s sides, which proved that their instrumental skills were still intact. Like most such efforts, though, it ultimately failed to re-create the spark and spontaneity it so obviously wanted to achieve. Jones continued with his own musical output through the following decades, often lending his instrumental skills to other artists and occasionally issuing his own albums, such as the 2009 solo effort Potato Hole. Bassist Dunn, intermittently active with festival and tour appearances after the turn of the millennium, had been touring with Cropper and Eddie Floyd in Japan during May 2012 when he died in his sleep in a Tokyo hotel. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.