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Booker T & the MG's - based band formed by keyboard player Booker T Jones in the early 60's. The MG's were made up of Steve Cropper on guitar, Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass and Al Jackson jnr on drums. They were sometimes referred to as "the greatest backing band in the universe" and "the fathers of the Memphis Sound", and for a band that had no intentions of recording any albums under their own name, they didn't do too badly! ''Green Onions" reached number one on the R&B charts and number three on the pop charts in 1962, and most of their other singles charted somewhere on the various charts as well. Booker T was also an excellent musician, as were the rest of the members in the band. Jones went on to work with the likes of Barbara Streisand and John Lee Hooker, and a "reformation" album, "That's the way it should be", featuring Booker T, Dunn, Cropper and drummer Steve Jordan, emerged in 1994.
Booker T & the MG's
Booker T & the MG's - Green Onions, the title track of their debut album, released in 1962. US keyboard player Booker T Jones was noticed by recording executive Jim Stewart when Jones was a session/in-house player for Stax Records. Jone's first instrument was the string bass, but he soon switched to the organ. He assembled his band, featuring Al Jackson Jnr. on drums, Steve Cropper on guitar and Lewis Steinberg on bass, and they recorded this brilliant album which first came out in the Autumn of 1962. Our featured track was, alongside tracks such as "Time is Tight" and "Mo' Onions", a fair sized hit for the MG's and established Booker T as one of the premier k eyboard players of the sixties/early seventies. The band went on to record well into the seventies and disbanded in about 1978, although they reformed for a short while in the mid nineties.
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Biography by Richie Unterberger
As the house band at Stax
Records in Memphis, 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 can be
heard on classic hits by Otis
Redding, Wilson Pickett, Carla
Thomas, Albert King, and Sam &
Dave, just to name the very most
prominent examples. For that
reason alone, they would deserve
their spot in rock & roll's 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 tons of 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. In a couple years or so,
Steinberg would be 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" (number
three, 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. As a band
that featured two blacks and two
whites playing as tightly
together as possible, they also
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 they're best
appreciated via anthologies. But
their albums were not
inconsequential, and
occasionally ambitious (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 have been
active as recording artists and
session musicians since, Cropper
and Dunn joining the Blues
Brothers for a while 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
recreate the spark and
spontaneity it so obviously
wanted to achieve.

Steve
Cropper
Donald "Duck" Dunn
Booker T. Jones
Lewis Steinberg
Al Jackson, Jr

The
Meters
Junior Walker
The Bar-Kays
Clarence Carter
The Mar-Keys
Isaac Hayes
Carla Thomas
Percy Sledge
Otis Redding
Wilson Pickett
Steve Cropper
Solomon Burke
David Porter
Soul
Kool & the Gang
Dave Lewis
Dave "Baby" Cortez
Willie & the Mighty Magnificents
Lee Dorsey
William Bell
Joe Simon

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make to this band or something
to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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