1 / 23

Atlantic/Stax:

Atlantic/Stax:. Soulsville, U. S. A. Southern Soul. Heavily influenced by blues and gospel Retains elements of R&B Horn section Tendency toward shuffle rhythms Emotional, “attitude” songs Rougher, blues/gospel singing style of most performers. Stax Records.

Download Presentation

Atlantic/Stax:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Atlantic/Stax: Soulsville, U. S. A.

  2. Southern Soul • Heavily influenced by blues and gospel • Retains elements of R&B • Horn section • Tendency toward shuffle rhythms • Emotional, “attitude” songs • Rougher, blues/gospel singing style of most performers

  3. Stax Records • Studio at center of soul - Stax Records in Memphis • Named for founders Jim STewart and Estelle AXton • Recorded for Atlantic Records from 1960 • Memphis • Muscle Shoals, Alabama

  4. Booker T. and the MGs • Integrated band • Booker T. Jones (piano), Al Jackson (drums) African-American • Donald “Duck” Dunn (bass), Steve Cropper (guitar) white • Memphis Horns - all white • Stressed electric guitar, active bass lines, horn lines • Often worked out arrangements on spot, based on head arrangements or lead sheets • Essential part of Stax sound

  5. MOTOWN “Hitsville” Black owned All black performers Aimed at white audience Top-down decisions Songs by professional songwriters STAX “Soulsville” White owned (at first) Integrated Aimed at R&B audience Collaborative Songs by performers, arranged in sessions Comparison Between Motown and Stax

  6. MOTOWN Producer/composer most important Smooth, refined pop sound Complex textures Wall of Sound 8 beat style beat, moving to 16-beat Clean, crisp rhythms STAX Performer most important Rawer, blues-gospel sound Simpler textures Horn/rhythm sections 8 beat style beat, moving to 16-beat Pulsating “funky” rhythms Motown and Stax

  7. Aretha Franklin (1942- ) • Began as gospel singer • Signed by Columbia in 1960 to be black pop singer - fails • Jerry Wexler at Atlantic records buys contract in 1966 • Sends to Stax studio at Muscle Shoals, AL to record own material

  8. Respect • Cover version of Otis Redding hit • Minimal instrumental accompaniment • Focus on lead, backing vocals • 4 bar intro: bass (beat), horns (harmonic rhythms), guitar riff (style beat)

  9. Respect • Form: A A A sax solo A B (R-E-S-P-E-C-T), vamp on A section as outro • Improvised elaboration of previously heard material • Backing vocals play active role • Call and response, style beat • Many details worked out in session

  10. Otis Redding (1941-1967) • Started career as backup singer for Little Richard • Commanded wide variety of styles • Soulful ballads like Percy Sledge • Blues/gospel fusion • Gritty tone • Impassioned style • Breakout performance at Monterey Pop • Killed in plane crash later that year

  11. I Can’t Turn You Loose • Opens with memorable, syncopated riff • Another riff layered on top • Vocals also based on riff • Strong beat AND strong backbeat • Gospel influence evident

  12. Other Major Stax Artists • Isaac Hayes • Songwriter/producer for Stax • Theme from Shaft won Grammy, Oscar for best song • Wilson Pickett - In The Midnight Hour • Percy Sledge - When A Man Loves a Woman • Sam and Dave (Sam Moore and Dave Prater)

  13. Sam and Dave - Soul Man Certain similarities to Motown sound • Riff-based, verse and refrain, end-weighted • Differences • More gospel-influenced vocal • Not a “story song” - about attitude • Groove • eight beat rock rhythm in bass line • back beat in tambourine (refrain) or drums (verse) • horn riffs • double time guitar riff

  14. James Brown Neither Motown nor Stax: Just Soul

  15. James Brown (1933- ) • Age 5: starts dancing on streets for tips • Age 20: Joins gospel quartet • Brown emerges as leader • Change name to the Famous Flames • First hit Please, please, please (1956) gospel-inspired doo-wop • Style changes in mid 1960s

  16. James Brown Style • Fuses tight, riff-based jump blues and R&B horn sections • Fervid, gospel performing style • Up-tempo dance numbers • Emphasize rhythm over melody • Polyrhythmic • Each part maintains own repetitive pattern

  17. I Got You • Harsh, declamatory vocals and falsetto shrieks • Solid rock beat in drums • Well-defined sections, set off by tone colors and vocals • Arrangement of these blocks of sound gives form to song

  18. Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag • Same organizing principle as I Got You • Riff-based horn parts • Double-time guitar riff at end of chorus: sixteen-beat style beat for one measure • Choked rhythm guitar

More Related