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Monday, June 20, 2011

The Kingpins - In The Pocket (ATCO 6516)


In The Pocket

GET EXCITED

I'm heading out on a Road Trip the end of this week to attend the sold out Memphis Boys concert at the Franklin Theater in Franklin, Tennessee. I am just so like amped, bro! Woo-Hoo! They are, without question, the most under appreciated of the Southern Soul 'rhythm sections', but somehow it's just not cool (perhaps it's even considered a sacrilege) to say that they were the best. What's that, Red? Better than the MG's, you say? Better than the 'Swampers'? Better than Hi Rhythm?

Yes.

There, I've said it... this absolutely untouchable B side we have here today is a case in point. Cut in August of 1967, the staggering amount of talent in the building at 827 Thomas Street at that moment just boggles the mind. Tom Dowd and King Curtis showed up with a young bass player named Jerry Jemmott, which freed up Tommy Cogbill to co-produce the sessions with Dowd, resulting in some of the best music ever recorded at American. In addition to all of that, Bobby Womack had just recently arrived and decided to stay a while, composing this incredible song with King Curtis on the spot. They honestly don't come any better than this, folks! This was the first recording credited solely to The Kingpins, the group that Jemmott would continue to anchor for Curtis for years, only in this case it's really the American Group with Jemmott and Womack along for the ride. So, who's playing that towering, shimmering, utterly fantastic electric guitar - Reggie Young, Bobby Womack, or both of them? Hmmm...

In any event, this record shows just how tight a band these guys were, and how, as I said, they continue to turn up in the most unexpected places. Reggie, of course, came up out of Bill Black's Combo, and was the cornerstone of Hi Records for years, playing on virtually every record cut at Royal Studio before Willie Mitchell brought in Hi Rhythm in 1968. It was a studio band that would also include Bobby Emmons, Tommy Cogbill and Mike Leech at one time or another, and whose influence on Memphis Soul is simply incalculable.

You know, I've put up almost 600 45s since I started this thing almost six years ago, and I got this idea to go through them and pull together every one of 'em that featured The Memphis Boys in one form or another. Here goes:


Willie


Woodchopper's Ball


I'll Do The Rest


Prayer Meetin'


Forgetting You


Old Friend


Crying Baby Baby Baby


The Dark End Of The Street


You're Gonna Make Me Cry



This Hurt Is Real


Missing You


I Want Everyone To Know


I Was Born All Over


Ain't That True Love


I Don't Want To Have To Wait


Cry Like A Baby


Don't Look Back


Nobody Has To Tell Me (You Were Meant For Me)


One Bo-Dillion Years


(You Keep Me) Hangin' On


I'm Alright Now


Comin' To Bring You Some Soul


Everyday I Have To Cry Some


How Many Times Must I Knock


Show Me


Temptation Was Too Strong


Somebody's Got To Love You


Cheater Man


I'm Blue


Save It


Meet Me In Church


Memphis Underground


New Orleans


So Much Love



This Is Soul


8th Wonder


Burning Fire


People Sure Act Funny


Hey Little One


The High Times


I'm Tired Of Pretending



Tell Me You Love Me

When I started working on this post, I honestly had no idea how many there really were. Wow! Even when taken with the earlier American Soul Mix that I posted a few years back, these records only begin to tell the story of this greatest of all Southern Soul rhythm sections.

As their work with more mainstream artists like B.J. Thomas and Neil Diamond began to bring some well deserved attention to American, things began to change... Once the King entered the building in January of 1969, there was no turning back.


Any Day Now

Here's the number one smash hit that sealed the deal. Arguably Chips and the Boys greatest work, it represented a high water mark that was tough to top.


Suspicious Minds

Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that these guys don't deserve all the accolades they've gotten over the years for being the force behind the well documented Elvis Resurrection, I just feel that these kudos tend to obscure the amazing wealth of music that got them there... and just how exceptional they really are.

After the move to Nashville, they continued to be used as a cohesive studio unit on great R&B records like this one by folks like Papa Don Schroeder and Buddy Killen...


I Wanna Be Your Main Squeeze

...and as Chips got down to business in Nashville, and brought his own unique gift to the Outlaw Country movement in the mid-seventies, he brought Reggie and the Boys along with him as well.


Just To Satisfy You

There is no other band with as varied and consistently excellent output, period.


The Memphis Boys stand alone.

11 comments:

  1. Anonymous2:11 PM

    Awesome post! Enjoy the show.

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  2. Anonymous9:30 PM

    You said it: Wow.

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  3. Holy Cow!

    Thanks for reminding me how badly I need that Sam Baker 45.

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  4. Noah S.12:46 AM

    Great post Red! I can't wait to hear about the show. I see they'll have vocalist Terry Mike Jeffrey on hand. While he's played his share of Elvis conventions he's also got some serious pipes:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1KHQSj3jqho

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  5. OK everybody, thanks for the kind words there- glad you all agree with me, this music is just the greatest!

    In case you haven't figured it out (which I'm sure you have), if you use that little Yahoo Media Player arrow to play any of the songs, it will let you play all 47 45s as a playlist. Also, if you click on most of the label scans, it will pop up a new window and take you to my original post about that record...

    I'm outta here! Thanks!

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  6. Very nice, thanks for sharing.

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  7. Anonymous10:16 AM

    Red you have outdone yourself with this one......

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  8. plasticsun6:30 PM

    Great stuff - thanks!

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  9. As much as I enjoyed this, I was delighted to see how many of these I already have heard and learned about via The B Side over the years. Thanks then, thanks now, Red.

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  10. so many great tracks, thanks for putting them on the yahoo media player, would've taken a while to go through each of them individually.

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