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Booker T. won a GRAMMY in 1997 for his work with Booker T. & The MGs, taking home honors for Best Pop Instrumental Performance. He was presented a GRAMMY Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007, also for his work with the MGs. But this year at the 52d Annual GRAMMY Awards, Booker T. scored his first-ever GRAMMY as a solo artist, winning the Best Pop Instrumental Album trophy for his April 2009 release Potato Hole (Epitaph/ANTI-). Potato Hole, on which Booker is backed by the blistering Drive-By Truckers, was Booker T.'s first new album in nearly two decades, and the lead single "Warped Sister" had been nominated for Best Rock Instrumental (the legendary Jeff Beck took home that award.)
Booker T and The MGs were the session band at Memphis based Stax Records, playing on the classic recordings by Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Sam And Dave, Irma Thomas, amongst many other classic recordings. He's also had hits in his own right with timeless instrumentals including Green Onions, Time Is Tight , Hip Hug-Her, Hang Them High ,Groovin', amongst many others. It is hard to believe that Booker T was only 15 and still at high school when he started as a session player at Stax Records and also wrote many of the great soul classics! Booker T's current project is recording a new album with hip hop outfit THE ROOTS. He is also a producer of some note having produced million selling albums for Bill Withers, Rita Coolidge and Willie Nelson's breakthrough album Stardust. Back in 1993 he appeared in Slane Castle with Neil Young, Pearl Jam and Van Morrison.
Hammond
B3 alchemist Booker T Jones is one America's most
prolific, distinguished and instantly recognizable musical forces,
and the arrival of his new Anti- album, Potato Hole,
not only re-affirms his greatness, it also re-introduces the neglected
all-instrumental format to a noisy, crowded marketplace crying out
for precisely the type of soul satisfying pleasure which Jones excels
at.
With choice accompaniment by the capable Southern rock visionaries
Drive By Truckers and a sound often pushed into
over drive by the volcanic lead guitar of rock and roll legend Neil
Young, it is an altogether extraordinary set. Featuring
a mixture of newly written songs and a trio of intriguing covers,
all recorded in a scant one weeks time, Potato Hole
captures Booker T at the critical peak of a renewed
creative phase in his storied career.
"I really feel like I've been opened up again, I've got
the creative muse working for me," Jones said. "It's
like I have discovered a new method, a little road I can take to
open it up, and I'm excited about playing this music."
The album rolls through a selection of far-ranging compositions,
each separate and distinct pieces that, by turn, manifest his characteristic
adoration of the groove, exploring and exploiting each mood to the
limit. Whether it's a case of cosmological serenity or funky staccato
chicken peck work-outs, Jones' melodic vision and expansive arrangements
are delivered with a mesmerizing quality. The album also pushes
into sometime previously unvisited-by Jones territory: lead track
"Pound It Out" is a brawny, relentless
exercise in hard rock, an intense, driving song that's far more
of a head-banger than a blast of steam-heated soul.
If that seems out of place, you don't really know Mr. Jones; "I
like rock music, always have." he said. "Otis
[Redding] did too, and we were getting into it a bit, but couldn't
really do it back then. It just wasn't right for Stax."
The statement is more than a bit provocative, but the musician tosses
out such revelations like carelessly hurled thunderbolts, an arsenal
accrued over the course of his remarkable career.
Born in Memphis, Tennessee on November 12 1944, Booker's interest
in music manifested itself early, and as a child he both sang gospel
in church and received classical training on the piano. A fascination
with the Hammond B3 grew to the point where he
funded his own organ lessons with newspaper route money and by his
teens, Jones found himself at Stax Records, first
as an underfoot hanger-on and soon on staff, as leader of the house
band. Backing fabled stars like Rufus and Carla
Thomas, Otis Redding, Sam &
Dave and Eddie Floyd both in the studio
and on the road, the teenager's multi-instrumental prowess--on keys,
brass and reeds--was impressive.
With his Memphis Group cohorts Steve Cropper,
Donald "Duck" Dunn and Al Jackson,
Jones laid out the blueprint for the fabled Stax sound and reaped
his own rewards with a string of hits that frequently crossed over
to the pop charts. Jones post-Stax resume has been equally impressive,
recording with everyone from Bobby Darin to John
Lee Hooker and producing for numerous artists (including
Bill Withers' signature Just As I Am
album and Willie Nelson's 1978 multi-platinum blockbuster
Stardust). Jones and the MGs re-formed to serve
as house band for the famed 1991 Bob Dylan tribute
at Madison Square Garden (which led to a sustained
alliance between Neil Young and Jones). Along the
way, he's also scored numerous films and enjoyed induction into
the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992.
Potato Hole demonstrates that not only is Jones'
talent and power undiminished, it also reveals how much there is
to his music that we've never heard before. Jones has a remarkable
knack for telling a story with his melodies, compositions so thoughtfully
constructed that one can almost visualize narrative events, as the
self-explanatory "Pound it Out", the
room-to-room filial warmth of "Family Reunion",
the illimitable intimacy and affection of "Nan"
(Jones' wife), and, in the case of title track (the term is a 19th
century Afro-American colloquialism for the spot where smuggled
food items were stashed beneath slave quarters), a cinematic, almost
epic recounting of the struggles and spiritual resilience slavery
imposed.
This quality is so pervasively seductive that you may find yourself
singing along, as if Jones was telegraphing lyrics that exist only
within the listener. Even the three songs here that did not originate
with Jones (Outkast's "Hey Ya,"
Tom Waits' "Get Behind the Mule"
and the Drive By Truckers' own "Space
City") are transformed into vintage Booker
T jams, shimmering with relaxed, after-hours atmosphere
and full of the fiery, taut organ work for which he is rightfully
prized.
Whether laying down a meditative ramble or hard-charging rocker,
Jones' sense of artistic liberation and depth of involvement on
every track here is breath taking--with Potato Hole,
the cat is going into orbit. "The Hammond B3 and me have
this thing goin' on. It's always there inside me. I've heard whole
pieces in my head that I'll never even remember--and now I'm finally
getting them out." he explained. "It gives me
a freedom that I didn't have . . . I sort of had it with the MG's
in the 60s, but even then it was more murky. This is lot more clear.
I don't know how to put it, except it's like I can see again."
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