BOOKER T. AND THE MG's

 


STAX - STA 0001
BOOKER T. AND THE M.G.'S
Soul limbo
Heads or tails

STAX - STA 0013
BOOKER T. AND THE M.G.'S
Hang 'em high
Over easy

STAX - 2025 026
BOOKER T. AND THE M.G.'S
Melting pot
Kinda easy like

STAX - STA 0028
BOOKER T. AND THE M.G.'S
Time is tight
Johnny, i love you


 


STAX RECORDS - 2325018

BOOKER T. & THE M.G.'S GREATEST HITS

Side 1: Hang 'em high - Eleanor Rigby - Soul limbo - Over easy - Mr. Robinson - Something

Side 2: Time is tight - Johnny, i love you - Heads or tails - Meditation - Hip hug-her


MIDI - MID 20032

BOOKER T. AND THE MG's - STAR COLLECTION

Side 1: Mercy mercy - My sweet potatoe - Slim Jenkins joint - Groovin' - Chinese checkers - Green onions

Side 2: Can't be still - I can't sit down - More - Soul sanction - Sunny - Get ready

 

BOOKER T. AND THE MG's (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)

Formed in 1962 in Memphis, Tennessee, Booker T and the MG’s (“MG” officially stood for “Memphis Group”) would make their way into history as one of the most important soul outfits in the history of music. They were indispensable as the house band for stax records, backing up many rising artists (Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, Albert King, and many others), but it was the MG’s themselves that put Stax on the map with such singles as “Green Onions”, which peaked at number 3 on the Pop Charts, and “Hip Hug-Her”, which peaked at number 6 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, 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.