Wednesday, January 25, 2023

The Staple Singers - Soul Folk In Action (1968) Stax - Rare Soul/Gospel

This was the debut album by this iconic group on Stax Records where they started to move away from their gospel roots into the blossoming soul market where they would flourish and find stardom. Pops Staples and his three singing daughters Mavis, Yvonne, and Cleo have come a long way from the main part of Mississippi. From their gospel beginnings through the folk rock era to their soul music peak, the Staple Singers have traveled a long, artistically rich road into the mainstream of American music. Roebuck Staples was born in 1915 in Winona, Mississippi, where he grew up with hard times and the blues, his singing and guitar style influenced by country bluesmen Barbecue Bob and Big Bill Broonzy. But Roebuck found the Lord and joined a jubilee quartet called the Golden Trumpets. Roebuck, his wife Oceola, and their two children, Cleotha and Pervis, moved north to Chicago in 1936, where Yvonne and Mavis were born a few years later. Singing in a Southern quartet style usually performed by all-male, adult groups, the Staple Singers began appearing at local churches in 1948. Mavis, then age seven, handled the bass parts. By 1954, Pops, Mavis, Cleo, and Pervis (Yvonne replaced him many years later) landed a contract with Chicago’s United label, cutting a number called “Sit Down Servant.” Pop’s thin, winsome tenor shared the lead with Mavis’s deep, throaty tones, as they have done ever since, although her unique contralto voice had not developed the emotional edge it was soon to have. The record failed to catch on, though, perhaps because Pops’ reverberating down-home guitar, which would become an-other trademark of their style, was overshadowed by a rinky tink piano. The Staple sound did click in a big way when their haunting 1957 Vee-Jay recording of “Uncloudy Day” became a nationwide gospel hit. Others followed, including “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” “Help Me, Jesus,” and “Swing Down Chariot (Let Me Ride”), established the Staples as one of America’s top gospel attractions. They were signed to Bill Grauer and Orrin Keepnews’s Riverside jazz label in 1962 when the folk music boom was in full force. The group was beginning to pick up college bookings, in addition to their religious dates. While at Riverside, they were the first black artists to record material by Bob Dylan. Their following continued to expand when they moved to the Epic label, where they became identified with social protest songs like “Freedom High-way” and “Why? (Am I Treated So Bad),” both penned by Pops, and Stephen Stills’s “For What It’s Worth.” (The latter two were produced by rock and roll legend Larry Williams.) When the Staples joined Stax in 1968, they were working alongside major rock acts at places like the Fillmore West and East. The first two Stax albums, produced by Steve Cropper, continued in the folk vein, but their third, The Staple Swingers, offered a bold new direction of hip soul “message” songs. It was produced in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, by Al Bell, as was their next, Be Altitude: Respect Yourself. Be Altitude broke the Staple Singers wide open. “Respect Yourself,” written by Mack Rice and Luther Ingram, reached the Number Two position on Billboard’s soul chart, while Al Bell’s “I’ll Take You There,” with its infectious reggae like beat, hit Number One soul and pop. There were more hits at Stax-“Oh La De Da,” “If You’re Ready (Come Go with Me),” and “Touch a Hand, Make a Friend” before they moved on to Warner Bros., where they scored with Curtis Mayfield’s soundtrack to Let’s Do It Again. Changing their name to “The Staples” and adopting a more secular image, the group cut albums produced by fellow Chicagoans Curtis Mayfield and Eugene Record. In all they recorded 28 studio albums and over 100 45,s...Pops Staples passed sadly in 2000...My personal opinion is they are essential for anybody who loves Black music and are true Legends!..with the odd record or two poppin up on the northern dancefloors. After Otis Reddings version this Dock of The bay version is up there..awesome!

AMM


                                                                      The Tasters!





16 comments:

Simon said...

superb stuff amm ..why arent they popular on here ?
the epitomise soul

soultime said...

The staple singers have put out some fantastic tracks over the years .

richsoul said...

Thank you for putting the spotlight on a great soul family. The Staples singers. Thanks AMM.

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM. I guess using the words Soul and Folk is covering all the bases. Nothing wrong with that.

PeterH said...

I want to listen to everything from them. Thanks for review, P.

Big Dave said...

Another original... what a weekend this is going to be.
Many thanks AMM for this review.

BigD

Arty said...

Thanks, AMM, another great Staple's album.

deadwoodie said...

Excellent release!

staxman said...

Bring it on! Never did a bad song! Island dessert group if I had to pick one. Classic y Classy AMM.

bigcravings said...

Is there ever enough Staples?

Kenji said...

i luv are bestt!

Anghellic67$ said...

Great Review Thank you AMM

hakase said...

well my best is "Slow Train" all the time! thank you for this AMM

Rush said...

Thanks AMM The Staple Singers is always on par

reb.jukebox said...

Thnakk you AMM for more Staple Singers Reb

pedro B said...

Great album cant enough of old Mavis see four times now wish i could have seen them perform together great review AMM
Cheers Pedro