Tag Archives: 2014

08/10/2014 Soulful Sunday

  Sam Moore and Dave Prater represent the true meaning of Soulful Sunday ..

So please please please, “Hold On I’m Comin“, Stax had so many great artist here is just a touch of SAM & DAVE.. not only did they help drive the Memphis sound and STAX they brought that Southern Soul all over America till the popularity made them international stars )O( ENJOY this several song upload of STAX sounds and listen understand what was going on in the political arena and how SOUL MUSIC helped advance the movement.. Voice of Memphis Music… Tall Cotton Productions ..I am posting almost an hour of some mighty fine R&B Soul for you to listen to as for the next few weeks till the start of September we will be posting,TALL COTTON PRODUCTIONS in NEW YORK”,… Skip advertisement in beginning of each cut SORRY Sam Moore and Dave Prater both experienced gospel music singers, having performed individually with groups the Sensational Hummingbirds and The Melionaires. They met in The King of Hearts Club in Miami in 1961, where they were discovered by regional producer Henry Stone, who signed them to Roulette Records. After modest success at Roulette,they were signed by Jerry Wexler to Atlantic Records in 1964, then being ‘loaned‘ out to Stax Records to produce, record and release their records.

The duo’s November 1965 single, “You Don’t Know Like I Know,” started a series of ten straight top twenty Billboard R&B hits that included “Hold On! I’m Comin’” (1966), “You Got Me Hummin’” (1966), “When Something Is Wrong with My Baby” (1967), “Soul Man” (1967), and “I Thank You” (1968). Most of their hits were penned by Isaac Hayes and Dave Porter. In most recordings, they were also backed by Hayes on piano with Booker T and the MGs and The Memphis Horns. The ending of their association with the Stax record label and their frequently volatile relationship contributed to their first break-up in 1970.

Sam & Dave performed throughout most of the 1970s through 1981, and enjoyed a brief resurgence in popularity due to The Blues Brother’s 1979 recording of “Soul Man“. Their last performance together was on December 31, 1981, at the Old Waldorf in San Francisco. On 9 April 1988, Prater died in a car crash in Sycamore, Georgia.

Thanks to Wikipedia, Google, Tracy’s web site, & )o( br toad Voice of Memphis Music & Cotton Row Music & Records,Tall Cotton Productions, blsfilm llc.. Barry Shankman*)O(*.

 

 

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08/08/2014 Blues Friday

 “Blues You Can’t Lose” Mr. Willie Dixon
 Blues Friday just a thank you to everyone who enjoys our Blues Friday and Soulful Sunday. This week will be the last week of Blues Friday and Soulful Sunday till the Beginning of September. Due to Production Projects travel and video shoots we just are not going to have the time I am going to miss these great Music Blogs as much if not more than you.. I will be blogging about the Studio and the progress that TALL COTTON PRODUCTIONS is making as we move forward Blues Friday today we are going to talk about the professional sound of the Blues Mr. Willie Dixon.. Voice of Memphis Music.. Cotton Row Music Records.. & Tall Cotton Productions “Blues you can’t Lose” Willie was one of the professional Blues musicians who helped make the transitions from Delta Chicago Blues to the money making songwriting Blues musician. Enjoy this as it is one of the first as he started that movement )O( .Rock & Roll hall of Fame,Tall Cotton Productions, Voice of Memphis Music, Cotton Row Music & Records, Blsfilm LLC, br toad & Barry Shankman

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08/01/2014 Blues Friday

 

 Blues Friday Voice of Memphis Music & Cotton Row Music & Records. Bringing us Mr Lightnin Hopkins COMING STRONG, “Cause you got something I lack”… “That Black Cadillac” Lightnin’ Hopkins giving us a solid guitar chugging like a locomotive going up a grade working hard and steady and giving it all it’s got on Blues Friday.. “ I sure enough need you to come back you got something I lack”,” That Black Cadillac”.. it sure can get down the road.. Enjoy Lightnin’s solid licks and the roll-en snare the bass in buried in the sound which brings us to the Blues which was usually a guitar , snare, kick and a hi hat.. Voice of Memphis Music..Cotton Row Music Records

. it has that chugging Railway soul )o( .Rock & Roll hall of Fame, Voice of Memphis Music, Cotton Row Music & Records, Blsfilm LLC, br toad & Barry Shankman

 

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07/27/2014 Soulful Sunday

 This little lady has a voice so strong and soulful that I just had to add her to our Sunday blog’s and post Ms. Tracy Nelson singing one of her very best, “Down So Low” Voice of Memphis Music & Cotton Row Music & Records… )o(b

Nelson was born and grew up in Madison, Wisconsin. There she first learned about R&B music from WLAC radio inNashville. In her teens, Nelson sang folk music in coffeehouses and with a group called The Fuller’s Wood Singers and was lead singer in a band called The Fabulous Imitations.

In 1964, Nelson recorded an acoustic blues album released on Prestige Records, “Deep Are the Roots“. It featured blues harmonica player Charlie Musselwhite among her backup band. In Chicago, where the album was recorded, Nelson met and learned from artists such as Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, and Otis Spann.

Nelson moved to San Francisco in 1966, where she became part of the music scene there. Her band Mother Earthplayed the Fillmore Auditorium, sharing bills with the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix. It was during this period that Nelson wrote and recorded, with Mother Earth on the album Living with the Animals, her signature song “Down So Low“, later covered by Linda Ronstadt, Etta James,and Diamanda Galás.

In the late 1960s Nelson relocated to Nashville, where she and Mother Earth recorded the album Make A Joyful Noise and the solo effort Tracy Nelson Country. The latter features Nelson’s cover of the country classic “Blue, Blue Day”. Nelson made a total of six albums with Mother Earth for the Mercury, Reprise, and Columbia labels. She has continued to record as a solo artist, for Atlantic and other labels. In 1974, her duet with Willie Nelson, “After the Fire is Gone“, was nominated for a Grammy Award. Her 1975 release “Sweet Soul Music” on the MCA label included Leon Pendarvis and Richard Tee on keyboards and the Sweet Inspirations, and featured covers of Don Nix‘s “Same Old Blues” and Bob Dylan‘s “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight“.

After a lengthy hiatus from recording in the 1980s, Nelson released several albums on the independent Rounder Records label in the 1990s. Her 1998 collaboration with label-mates Marcia Ball and Irma ThomasSing It” garnered a second Grammy nomination. During this comeback period she performed on American music television programs such as Sunday Night and Austin City Limits.

Since the early 2000s, Nelson has recorded for various independent record labels. She released her first in concert album “Live From Cell Block D” in 2004. Other projects include a collaboration with blues-rock veteransNick Gravenites, Harvey Mandel, Corky Siegel and Sam Lay. Billed as the Chicago Blues Reunion, the group toured major cities in 2005 and 2006.

In 2007, Tracy released You’ll Never Be a Stranger at My Door, her first pure country effort since her 1969 album, Mother Earth Presents Tracy Nelson Country. Stranger included her covers of Johnny Cash‘s “I Still Miss Someone“, Jim Reeves‘s “Four Walls“; the Everly Brothers‘ “I Wonder If I Care as Much” and a song based on a poem of her own composition, “Salt of the Earth”.

In 2013, Nelson was nominated for a Blues Music Award in the ‘Koko Taylor Award (Traditional Blues Female)’ category

Thanks to Wikipedia, Google, Tracy’s web site, & )o( br toad Voice of Memphis Music & Cotton Row Music & Records, Br toad, blsfilm llc.. Barry Shankman*)O(*

 

 

Rare picture of Tracy, Eric Burdon & Jimi Hendrix

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COTTON ROW WITH UNDERNEATHLINE

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07/25/2014 Blues Friday

 

Blues Friday Voice of Memphis Music & Cotton Row Music & Records Bringing you Robert Johnson playing “Kind Hearted Woman Blues” This Song contains the only guitar solo Robert Johnson ever recorded. A very good example for his amazing talent. He plays rhythm and lead guitar on one instrument and at the same time. Here we have both takes which remain to that day.

Voice of Memphis Music, Cotton Row Music & Records enjoy Robert’s guitar work..

Rock & Roll hall of Fame, Voice of Memphis Music, Cotton Row Music & Records, Blsfilm LLC, br toad & Barry Shankman

 

 

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COTTON ROW WITH UNDERNEATHLINE

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03/20/2014

Supporting the MEMPHIS MUSIC and all the great events.. Bill Harrison and the Fools Ball 14
April 4th,5th & 6th get out and enjoy the SOUTHERN Hospitality Music , food & good times with friends

*)o(* Voice of Memphis Music.. Cotton Row Music & Records

 

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