A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 134: “In the Midnight Hour” by Wilson Pickett
Episode Date: October 13, 2021Episode 134 of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “In the Midnight Hour”, the links between Stax, Atlantic, and Detroit, and the career of Wilson Pickett. Click the full po...st to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a fifteen-minute bonus episode available, on “Mercy Mercy” by Don Covay. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt’s irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs by Andrew Hinky.
Episode 134
In the Midnight Hour by Wilson Pickett.
A quick note before I start,
just to say that this episode contains some discussion of domestic abuse,
drug use and abusive employees by their employer,
and one mention of an eating disorder.
Also, this episode is much longer than normal,
because we've got a lot to fit in.
Today, we're going to move away from Motown
and have a look at a record recorded in the studios
of their great rival Stax Records,
though not released on that label.
But the record we're going to look at
is from an artist who was a bridge between the Detroit's soul of Motown
and the southern soul of Stax,
an artist who had a foot in both camps
and whose music helped the define soul,
while also being closer than that of any other soul man,
to the music made by the white rock musicians of the period.
We're going to look at stacks and mussel shoals and Atlantic Records,
and at Wilson Pickett and in the midnight hour.
Wilson Pickett never really had a chance.
His father, Wilson Senior, was known in Alabama for making Moonshire Whiskey
and spent time in prison for doing just that,
and his young son was the only person he told the location of his still.
Eventually, Wilson Sr. moved to Detroit to start earning more money, leaving his family at home at first.
Wilson Jr. and his mother moved up to Detroit to be with his father, but they had to leave his older siblings in Alabama,
and his mother would shuttle between Michigan and Alabama, trying vainly to look after all her children.
Eventually, Wilson's mother got pregnant while she was down in Alabama, which broke up his parents' marriage,
and Wilson moved back down to Alabama permanently, to live on a family.
farm with his mother. But he never got on with his mother, who was physically abusive to him,
as he himself would later be to his children, and to his partners, and to his bandmates.
The one thing that Wilson did enjoy about his life in Alabama was the gospel music,
and he became particularly enamored of two gospel singers, Archie Brownlee of the Five Blind Boys
of Mississippi, and Julius Cheeks of the sensational nightingales. Wilson determined,
to become a gospel singer himself,
but he couldn't stand living with his mother in rural Alabama
and decided to move up to be with his father
and his father's new girlfriend in Detroit.
Once he moved to Detroit,
he started attending Northwestern High School,
which at the time was also being attended
by Norman Whitfield,
Florence Ballard, and Melvin Franklin.
Pickett also became friendly with Aretha Franklin,
though she didn't attend the same school.
She went to school at Northern,
with Smokey Robinson, and he started attending services at New Bethel Church,
the church where her father preached.
This was partly because Reverend Franklin was one of the most dynamic preachers around,
but also because New Bethel Church would regularly feature performances
by the most important gospel performers of the time.
Pickett saw the Soulsterers perform there, with Sam Cooke singing lead,
and of course also saw Aretha singing there.
He joined a few gospel groups.
first joining one called the Sons of Zion,
but he was soon poached by a more successful group,
the violinaires.
It was with the violin airs that he made what is almost certainly his first recording,
a track that was released as a promo single,
but never got wide release at the time.
The violinaires were only moderately successful on the gospel circuit,
but Pickett was already sure he was destined for bigger things.
He had a rivalry with David Ruffin, in particular,
constantly mocking Ruffin
and saying that he would never amount to anything
while Wilson Pickett was the greatest.
But after a while, he realised that Gospel
wasn't where he was going to make his mark.
Partly his change in direction was motivated by financial concern.
He'd physically attacked his father and been kicked out of his home,
and he was also married while still a teenager
and had a kid who needed feeding.
But also, he was aware of a certain level of hypocrisy
among his more religious acquaintances.
Aretha Franklin had two kids, aged only 16, and her father, the Reverend Franklin,
had fathered a child with a 12-year-old, was having an affair with the gospel singer Clara Ward,
and was hanging around blues clubs all the time.
Most importantly, he realised that the audiences he was singing to in church on Sunday morning
were mostly still drunk from Saturday night.
As he later put it, I might as well be singing rock and roll as singing to a drunken audience,
I might as well make me some money.
And this is where the Falcons came in.
The Falcons were a doo-wop group
that had been formed by a black singer, Eddie Floyd,
and a white singer, Bob Menardo.
They'd both recruited friends,
including bass singer Willie Schofield,
and after performing locally,
they'd decided to travel to Chicago
to audition for Mercury Records.
When they got there,
they found that you couldn't audition for Mercury in Chicago.
You had to go to New York.
but they somehow persuaded the label to sign them anyway, in part because an integrated group
was an unusual thing. They recorded one single for Mercury, produced by Willie Dixon, who was
moonlighting from Chess.
But then Menardo was drafted,
and the group's other white member, Tom Shetler,
decided to join up along with him.
The group went through some other line-up changes
and ended up as Eddie Floyd, Willie Schofield,
Mac Rice, guitarist Lance Finney,
and lead singer Joe Stubbs, brother of Levi.
The group released several singles on small labels owned by their manager,
before having a big hit with You're So Fine,
the record we heard about them recording last episode.
That made number two on the R&B charts,
and number 17 on the pop charts.
They recorded several follow-ups,
including Just for Your Love,
which made number 26 on the R&B charts.
Maybe I was on the ocean.
I'll fight a band.
It's ship to the moon, just for your love.
What?
Just for your love.
To give you're so fine, and baby you're mine.
To give you some idea of just how interrelated all the different small R&B labels were at this point,
that was originally recorded and released on chess records.
But as Raquel Davis was at that point working for chess,
he managed to get the rights to reissue it on Anna Records,
the label he co-owned with the Gordy Sisters.
And the re-released record was distributed by Gone Records,
one of George Goldeners' labels.
The group also started to tour supporting Marv Johnson,
but Willie Schofield was becoming dissatisfied.
He'd written, You're so fine,
but he'd only made $500 from what he was told
was a million-selling record.
He realised that in the music business,
the real money was on the business side,
not the music side,
so while staying in the Falcons,
he decided he was going to go into management too.
He'd found the artist he was going to manage
while he was walking to his car,
and heard somebody in one of the buildings he passed
singing Elmore James' then current blues hit,
The Sky is Crying.
The person he heard singing that song,
and accompanying himself on acoustic guitar,
was of course Wilson Pickett,
and Scofield signed him up to a management contract,
and Pickett was eager to sign,
knowing that Schofield was a successful performer himself.
The intention was at first that Schofield would manage Pickett
as a solo performer,
but then Joe Stubbs got ideal.
as above his station, and started insisting that the group be called Joe Stubbs and the Falcons,
which put the others backs up, and soon Stubbs was out of the group. This experience may have been
something that his brother later had in mind. In the late 60s, when Motown started trying to promote
groups as lead singer and the group, Levi Stubbs always refused to allow his name to go in front
of the four tops. So the Falcons were without a lead singer. They tried a few other singers in their
circle, including Marvin Gay, but were turned down, so in desperation they turned to Pickett.
This wasn't a great fit. The group, other than Schofield, thought that Pickett was too black,
both in that he had too much gospel in his voice, and literally in that he was darker skin than
the rest of the group, something that Scofield, as someone who was darker than the rest of the
group, but less dark than Pickett, took offense at. Pickett, in turn, thought that the Falcons were too
poppy, and not really the kind of thing he was at all interested in doing. But they were stuck
with each other and had to make the most of it, even though Pickett's early performances were by all
accounts fairly dreadful. He apparently came in in the wrong key on at least one occasion,
and another time froze up altogether and couldn't sing. Even when he did sing, and in tune,
he had no stage presence, and he later said, I would trip up, fall on the stage, and the group
would rehearse me in the dressing room after every show. I would get mad because I would
wanted to go out and look at the girls as well. They said, no, you got to rehearse Oscar.
They called me Oscar. I don't know why they called me Oscar. I didn't like that very much.
Soon Joe Stubbs was back in the group, and there was talk of the group getting rid of Pickett altogether.
But then they went into the studio to record a song that Sam Cuck had written for the group,
Pau You're in Love. The song had been written for Stubbs to sing, but at the last minute they decided
to give Pickett the lead instead.
Pickett was now secure as the group's lead singer, but the group weren't having any success
with records. They were, though, becoming a phenomenal live act, so much so that on one tour,
where James Brown was the headliner, Brown tried to have the group kicked off the bill,
because he felt that Pickett was stealing his thunder. Eventually, the group's manager set up his own
record label, Lupine Records, which would become best known as the label that released the first record
by the primates, who later became the Supremes.
Lupine released the Falcon single I Found a Love,
after the group's management had first shopped it around to other labels
to try to get them to put it out.
That song, based on the old Pentecostal hymn Yes Lord,
was written by Pickett and Schofield,
but the group's manager, Robert West,
also managed to get his name on the credits.
The backing group, the Ohio Untouchables,
would later go on to become better known as the Ohio players.
One of the labels that had turned that record down was Atlantic Records
because Jerry Wexler hadn't heard any hit potential in the song.
But then the record started to become successful locally,
and Wexler realised his mistake.
He got Lupine to do a distribution deal with Atlantic,
giving Atlantic full rights to the record,
and it became a top 10 R&B hit.
But by this point, Pickett was sick of working with the Falcons,
and he'd decided to start trying for a solo career.
His first solo single was on the small label Correctone
and was co-produced by Robert Bateman
and featured the Funk Brothers as instrumental backing
and the primettes on vocals.
I've seen some claims that the Andantes are on there too,
but I can't make them out,
but I can certainly make out the future Supremes.
That didn't do anything,
and Pickett kept recording with the Falcons for a while,
as well as putting out his solo records.
But then Willie Schofield got drafted and the group split up.
Their manager hired another group, The Fabulous Playboys, to be a new Falcons group,
but in 1964 he got shot in a dispute over the management of Mary Wells
and had to give up working in the music industry.
Pickett's next single, which he co-wrote with Robert Bateman and Sonny Schofield,
was to be the record that changed his career forever.
If You Need Me, once again featured the Front Brothers and the Andantes,
and was recorded for correct tone.
Jerry Wexler was again given the opportunity to put.
the record out on Atlantic and once again decided against it. Instead, he offered to buy the
songs publishing and he got Solomon Burke to record it in a version produced by Bert Burns.
Burke wasn't fully aware when he cut that version, but Wilson Pickett, who was his friend,
had recorded his own version. He became aware, though, when Double L records, a label co-owned
by Lloyd Price, bought the correct tone master and released Pickett's version nationally at the same
to Hammers Burke's version came out. The two men were annoyed that they'd been put into
unwitting competition, and so started an unofficial non-aggression pact. Every time Burke was brought
into a radio station to promote his record, he'd tell the listeners that he was there to promote
Wilson Pickett's new single. Meanwhile, when Pickett went to radio stations, he'd take the
opportunity to promote the new record he'd written for his good friend, Solomon Burke,
which the listeners should definitely check out. The result was that both records became hit.
Pickett's scraped the lower reaches of the R&B top 30,
while Burke, as he was the bigger star,
made number two on the R&B chart and got into the Pop Top 40.
Pickett followed it up with a sound alike,
it's too late,
which managed to make the R&B top 10,
as there was no competition from Burke.
At this point, Jerry Wexler realized
that he'd twice had the opportunity to release a record with Wilson Pickett singing,
twice he'd turned the chance down,
and twice the record had become a hit.
He realized that it was probably,
a good idea to sign Pickett directly to Atlantic and avoid missing out.
He did check with Pickett if Pickett was annoyed about the Solomon Burke record.
Pickett's response was, I need the bread, and Wilson Pickett was now an Atlantic artist.
This was at the point when Atlantic was in something of a commercial slump.
Other than the records Burt Burns was producing for the drifters and Solomon Burke,
they were having no hit, and they were regarded as somewhat old-fashioned, rooted in a version
of R&B that still showed its roots in jazz, rather than the new sounds that were taking over
the industry in the early 60s. But there was still a bigger label than anything else Pickett had
recorded for, and he seized the opportunity to move into the big time. To start with, Atlantic
Team Pickett up with someone who seemed like the perfect collaborator, Don Covey, a soul singer
and songwriter who had his roots in hard R&B and gospel music, but had written hits for people
like chubby checker. The two got together and recorded a song they wrote together. I'm going to
cry, cry baby. That did nothing commercially and gallantly for Pickett on the same day Atlantic
released a single Covey had written for himself, Mercy Mercy, and that ended up going to number
one on the R&B chart and making the pop top 40. As I'm Gonna cry didn't work out,
Atlantic decided to try to change tack
and paired Pickett with their established hitmaker Bert Burns
and a duet partner Tammy Lynn
for what Pickett would later describe as
one of the weirdest sessions on me I ever heard in my life
a duet on a man-and-wile song, Come Home Baby.
Pickett later said of that track
it didn't sell two records
but while it wasn't a hit
it was very popular among musicians
a few months later
Mick Jagger would produce a cover version of it
on immediate records, with Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards, and the Georgie Fame Brass section,
backing a couple of unknown singers. Sadly for Rod Stewart and P.P. Arnold, that didn't get past
being issued as a promotional record, and never made it to the shops. Meanwhile, Pickett went out
on tour again, substituting on a package tour for Clyde McFatter, who had to drop out when his sister died.
Also on the tour was Pickett's old bandmate from the Falcons, Mac Rice, now performing as Sir Mac
Rice, who was promoting a single he'd just released on a small label, which had been produced by
Andre Williams. The song had originally been called Mustang Mama, but Aretha Franklin had suggested
he called it Mustang Sally instead. Pickett took note of the song, though he didn't record it just
yet, and in the meantime, the song was picked up by the white rock group, The Young Rascals,
who released their version as the B-side of their number one hit, Good Loving.
Atlantic's problems with having hits
weren't only problems with records they made themselves.
They were also having trouble getting any big hits with Stax Records.
As we discussed in the episode on Green Onions,
Stacks were being distributed by Atlantic,
and in 1963 they'd had a minor hit with These Arms of Mine by Otis Redding.
But throughout 1964,
while the label had some R&B success with its established stars,
it had no real major breakout hit,
and it seemed to be floundering a bit.
It wasn't doing as badly as Atlantic itself,
but it wasn't doing wonderfully.
It wasn't until the end of the year
when the label hit on what would become its defining sound,
when for the first time,
Redding collaborated with Stax Studio,
guitarist and producer Steve Cropper on a song.
That record would point the way
towards Redding's great artistic triumphs
of the next couple of years,
which we'll look at in a future episode.
But it also pointed the way towards a possible future sound for Atlantic.
Atlantic had signed a soul duo, Sam and Dave,
who were wonderful live performers,
but who had so far not managed to translate those live performances to record.
Jerry Wexler thought that perhaps Steve Cropper could help them do that,
and made a suggestion to Jim Stewart at Stacks.
Atlantic would loan out Sam and Dave to the label.
They'd remain signed to Atlantic,
but make their records at Stax Studios,
and they'd be released as Stax's records.
The first single for Stax, a place nobody can find,
was produced by Cropper and was written by Stax's songwriter Dave Porter.
That wasn't a hit, but soon Porter would start collaborating with another songwriter,
Isaac Hayes, and would write a string of hits for the duo.
But in order to formalise the loan out of Sam and Dave,
Atlantic also wanted to formalise their arrangement with Stax.
Previously, they'd operated on a handshake basis.
Waxler and Stewart had a mutual respect,
and they simply agreed that Stax would give Atlantic the option to distribute their stuff.
But now they entered into a formal long-term contract,
and for a nominal sum of $1,000,
Jim Stewart gave Atlantic the distribution rights to all past Stax records
and to all future records they released for the next few years.
Or at least, Stewart thought that the agreement he was making
was formalising the distribution agreement.
what the contract actually said, and Stuart never bothered to have this checked over by an entertainment lawyer
because he trusted Wexler, was that Stax would, for the sum of one dollar,
give Atlantic permanent ownership of all their records in return.
The precise wording was,
You hereby sell, assign, and transfer to us are successes or assigns,
absolutely in forever, and without any limitations or restrictions whatever,
not specifically set forth herein,
the entire right title and interest in and to each of such matters,
and to each of the performances embodied thereon.
Jerry Wexler would later insist that he had no idea that particular close was in the contract,
and that it had been slipped in there by the lawyers.
Jim Stewart still thought of himself as the owner of an independent record label,
but without realising it, he'd effectively become an employee of Atlantic.
Atlantic started to take advantage of this new arrangement
by sending other artists down to Memphis to record with the Stax musicians.
Unlike Sam and Dave, these would still be released as Atlantic records rather than Stax's ones,
and Jerry Waxer and Atlantic's engineer Tom Bowd would be involved in the production,
but the records would be made by the Stacks team.
The first artist to benefit from this new arrangement was Wilson Pickett,
who had been wanting to work at Stax for a while, being a big fan of Otis Redding in particular.
Pickett was teamed up with Steve Cropper,
and together they wrote the song that would define Pickett's career.
The seeds of In the Midnight Hour come from two earlier recordings.
One is a line from his record with the Falcons, I Found a Love.
The other is a line from a record that Clyde MacFatter had made with Billy Ward and the Dominoes back in 1951.
Those lines about a midnight hour and love come tumbling down were turned into the song that would make Pickett's name.
But exactly who did what has been the cause of some disagreement.
The official story is that Steve Cropper took those lines and were,
with Pickett to write the song as a straight collaboration. Most of the time, though,
Pickett would claim that he had written the song entirely by himself, and that Cropper had
stolen the credit for that and their other credited collaborations. But other times, he would
admit, he worked with me quite a bit on that one. Floyd Newman, a regular home player at Stax,
would back up Pickett, saying, every artist that came in here, they'd have their songs altogether,
but when they leave they had to give up a piece of it to a certain person.
But this person, you couldn't be mad at him,
because he didn't own stacks, Jim Stewart owns stacks.
And this guy was doing what Jim Stewart told him to do,
so you can't be mad at him.
But on the other hand,
Willie Schofield, who collaborated with Pickett on I Found a Love,
said of writing that,
Pickett didn't have any chord pattern.
He had a couple of lyrics.
I'm working with him, giving him the chord change, the feel of it.
Then we're going in the studio,
and I've got to show the band how to play it
because we didn't have arrangers.
That's part of the songwriting,
but he didn't understand.
He felt he wrote the lyrics, so that's it.
Given that Cropa didn't take the writing credit
on several other records he participated in,
that he did have a consistent pattern
of making classic hit records,
that in the Midnight Hour
is stylistically utterly different
from Pickett's earlier work,
but very similar to songs like Mr. Pitiful,
co-written by Cropa,
and Pickett's long-standing habit of being dismissive
of anyone else's contributions to his success,
I think the most likely version of events
is that Cropper did have a lot to do with how the song came together
and probably deserves his credit.
But we'll never know for sure exactly what went on in their collaboration.
Whoever wrote it,
in the Midnight Hour became one of the all-time classics of Seoul.
But another factor in making the record a success
and in helping reinvent the Stacks sound
was actually Jerry Wexler.
Wexler had started attending sessions
at the Stack Studios, and was astonished by how different the recording process was in the south,
and Wexler had his own input into the session that produced in the midnight hour.
His main suggestion was that rather than play the complicated part that Cropper had come up with,
the guitarist should simplify, and just play chords, along with Al Jackson's snare drum.
Wexler was enthusing about a new dance phrase called The Jerk,
which had recently been the subject of a hit record bear group called The Larks.
The jerk, as Wexler demonstrated it to the bemused musicians,
involved accenting the second and fourth beats of the bar,
and delaying them very slightly,
and this happened to fit very well with the Stax Studio sound.
The Stax Studio was a large room, with quite a lot of reverb,
and the musicians played together without using headphones,
listening to the room sound.
Because of this, to stay in time,
Steve Cropper had started taking his cue,
not just from the sound, but from watching Al Jackson's left hand go into the snare drum.
This had led to him playing when he saw Jackson's hand go down on the two and four,
rather than when the sound of the snare drum reached his ears,
a tiny fraction of a second anticipation of the beat,
before everyone would get back in sync on the one of the next bar as Jackson hit the kick drum.
This had in turn evolved into the whole group playing the backbeat with a fractional delay,
hitting it a tiny bit late, as if you're listening to the echo of those beats rather than to the beat itself.
If anyone other than the utterly exceptional musicians had tried this,
it would have ended up as a car crash, but Jackson was one of the best timekeepers in the business,
and many musicians would say that at this point in time, Steve Cropper was the best rhythm guitarist in the world.
So instead, it gave the performances just enough sense of looseness to make them exciting.
This slight delayed backbeat
was something the musicians had naturally fallen into doing
but it fit so well with Wexter's conception of the jerk
that they started deliberately exaggerating it
still only delaying the backbeat my mutely
but enough to give the record a very different sound
from anything that was out there.
That delayed backbeat sound
would become the signature sound of stacks
for the next several years
and you will hear it on the run of classic singles
they would put out for the next few years
by Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, Carla Thomas, Bookerty and the MGs, Eddie Floyd and others.
The sound of that beat is given extra emphasis by the utter simplicity of Al Jackson's playing.
Jackson had a minimalist drum kit, but played it even more minimally.
Other than the occasional Phil, he never hit his Tom at all, just using the kick drum snare and high hat.
And the hi-hat was not even mic'd, with any high-hat on the actual records just being the result of Leak
from the other mics. But that simplicity gave the Stax records a power that almost no other
records from the period had. In the Midnight Tower made number one on the R&B chart and made number
21 on the pop charts, instantly turning Pickett from an also-ran into one of the major
stars of soul music. The follow-up, a sounder-like called Don't Fight It, also made the top
five on the R&B charts. At his next session, Pickett was reunited with his old bandmate
Eddie Floyd. Floyd would soon go on to have his own hits at Stacks, most notably with
knock on wood, but at this point he was working as a staff songwriter at Stax, coming up with
songs like Comfort Me for Carla Thomas. Floyd had teamed up with Steve Cropper, and
they'd been, shall we say, inspired by a hit for the Marvelette, Beachwood 45789, written by Marvin
Gay, Gwen Gordy and Mickey Stevenson. Cropper and Floyd had come up with their own song,
634-5789, which Pickett recorded and which became an even bigger hit than in the midnight hour,
making number 13 on the pop charts, as well as being Pickett's second R&B number one.
At the same session, they cut another single.
This one was inspired by an old gospel song, 99 and one half won't do,
recorded by Sister Rosetta Tharp, among others.
The song was rewritten by Floyd, Cropper and Pickett,
and was also a moderate R&B hit,
though nowhere near as big as 634-5-7-8-9.
That would be the last single that Pickett recorded at Stacks, though,
though the reasoning has never been quite clear.
Pickett was, to put it as mildly as possible,
a difficult man to work with,
and he seems to have had some kind of falling out with Jim Stewart,
though Stewart always said that the problem was actually
that Pickett didn't get on with the musicians.
But the musicians disagree,
saying they had a good working relationship,
Pickett was often an awful person, but only when drunk, and he was always sober in the studio.
It seems likely, actually, that Pickett's move away from the Stacks Studios was more to do with someone else.
Pickett's friend Don Covey was another Atlantic artist recording at Stax,
and Pickett had travelled down with him when Covey had recorded Seesaw there.
Everyone involved agreed that Covey was an eccentric personality,
and that he rubbed Jim Stewart up the wrong way.
There is also a feeling among some
that Stuart started to resent the way Stax's sound
was being used for Atlantic artists,
like he was giving away hit,
even though Stax's company got the publishing
on the songs Cropper was co-writing,
and he was being paid for the studio time.
Either way, after that session,
Atlantic didn't send any of its artists down to Stax,
other than Sam and Dave,
who Stax regarded as their own artists.
Pickett would never again record,
at Stax, and possibly coincidentally, once he stopped writing songs with Steve Cropper,
he would also never again have a major hit record with a self-penned song.
But Jerry Waxler still wanted to keep working in Southern Studios, and with Southern musicians,
and so he took Pickett to Fame Studios in Mussel Shulls, Alabama.
We looked back in the episode on Arthur Alexander, at the start of Fame Studios,
but after Arthur Alexander had moved on to Monument Records, Rick Hall had turned Fame into a home,
for R&B singers looking for crossover success.
While Stax employed both black and white musicians,
fame studios had an all-white rhythm section,
with a background in country music,
but that had turned out to be absolutely perfect
for performers like the soul singer Joe Tex,
who had himself started out in country before switching to soul,
and who recorded classics like,
Hold What You Got at the studio.
That had been released on Fame's record label
and Jerry Wexler had been impressed
and had told Rick Hall to call him the next time he thought he had a hit.
When Hall did call Wexler, Wexler was annoyed.
Hall found him in the middle of a party,
but Hall was insistent.
You said to call you next time I've got a hit,
and this is a number one.
Wexler relented and listened to the record down the phone.
This is what he heard.
Atlantic snapped up when a man loves a woman by Percy Slag.
and it went to number one on the pop charts, the first record from any of the Southern
Soul Studios to do so. In Wexler's eyes, fame was now the new Stax. Wexler had a bit of a
culture shock when working at fame, as it was totally unlike anything he'd experienced before.
The records he'd been involved with in New York had been mostly recorded by slumming jazz musicians,
very technical players who would read the music from charts, and Staxe had Steve Cropper
as de facto musical director,
leading the musicians
and working out their parts with them.
By contrast, the process used at fame
and at most of the other studios
in what Charles Hughes describes
as the country soul triangle
of Memphis, Muscle Shoals and Nashville,
was the process that had been developed
by Owen Bradley and the Nashville A team in Nashville.
And for a fuller description of this,
see the excellent episodes
on Bradley and the A team
in the Great Country Music podcast,
Cocaine and Rhinestones.
The musicians would hear
play-through of the song by its writer, or a demo, would note down the chord sequences using
the Nashville number system, rather than a more detailed score, do a single run-through to
get the balance right, and then record. Very few songs required a second take. For Pickett's
first session at fame, and most subsequent ones, the fame rhythm section of Keyboard Player
Chips Moment, guitarist Jimmy Johnson, bass player junior low, and drummer Roger Hawkins
was augmented with a few other players.
Memphis guitarist Chips Momon and Tommy Cogbill
and the horn section who played on Pickett's Stax Records,
moonlighting.
And for the first track they recorded there,
Wexler wanted them to do something
that would become a signature trick for Pickett
over the next couple of years.
Record a soul cover version of a rock cover version
of a soul record.
Wexler's thinking was that the best way for Pickett
to cross over to a white audience
was to do songs that were familiar to them
from white pop cover versions,
but songs that had originated in Pickett's soul style.
At the time as well, the hard backbeat sound on Pickett's hit
was one that was more associated with white rock music than with soul,
as was the emphasis on rhythm guitar.
To modern years, Pickett's records are almost the definition of soul music,
but at the time they were absolutely considered crossover records.
And so in the coming months,
Pickett would record cover versions of Don Covey's Mercy Mercy Mercy,
Solomon Burke's Everybody Needs Somebody to Love
and Irma Thomas's Tyre is on My Side,
all of which had been previously covered by the Rolling Stones
and two of which had their publishing owned by Atlantic's publishing subsidiary.
For this single though,
he was recording a song which had started out as a gospel-inspired dance song
by the R&B singer Chris Kenner.
That had been a minor hit towards the bottom end of the Hot 100,
but it had been taken up by a lot of other musicians
and become one of those songs everyone did as album filler.
Rufus Thomas had done a version at Stax, for example.
But then a Chicano garage band called Cannibal and the Headhunters started performing it live,
and their singer forgot the lyrics and just started singing nah-na-na-na-na-na,
giving the song a chorus it hadn't had in its original version.
Their version, a fake live studio recording, made the top 30.
Pickett's version was drastically rearranged,
and included a guitar riff that Chip's Moment had come up with,
some new lyrics that Pickett introduced, and a bass intro that Jerry Wexler came up with,
a run of semi-quavers that Junior Lowe found very difficult to play.
The musician spent so long working on that intro that Pickett got annoyed and decided to take charge.
He yelled, come on, one, two, three, and the horn players, with the kind of intuition that comes from working
together for years, hit a chord in unison.
He yelled one, two, three again, and they hit another chord, and Lowe went into the bass part.
They'd found their intro.
They ran through that opening one more time, then recorded a take.
At this time, Fame was still recording live onto single-track tape,
and so all the mistakes were caught on tape with no opportunity to fix anything,
like when all but one of the home players forget to come in on the first line of one verse.
But that kind of mistake only added to the feel of the track,
which became Pickett's biggest hit yet,
his third number one on the R&B chart,
and his first pop top ten.
As the formula of recording a sole cover version of a rock cover version of a soul song
had clearly worked,
the next single Pickett recorded was Mustang Sally,
which as we saw had originally been an R&B record by Pickett's friend Mack Rice
before being covered by the young rascals.
Pickett's version, though, became the definitive version.
But it very nearly wasn't.
That was recorded in a single take,
and the musicians went into the control room to listen to it,
and the metal capstan on the tape machine flew off while it was rewinding.
The tape was cut into dozens of tiny fragments,
which the machine threw all over the room in all directions.
Everyone was horrified, and Pickett, who was already known for his horrific temper,
looked as if he might actually kill someone.
Tom Dowd, Atlantic's genius engineer,
who had been a physicist on the Manhattan Project while still a teenager,
wasn't going to let something as minor as that stop him.
He told everyone to take a break for half an hour, gathered up all the randomly thrown bits of tape, and spliced them back together.
The completed recording apparently has 40 splices in it, which would mean an average of a splice every four seconds.
Have a listen to this 30 second segment and see if you can hear any at all.
That segment has the one part where I think I can hear one splice in the whole track,
a place where the rhythm hiccups very slightly, and that might well just be the drummer trying a fill that didn't
quite come off. Mustang Sally was another pop-top-thirty hit, and Waxter's crossover strategy
seemed to have been proved right, so much so that Pickett was now playing pretty much all-white
bills. He played, for example, at Murray the Kay's last ever review at the Brooklyn Paramount,
where the other artists on the bill were Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels, The Young Rascals,
Al Cooper's Blues Project, Cream, and The Who. Pickett found The Who extremely unprofessional,
with their use of smoke bombs and smashing their instruments,
but they eventually became friendly.
Pickett's next single was his version of Everybody Needs Somebody to Love,
the Solomon Burke song that the Rolling Stones had also covered,
and that was a minor hit,
but his next few records after that didn't do particularly well.
He did, though, have a big hit with his cover version of a song by a group called
Dyke and the Blazers.
Pickett's version of Funky Broadway took him to the pop Top Ten.
It did something else as well.
you may have noticed that two of the bands on that Paramount Bill
were groups that get called Blue-eyed Soul.
Soul had originally been a term used for music made by black people,
but increasingly the term was being used by white people for their music,
just as rock and roll and rhythm and blues before it had been picked up on by white musicians.
And so, as in those cases, black musicians were moving away from the term,
though it would never be abandoned completely, and towards a new slang term,
funk.
and Pickett was the first person to get a song with funk in the title onto the pop charts.
But that would be the last recording Pickett would do at fame for a couple of years.
As with Stacks, Pickett was moved away by Atlantic because of problems with another artist,
this time to do with a session with Aretha Franklin that went horribly wrong,
which we'll look at in a future episode.
From this point on, Pickett would record at American Sound Studios in Memphis,
a studio owned and run by Chip's Moment,
who had played on many of Pickett's records.
Again, Pickett was playing with an all-white house band,
but brought in a couple of black musicians,
the saxophone player King Curtis,
and Pickett's new touring guitarist Bobby Womack,
who had had a rough few years,
being largely ostracised from the music community
because of his relationship with Sam Cooke's widow.
Womack wrote what might be Pickett's finest song,
a song called I'm in Love,
which is a masterpiece of metrical simplicity disguised as complexity.
You could write it all down as being in straight 4-4,
but the pulse shifts and implies alternating bars at 5 and 3 at points.
Womack's playing on those sessions had two effects,
one on music history and one on picket.
The effect on music history was that he developed a strong working relationship with Reggie Young,
the guitarist in the American Sound Studio band,
and Young and Womack learned each other's styles.
Young would later go on to be one of the top country session guitarists,
playing on records by Merle Haggard,
William Nelson, Dolly Parton,
Kenny Rogers,
Whalen Jennings and more,
and he was using Womack's style of playing.
He said later,
I didn't change a thing,
I was playing that Wormack style on country records
instead of the hillbilly stuff.
It changed the whole bed of country music.
The other effect, though, was a much more damaging one.
Womack introduced Pickett to Cocaine,
and Pickett, who was already an aggressive, violent, abusive man,
became much more so.
I'm in love went to number four on the R&B charts,
but didn't make the pop top 40.
The follow-up, a remake of Staggilly,
did decently on the pop charts,
but less well on the R&B charts.
Pickett's audiences were diverging,
and he was finding it more difficult
to make the two come together,
but he would still marriage it sporadically
throughout the 60s.
One time when he did was in 1968,
when he returned to Muscle Shoals and to Fame Studios,
In a session there, the guitarist was very insistent that Pickett should cut a version of the Beatles' most recent hit.
Now, obviously, this is a record that's ahead in our timeline, and which will be covered in a future episode.
But I imagine that most of you won't find it too much of a spoiler when I tell you that Hey Jude by the Beatles was quite a big hit.
What that guitarist had realised was that the tag of the song gave the perfect opportunity for ad-libbing.
You all know the tag.
And so on. That would be perfect for a guitar solo, and for Pickett to do some good soul shouting over.
Neither Pickett nor Rick Hall were at all keen. The Beatles record had only just dropped off number one,
and it seemed like a ridiculous idea to both of them. But the guitarist kept pressing to do it,
and by the time the other musicians returned from their lunch break, he'd convinced Pickett and Hall.
The record starts out fairly straightforward, but it's on the tag when it comes to life.
Pickett later described recording that part.
He stood right in front of me as though he was playing every note I was singing,
and he was watching me as I sang,
and as I screamed, he was screaming with his guitar.
That was not Pickett's biggest hit, but it was one of the most influential.
It made the career of the guitarist, Dwayne Allman,
who Jerry Wexer insisted on sound to his own contract after that,
and as Jimmy Johnson, the rhythm guitarist on the session, said,
We realised then that Dwayne had created Southern Rock in that ramp.
It was big enough that Waxster pushed Pickett to record a whole series of cover versions of rock songs.
He put out versions of Hey Joe, Born to Be Wild, and You Keep Me Hanging on.
The latter going back to his old technique of covering a white cover version of a black record,
as his version copied the Vanilla Fudge's arrangements rather than the Supreme's original.
But these only had very minor successes.
The most successful of them was his version of Sugar Sugar,
the Archies. As the 60s turned into the 70s, Pickett continued having some success,
but it was more erratic and less consistent. The worlds of black and white music were drifting apart,
and Pickett, who more than most had straddled both worlds, now found himself having success in
neither. It didn't help that his cocaine dependency had made him into an egomaniac.
At one point in the early 70s, Pickett got a residency in Las Vegas, and was making what by most
standards was a great income from it. But he would complain bitterly that he was only playing the
small room, not the big one in the same hotel, and that the artist playing the big room was getting
better billing than him on the posters. Of course, the artist playing the big room was Elvis Presley,
but that didn't matter to pick it. He thought he deserved to be at least that big. He was also
having regular fights with his record label. Armet Ertugan used to tell a story, and I'm going
to repeat it here with one expletive cutout, in order to get past Apple's rating.
system. In Ertigan's words, Jerry Wexler never liked Crosby Stills and Nash because they wanted
so much freaking artistic autonomy. While we were arguing about this, Wilson Pickett walks in the room
and comes up to Jerry and says, Jerry, and he goes, wham, and he puts a pistol on the table. He says,
if that, expletive, Tom Dowd, walks into where I'm recording, I'm going to shoot him. And if you walk
in, I'm going to shoot you. Oh, Jerry said, that's okay, Wilson. Then he walked out. So I said,
You want to argue about artistic autonomy?
As you can imagine, Atlantic were quite glad to get rid of Pickett
when he decided he wanted to move to RCA records,
who were finally trying to break into the R&B market.
Unfortunately for Pickett,
the executive who'd made the decision to sign him soon left the company,
and as so often happens when an executive leaves,
his pet project becomes the one that everyone's desperate to get rid of.
RCA didn't know how to market records to black audiences,
and didn't really try,
and Pickett's voice was becoming damaged from all the cocaine use.
He spent the 70s and 80s going from label to label,
trying things like going disco with no success.
He also went from woman to woman, beating them up,
and went through band members more and more quickly as he attacked them too.
The guitarist Mark Ribot was in Pickett's band for a short time and said,
and here again I'm cutting out an expletive,
you can write about all the extenuating circumstances,
and maybe it needs to be put in historical context,
but, you know why guys beat women? Because they can, and it's abuse. That's why employers beat
employees when they can. I've worked with black band leaders and white band leaders who are respectful,
courteous and generous human beings. And then I've worked with Wilson Pickett.
He was becoming more than more paranoid. He didn't turn up for his induction in the rock and roll
hall of fame, where he was scheduled to perform. Instead he hid in his house, scared to leave.
Pickett was repeatedly arrested throughout this time and into the 90s,
spending some time in prison,
and then eventually going into rehab in 1997 after being arrested for beating up his latest partner.
She dropped the charges, but the police found a cocaine in his possession and charged him with that.
After getting out, he apparently mellowed out somewhat and became much easier to get along with.
Still often unpleasant, especially after he had a drink, which he never gave up,
but far less violin and more easygoing than he had been.
He also had something of a comeback sparked by an appearance in the flop film Blues Brothers 2000.
He recorded a blues album, It's Harder Now, and also guested on Adlib,
the comeback duets album by his old friend Don Covey,
singing with him and co-writing on several songs, including nine times a man.
It's harder now
You've been number of the chart
Because I'm the one
It's harder now was a solid blues-based album
In the vein of similar albums from around that time
By people like Solomon Burke
And could have led to Pickett
Having the same kind of late career resurgence as Johnny Cash
It was nominated for a Grammy
But Lost in the category for which it was nominated to Barry White
Pickett was depressed by the loss
And just decided to give up making new music
and just played the oldies circuit until 2004,
at which point he became too ill to continue.
The duet with Covey would be the last time he went into the studio.
The story of Pickett's last year or so is a painful one,
with squabbles between his partner and his children over his power of attorney,
while he spent long periods in hospital,
suffering from kidney problems caused by his alcoholism,
and also at this point from bulimia, diabetes and more.
He was ill enough that he tried to make amends with his children and his ex-referral.
wife, and succeeded as well as anyone can in that situation. On the 18th of January 2006, two months
before his 65th birthday, his partner took him to get his hair cut in his moustache shaped,
so he looked the way he wanted to look. They had together at his assisted living facility,
and prayed together, and she left around 11 o'clock that night. Shortly thereafter,
Pickett had a heart attack and died, alone, sometime close to the midnight hour.
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