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Director | Philip Priestley |
One line synopsis | A film documenting the history and output of the Stax record company, responsible for promoting the careers of musicians such as Isaac Hayes (b.1942) and Otis Redding (1941-1967), and the contribution of these performers to the Civil Rights movement. |
Description | Caption: "Los Angeles 1972." Isaac Hayes comes on stage at Wattstax, is greeted by Jesse Jackson, and takes a bow. Jim Stewart, founder with his sister Estelle Axton, of Stax records, in his car. Commentary says that he started recording in his garage. Stewart in Brunswick, the Memphis, Tennessee, suburb where they then set up a studio; Stewart talking about the early days when they had to stop recording when trains passed because of lack of insulation. Axton and Stewart describe how they finally moved to Memphis proper, with a studio built in the disused Capitol Theater cinema. Photograph of Rufus Thomas outside Stax studios. Thomas in interview at Radio WDIA, Memphis. Singing the Bread and Gravy song. Sings along to the recording of himself and daughter, Carla, performing ’Cause I Love You (1959). Photographs of Carla. Rufus Thomas. Stewart talks about ’Cause I Love You being an instant hit; Jerry Wexler, Atlantic Records, and Stewart talking about the agreement between Stax’s forerunner, Satellite, and Atlantic to press and distribute it. Photograph of Carla Thomas (Gee Whiz (1961) in background), and of William Bell outside the studio. Bell describes his early connections with Stax and the Thomas family. He performs You Don’t Miss Your Water, his hit from 1961, accompanied by Rufus’s son, Marvell, who played on the original. Bell says that though Stax itself was very integrated, segregation affected the company’s success; photographs from Memphis in the 1960s. Stewart says that Axton set up a record shop in the lobby of the former cinema; photograph. Axton describes how people would meet there and discuss their music. Wexler talking about the studio band, Booker T. & the MG’s (photographs), Steve Cropper, Donald "Duck" Dunn, Al Jackson, and Booker T. Jones. Original footage of Booker T. & The MG’s playing Green Onions (1962) with young people dancing. Jones, Cropper and Dunn talking about their music, and about the Stax studio. Stewart notes that Otis Redding came to the studio in 1962. Cropper describes how amazed he was on first hearing Redding sing. Photographs of Redding; his 1963 recording These Arms of Mine over. Photograph of The Memphis Horns; Andrew Love and Wayne Jackson talk about the radical nature of the racial mixture at the Memphis studio musicians. It’s a Long Walk to D.C. But I Got My Walking Shoes On sung by Mavis Staples over shot of man on country road and original footage of people arriving at Washington DC in 1963; the March on Washington with Martin Luther King and others. Isaac Hayes talking about working at Stax where so much of the music was arranged on the spot. Love and Jackson playing, and talking about Otis Redding’s songs "[happening] in the studio". Cropper relates an anecdote about the genesis of Mr Pitiful (1964); Love and Jackson play introduction; recording over dramatisation of anecdote with car travelling through suburban streets towards the former studio site. Memorial plaque. Cropper and Jones pointing out where the different parts of the studios were. Photographs of Cropper in studio. Covers for Eddie Floyd’s Knock on Wood (1966), William Bell The Soul of a Bell (1967), Rufus Thomas Walking the Dog (1963), Carla Thomas Memphis Queen (1969), Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul (1966), Otis Redding and Carla Thomas King & Queen (1967), Booker T. & The MG’s Green Onions (1962); Wood’s Knock on Wood played over. Hayes talking about the Stax "family". Photographs of Hayes with David Porter circa 1964. Hayes plays and sings the gospel tune, You Don't Know Like I Know What the Lord Has Done for Me. The same tune sung in church. Hayes talks about the 1996 Sam Moore and Dave Prater recording, You Don’t Know Like I Know; original footage of Sam & Dave in performance with Booker T. & The MG’s and the Memphis Horns. Photograph of Malcolm X circa 1965; commentary talks of the 1965 riots in America, noting that a Stax revue played in concert (Wattstax) in Watts, Los Angeles, during this period. Cropper describes how the audience began to shout the "Burn, baby, burn" slogan. Original footage from Watts showing some of the fires, police, soldiers, etc; Booker T. & The MG’s Groovin’ (1967) plays over.William Bell talking about Stax then needing "a strong black individual … more focused on the black community and on black music" and commentary notes that Al Bell (photograph) was put in charge of promotions in 1965. Al Bell talks about the company’s belief that Stax music could become "the music of the world". Photograph of the performers who went on the 1967 European tour (the Stax/Volt revue), including Jones, Redding, Floyd, and Sam and Dave. Love and Jackson explain how the tour made them realise that they were all stars. Original footage of Redding singing Try a Little Tenderness (1967). Love and Cropper talk about the Monterey festival. Original footage of visitors, Hell’s Angels, etc. Dunn on Redding’s performance and original footage of "Can you do that just one more time". Newspaper report of Redding’s death in plane clash, part of I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (1966) over. Stewart talks about this event and how it affected the company. Photographs of Redding with (Sitting on) The Dock of the Bay (1968) over. The Lorraine Motel. Al Bell says he learned about the assassination of Martin Luther King (1968) while he was recording Shirley Walton’s Send Peace and Harmony Home. Photograph from the Motel on April 4th 1968; recording over. Bell talks about the split this event caused between black and white Stax employees. Wexler says that "the spirit seemed to have gone out … of rhythm and blues music". Street scenes with Albert King’s Born Under a Bad Sign (1967) over. Hayes says he agitated for more black employees at managerial levels, and talks about his song Soul Man (1967); heard over footage of troops in threes and black people being arrested. Photograph of Stewart circa 1968; commentary says that when Stax broke with Atlantic he discovered that Atlantic owned the rights to all his master tapes; the company was sold to Gulf & Western. Al Bell talks about realising that he needed to produce a catalogue. Hayes talks about his album Hot Buttered Soul (1969); photograph of him receiving a gold disc; Bell describes it as the first gold and platinum album recorded by a black artist. Hayes performs Never Can Say Goodbye. Bell talks about changes at the new Stax, including the fact that the increased volume meant that they started recording in many different locations. Photograph of Don Davis. Cropper lamenting the "slipping away" of what they had built up because over-expansion meant that albums were "farmed out"; he left. Photograph of Jim Stewart; commentary says he and Al Bell re-acquired the company as equal co-owners. Photograph of Jesse Jackson with Hayes and Bell. Jesse Jackson on his "Operation Bread Basket" campaign against chain stores that would not stock black goods, employ black managers, or allow black advertising, etc. Original footage of Jackson leading a church congregation in reciting his poem, I Am Somebody. Johnnie Taylor’s song I Am Somebody (1969) over photographs of Stax artists including Taylor, Hayes, Carla Thomas, King, the Emotions, the Dramatics, etc., along with Jesse Jackson and Stokely Carmichael at political events. Al Bell says that Jackson once reprimanded him for not spending enough time with the Staples Singers. Mavis Staples explains how they would open proceedings at Operation Bread Basket events. Jackson on the Staples family; photographs. Staples talks about "moving out of ‘protest’ songs and into … ‘message’ songs". The Staples Singers singing at an open-air meeting with Beatitude: Respect Yourself (1972) playing over. Hayes describes how he was engaged to write the score for Shaft (1971). Hayes performing the title song at Wattstax. Stills of Hayes. Wayne Jackson talking about the security staff employed to guard Hayes at the studio (photograph of Johnny Baylor and. Dino Woodard) whose "strong-arm tactics" Jackson believes changed the previously warm atmosphere. Photographs of Hayes; he talks about the changing image of black men. Al Bell on the Wattstax event. Aerial view of the stadium. Crowds, etc. Jesse Jackson introducing the event and talking about "shifting from ‘burn, baby, burn’, to ‘learn, baby, learn’". Hayes describing the event. Rufus Thomas performing Do the Funky Chicken; audience jumping barriers and dancing in the arena. Al Bell says that Stax music was finally "being heard all across America" and that the company wanted to expand its album sales (covers for Wattstax: The Living Word (1973), Rufus Thomas Crown Prince of Dance (1972), Isaac Hayes Live at the Sahara Tahoe (1973), The Bar-Kays Cold Blooded (1974), Albert King, Chico Hamilton, Little Milton, from the Montreux Blues and Jazz Festival, 1974, The Staples Singers Be What You Are (1973)). They eventually brought an anti-trust suit against CBS through whom they were distributing. Stewart talks about going bankrupt and trying, unsuccessfully, to regain financial backing after the case. Caption: "Stax was closed down on January 19th 1975. The studio building was demolished in 1989." Jones and Cropper walking over the site. Credits, with Booker T. & The MG’s Time is Tight (1969) over. |
Production company | Les Film Grain de Sable/La Sept/ARTE/L’Institut National de l’Audiovisuel |
Running time | 61 minutes |
Full credits | Un film de Philip Priestley. |
Year | 1994 |
Film segment | The Soul of Stax - ACE286.2 |
The Soul of Stax - ACE286.3 | |
The Soul of Stax - ACE286.4 | |
The Soul of Stax - ACE286.5 | |
The Soul of Stax - ACE286.6 | |
The Soul of Stax - ACE286.7 | |
Web address (URL) | https://player.bfi.org.uk/free |