  
     
    Jim Stewart, founder of Stax
    Records has stated, Isaac Hayes is one of the main roots of the Memphis Sound.
     
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
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    Native Memphian - Issac Hayes
    inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Raised in and around Memphis, Hayes signed on as a
    sessionman at Stax Records in 1964. His first session was for The Great Otis
    Redding Sings Soul Ballads (released on Volt Records, a Stax subsidiary). He and
    lyricist David Porter became a formidable songwriting team at Stax. Hayes and Porter
    bonded with the soul duo Sam and Dave, writing and producing a run of hits that
    included Hold On, Im Coming, Soul Man and I Thank
    You. They also wrote B-A-B-Y for Carla Thomas and hits for the Emotions,
    the Soul Children, Mable John and Lou Rawls. As a keyboardist and producer, Hayes was an
    important element in the Stax/Volt sound. All the while, he was itching to sing and
    hearing a different sound in his head. I wanted to sing pop music, easy listening,
    but Memphis was stone R&B, he told Rolling Stone in 1970.  
       The origins of Hayes style came
    following a Stax Christmas party, when Hayes, bassist Duck Dunn and drummer Al Jackson,
    Jr., began playing around in the studio. They hit on a unique approach, recasting pop hits
    in lengthy arrangements featuring spoken monologues from Hayes and jazzy, orchestrated
    middle sections. His first album, Introducing Isaac Hayes, appeared in 1967 but failed to
    chart. Hayes breakthrough came with his second solo album, Hot Buttered Soul (1969),
    which revolutionized soul music by
    bringing a more silky, adult sound to it  and by interpolating lengthy pillow-talk
    monologues, which Hayes called raps. Hot Buttered Soul contained only four
    tracks, and two of them  remakes of Dionne Warwicks Walk on By and
    Glen Campbells By the Time I Get to Phoenix  ran twelve and
    nineteen minutes long, respectively. Edited versions of both songs made up a double-sided
    hit single on the pop and R&B charts in 1969.  
     
        * From
    1969 to 1975, Hayes released a string of Top Twenty albums: Hot Buttered Soul (#8, 1969),
    The Isaac Hayes Movement (#8, 1970), To Be Continued (#11, 1970), Shaft (#1, 1971), Black
    Moses (#10, 1971), Live at the Sahara Tahoe (#14, 1973), Joy (#16, 1973) and Chocolate
    Chip (#18, 1975). He also appeared in Wattstax, a concert film and soundtrack spotlighting
    Stax artists.   |