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Soulsville on CBS News Sunday Morning: Transcript
CBS, Sunday, January 16, 2005
By Charles Osgood and Russ Mitchell
Soulsville USA
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Jan. 16, 2005
The music produced at Stax Records continues to resonate more than a
quarter century after the label's demise. And why not? The label was
home to Otis
Redding, Sam & Dave, Booker T. and the MGs and Isaac Hayes, among others.
Indeed, Stax was responsible for some of the most memorable soul sounds of the '60s and '70s.
The label's history is a story of integration, creativity and empowerment.
On CBS News Sunday Morning, Correspondent Russ Mitchell examines that
legacy and the renewed attention brought about by the opening of the
Stax
Museum of American Soul Music, which is built on the original site of stax. Also there: the new Stax Music Academy.
Mitchell sets the scene: Perched on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi
River sits Memphis, Tenn. Musicians have long gravitated there --
bringing from their
fields, churches and kitchens -- their songs. Aretha Franklin was born
there. W.C. Handy – father of the blues -- once called Memphis home. So
did Elvis
Presley, the king of rock 'n roll.
And then there was Stax, the little music label that could -- and did
-- create some of the most memorable sounds of the '60s and '70s. But
its history was
overlooked until a few years ago, when the city of Memphis, looking to
reclaim an important part of its cultural past, opened a museum and
threw a party to
welcome soul back home.
But before all this, there was the music.
It was 1960. Jim Stewart -- a country fiddler -- and his sister Estelle
Axton moved their fledgling record company to an abandoned movie
theater at 926 East
Maclemore in Memphis. Here, they would build a recording studio and
record store. Using the first two letters of their last names, Stewart
and Axton, they
would call their new label "Stax." Soulsville USA was born.
Former Stax employee Deannie Parker was there almost from the first:
"It was a rare opportunity in a neighborhood where there were not any
such
opportunities," Parker remembers. "The Soulsville neighborhood at the
time was a neighborhood that was transitioning. …This was becoming a
predominately African-American neighborhood. …By virtue of their having
established a business in this area, they had access to an untapped
resource for
some of the greatest undiscovered talent."
Neighborhood teens like Parker would walk through the studio's open door -- hoping for a chance at fame.
"My goal," she says, "was to be star. The first song I recorded along
with The Valadoors was, 'My Imaginary Guy,' which i wrote."
Parker never did find stardom. Others, however, would: Stax would
assemble an array of talent that created the blueprint of a southern
sound -- a potent mix
of gospel, blues, jazz and country -- a signature sound often confused with its more successful Northern cousin, Motown.
"In the North," says Isaac Hayes, "there was Motown. They had a slick,
polished sound. …But when you go below the Mason-Dixon Line, down
South, the
soul is a raw, raw sound. It was ours."
It was a sound, Mitchell says, that soon would belong to all of us.
Empathetic, prideful, the music paralleled the struggles of its
turbulent time.
Writer Peter Guralnick has authored a book about Stax' history in his book, "Sweet Soul Music."
"It's remarkable, remarkable story," he says, "that you should have
this musical integration in Memphis at the time of almost total social
segregation."
Former label executive Al Bell says, "I remember when I first walked
through these doors of Stax, how inspired I was. I guess it's fair to
say that, to define
what was going on in Stax at that time, one would have to walk into
Studio A and see two white guys that made up a rhythm section called
'Booker T. and
the MGs'...and then look into the control room…and see this white
guy...and recognize that he had been a country fiddle player. And hear
all this soulful,
passionate music coming from these people.
Stax artists Booker T. and the MGs: "Somehow, we all knew what the goal
was that we wanted. We knew we wanted it to be simple. We knew we
wanted it
to be funky. And we knew we wanted to have a good time doing it."
Stax' 15-year history was puctuated by plenty of highs and lows. And by
1975, a series of legal and financial reverses led to the label's
demise. The
Soulsville community lost an important anchor. It, and the Stax legacy, fell to neglect.
But Deannie Parker's love for the Stax legacy only grew stronger. And
almost 20 years after the company closed, a Memphis group approached
her about
helping to bring Stax back to life.
They wanted her to open a club on Beale Street -- Stax Records. And she
refused. Why? "I simply could not reduce Stax records to a club on
Beale Street.
…I was asked then by this team, 'Well, if not here and in a club, what
then?' And I said, "Well, I have a vision for it, for what I think Stax
Records…should be
glorified, if you will."
The vision, Parker says, was that it should be a museum. Not just any
museum: a full restoration of the original Stax complex, with an added
educational
component.
The idea? To build economic opportunity around musical heritage. And the name? Soulsville USA. Its president: Deannie Parker.
The museum journeys through soul's rich history, in the process displaying many of the more than 800 singles released at Stax.
But if the museum is a drive down Memory Lane, right next door,
Soulsville looks to the future. The real jewel of this $20 million
project is the Stax Music
Academy.
Here, neighborhood children learn about music's ability to transform
and change a neighborhood -- and young lives -- one voice at a time.
"I came back to Memphis to be part of something special. And boy, I
found it," exclaims academy Director Mark Willis. "We're trying to
raise some kids
through music. We want them to grow up, we want them to hang out, we
want to do formal programming, we want to do informal programming.
"I want 'em in the building as much as they can stand to be in here. We
want music all over. I want you to come back and go, 'Man, there's too
much music.
And can you turn some of that down?'
"I want to know them. I want them to know the staff. I want them to
come to a place that's safe, that they can trust and, frankly, where
adults do what they
say they're going to do."
Some children comment, "I like having fun here, I like learning the
notes. I like the teachers." "They teach us the basics of how things
are done in the real
world." "The staff is great. They're real easy to talk to and they're very accessible."
"We like to think," Willis says, "in terms of, 'Can we save one kid's
life?' In proportion to what we've done, it's worth it. …It sounds
funny to talk about (saving
one kid's life) but, I mean, we're really in the business of saving
lives. When we think about this community and the needs of this
community and the
resources of getting a kid on the right path and making the right decisions, we're going to save a couple lives."
An ambitous goal, and no small task for one of the nation's poorest communities.
A task Parker says is too valuable to be ignored.
"I find it very difficult to tell you (Mitchell) everything without
becoming emotional in terms of what this place means for children, what
it can be for children,
because I'm reminded of the fact that we were children when we came
here. …What I really hope is that this museum and the academy will do
for children
today what Stax records did for us when we were youngsters."
For more information:
Stax Museum of American Soul Music
Stax Music Academy
Soulsville, USA
926 East McClemore
Memphis, TN 38106
Additional music and video can be found here
Fantasy Inc.
Tenth and Parker
Berkeley, CA 94710
fantasyjazz.com
fantasyjazz.com/catalog
www.fantasyjazz.com/html/anniversary_stax.html
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