The Best Of Booker T. And The M.G.'s

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (60 ratings)

We’re sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United States) at this time.

ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 63:04

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Fred Goodman

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Most of the best from the group John Fogerty once called the greatest rock band of all time.
2000 | Label: Fantasy / Stax

It's hard to call any package that doesn't feature "Green Onions" the "best" of Booker T, but, that obvious flaw aside, the rest of this collection is rock-solid. Unlike Motown's fabled Funk Brothers session team, who embroidered and in some cases provided all the musical juice on many of that label's best tracks, the M.G.'s were a straightforward rhythm section, a bass/drums/guitar/organ combo that drove the Stax sessions but never papered over them. On their own, the group focuses on what they know best: bringing it home like a metronome. Featured tracks include "Time Is Tight," "Soul Limbo," "Hang 'em High," "Melting Pot" and "Hig Hug Her."

Write a Review4 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Go for the gold

streek53

Grab "Time is Tight," which will sound familiar as it's been used or copied by other artists, notably the Blues Brothers, who used the basic riff as their intro theme, and Hip Hug Her, which is on a par with Green Onions. Guitarist Steve Cropper co-wrote a number of huge hits (if you're a fan of 60s soul, check the writing credits for Otis Redding and Wilson Pickett, for example; if you're not a fan of 60s soul, sit and drool) and was an innovative player at the time (some of his stretches and bends are surreal, as in Hip Hug Her, and were widely copied), but had fallen off badly by the time he was playing with the Blues Brothers.

user avatar

Of course no "Green Onions" - cut in '62

jojomahogan

These are some tracks the great group recorded between 1968-70, after the Atlantic distribution deal with Stax ended. The MGs' career actually parellels The Beatles in time span and in their remarkable evolution. By the time the amazing "Melting Pot" was cut, this band had come A LONG way from that jam session that led to "Green Onions". This features their classic versions of "Hang 'em High" and "The Horse", and their absolutely brilliant and breathtaking cover of "Something". Also great originals "Over Easy" and "Heads or Tails", and a smokin jam of Albert King's "Born Under a Bad Sign" co-written by Booker T. Jones and Stax singer William Bell. Even with all these timeless gems, the masterpiece here, along with "Melting Pot", is "Meditation" where Jones plays guitar and trombone. It ranks up there with the works of Mozart or McCartney. And you will not find a better band on earth than Al Jackson, Jr. (drums), Donald "Duck" Dunn (bass), and Steve Cropper (guitar)!

user avatar

No Green Onions????

CPCounselor

Ok, explain to me how you can possibly have a "Best of Booker T..." without Green Onions.

user avatar

Why too much fluff...

AloisesJSpooneybarger

Way too much of the fluff covers that filled out booker t albums... listen to each song and download the ones you want ( i'd suggest avoiding the treacly beatles covers ).

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

They Say All Media Guide

This 16-song CD, clocking in at 46 minutes, is the second-best, and the handiest and most easily affordable, compilation available on Booker T. & the MG’s. It’s not remotely as comprehensive as Fantasy Records’ three-CD set (although this disc does have two tracks, “Booker-Loo” and “Slum Baby,” that don’t appear on the triple-CD set) but is more comprehensive and better representative of their work (and offers better sound) than either Fantasy’s single-disc best-of or the old Atlantic Records’ best-of compilation. The collection does jump around a bit across history in the course of covering the years 1963-1971, bouncing between late-’60s singles and album tracks and odd early/middle-’60s tracks. “Booker-Loo,” one of the pieces unique to this set, features some very crunchy rhythm guitar and flamboyant organ work in its intro, before Steve Cropper takes center stage with an unusually flashy lead guitar solo spot. “Slum Baby,” from three years later, features a much smoother and funkier sound. “Slim Jenkins’ Place” shows off Booker T. Jones’s piano skills as well as his organ playing, and all of it is marked by virtuoso playing. The collection also makes a strong case for the band’s members as composers — hits like “Hang ‘Em High” come off beautifully, especially in the crisply remastered version presented here, which brings out every nuance in the organ and guitar-dominated rendition of Dominic Frontiere’s theme from the Clint Eastwood movie of that name. But originals like the majestic, soaring “Time Is Tight” and the lyrical, playful “Soul-Limbo” are great pieces of pop-soul composition as well, and stand up just as well to repeated listening. Buy the triple-disc set if it’s in your budget, but at less than one-third of the cost, this collection shouldn’t be dismissed for its compactness and range. – Bruce Eder

more »