eMusic Review
Organist Booker T. Jones, guitarist Steve Cropper, bassist Louis Steinberg (later replaced by Duck Dunn) and drummer Al Jackson, Jr. were not only a sterling house band for the Memphis-based Stax label, they were also a superb combo unto themselves, and Soul Men provides worthwhile insight into their artistry. This compilation of previously unreleased sessions, most of them from 1965-1968, finds the combo subtly reinventing hit tunes of the day by songwriters ranging from Lennon-McCartney to Hayes-Porter. It includes three covers of songs they themselves had originally cut as a backing band, and Jones 'swirling organ licks sound even more heated on these versions of "When Something Is Wrong with My Baby," "Soul Man" and "On a Saturday Night" than they did behind Sam and Dave and Eddie Floyd. Steve Cropper nicely approximates Slim Harpo's loping "swamp" groove on "Baby, Scratch My Back," and delivers slithering blues riffs on Willie Dixon's "Wang Dang Doodle." Soul Men is a remarkable combination of musical imagination and rhythmic muscle, delivered with the ineffable less-is-more elan of this fabled quartet.