Green Onions

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (108 ratings)
Green Onions album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 35:13

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A Must Have

phlloyd

Classic album!!

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Best old find so far

OldieOldieslvr

Listened to several of these on KOMA in Hi School, but could not get my copy till Viet Nam, and then used vinyl. My favorite is still the title track. It's hard not to close your eyes and sway to "Behave Yourself"! I like power, but smooth and mellow makes more sense in the PM. Really can't fault any track though.

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Bada**

AmpereLachaise

This is one of the coolest albums ever made. They made Memphis proud. Play it at any party, straight through or on random. Oh, their version of "Comin' Home Baby" is only surpassed by the original...and not by much.

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Classic!

ShariKay

My, my, my! Wolfman's got green onions hanging round the studio. Gonna keep the vampires away, ya know?

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They Say All Music Guide

There’s not a note or a nuance out of place anywhere on this record, which was 35 of the most exciting minutes of instrumental music in any category that one could purchase in 1962 (and it’s no slouch four decades out, either). “I Got a Woman” is the single best indicator of how superb this record is and this band was — listening to this track, it’s easy to forget that the song ever had lyrics or ever needed them, Booker T. Jones’ organ and Steve Cropper’s guitar serving as more-than-adequate substitutes for any singer. Their version of “Twist and Shout” is every bit as satisfying. Even “Mo’ Onions,” an effort to repeat the success of “Green Onions,” doesn’t repeat anything from the earlier track except the tempo, and Jones and Cropper both come up with fresh sounds within the same framework.
“Behave Yourself” is a beautifully wrought piece of organ-based blues that gives Jones a chance to show off some surprisingly nimble-fingered playing, while “Stranger on the Shore” is transformed into a piece of prime soul music in the group’s hands. “Lonely Avenue” is another showcase for Jones’ keyboard dexterity, and then there’s the group’s cover of Smokey Robinson’s “One Who Really Loves You,” with a ravishing lead performance by Jones on organ and Cropper’s guitar handling the choruses. Just when it seems like the album has turned in all of the surprises in repertory that it could reasonably deliver, it ends with “Comin’ Home Baby,” a killer jazz piece on which Steve Cropper gets to shine, his guitar suddenly animated around Jones’ playing, his quietly trilled notes at the crescendo some of the most elegant guitar heard on an R&B record up to that time. – Bruce Eder

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