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The Morning Show - With Jill Riley

Coffee Break: Stax Records -

Coffee Break: Stax Records

 (L-R) Stax Co-President Al Bell, Stax Records founder Jim Stewart, and Pops Staples.
(L-R) Stax Co-President Al Bell, Stax Records founder Jim Stewart, and Pops Staples.Photo courtesy of Stax Archives.

by Jill Riley and Rachel Frances

December 07, 2022

On December 5, Stax Records co-founder, producer and engineer Jim Stewart passed away peacefully at the age of 92. Stewart was a driving force behind the trailblazing Memphis record label. With the help of talented songwriters and session musicians, he helped launch the careers of 1960’s and ‘70s artists including Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding and The Staple Singers. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002.

 

Stax Records defined the “Memphis Sound”, trailing only Motown Records as the country’s top soul label. The company also became known as a haven for racial integration in the segregated South. Stax and its affiliated record labels released 300 albums and 800 singles between 1959 and 1975 including Stewart-produced hits like Sam & Dave’s “Hold On, I’m Comin’” and Carla Thomas’s “Gee Whiz (Look at His Eyes)”.

Let’s pay tribute and celebrate the legacy of Jim Stewart with music that crafted the “Memphis Sound”. For today’s 9:30 Coffee Break, what Stax Records songs do you want to hear?


Respond with your song ideas in the comments below.

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Songs Played:
Otis Redding – I Can’t Turn You Loose
Carla Thomas – Pick Up the Pieces
Sam and Dave – Soul Man
Linda Lyndell – What a Man
Wilson Pickett – In The Midnight Hour
Eddie Floyd – Knock On Wood
The Bar-Kays – Soul Finger
Albert King – Born Under A Bad Sign
Isaac Hayes – Soulsville