Otis Redding - Stax Records Presents (2024)

  • 20 May, 05:22
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Artist:
Title: Stax Records Presents
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: UMG Recordings, Inc.
Genre: Soul, R&B
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 50:44
Total Size: 294 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. I Can’t Turn You Loose (Live / Set 1 / Friday, April 8, 1966) (04:43)
2. Respect (Alternate Take) (01:51)
3. (Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay (Take 2) (02:42)
4. Try A Little Tenderness (Take 1) (04:00)
5. Mr. Pitiful (Live / Set 1 / Saturday, April 9, 1966) (03:02)
6. These Arms Of Mine (Live / Set 3 / Saturday, April 9, 1966) (03:15)
7. Shake [London] (02:41)
8. Pain In My Heart (Live / Set 1 / Friday, April 8, 1966) (02:16)
9. I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (Live / Set 2 / Friday, April 8, 1966) (05:45)
10. I've Got Dreams To Remember (Alternate Take) (03:33)
11. Remember Me (02:25)
12. Send Me Some Lovin' (02:13)
13. Pounds And Hundreds (Lbs + 100s) (02:14)
14. Day Tripper [London] (03:33)
15. Just One More Day (Live / Set 2 / Friday, April 8, 1966) (06:25)

Otis Redding was one of the most powerful and influential artists to emerge from the Southern Soul music community in the '60s. A bold, physically imposing performer whose rough but expressive voice was equally capable of communicating joy, confidence, or heartache, Redding brought a passion and gravity to his vocals that was matched by few of his peers. He was also a gifted songwriter with a keen understanding of the creative possibilities of the recording process. Redding was born in 1941, and he hit the road in 1958 to sing with an R&B combo, Johnny Jenkins & the Pinetoppers. In 1962, Redding traveled to Memphis, Tennessee with Jenkins when the latter scheduled a recording session for Stax Records. When Jenkins wrapped up early, Redding cut a song of his own, "These Arms of Mine," in 40 minutes; Stax released it as a single in May 1963, and the song became a major R&B hit and a modest success on the Pop charts. Over the next four years, Redding would cut a handful of soul classics: "Mr. Pitiful," "That's How Strong My Love Is," "I've Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)," "Respect," "Tramp" (a duet with Carla Thomas), and "Shake." In 1967, Redding seemed poised for a major breakthrough with a legendary set at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival that solidified his status with hip rock & roll fans. Sadly, Redding would not live to see his greatest triumph: his most ambitious single, "(Sittin' on The) Dock of the Bay," was released little over a month after his death in a plane crash, becoming his first number one Pop hit and his signature tune. Redding would become a bigger star in death than in life, and his recordings would be regularly re-released and repackaged in the years to come, as his legend and his influence lived on into the 21st century.



  • qwes2020
  •  06:41
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Thanks4_$haring_M8!!
  • whiskers
  •  12:57
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  20:36
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Many thanks.