Initially a funky instrumental soul combo on Stax/Volt, the Bar-Kays were nearly destroyed when most of the band perished in the same plane crash that claimed Otis Redding. Amazingly, the Bar-Kays not only regrouped but prospered, evolving into a popular funk ensemble over the course of the 70s. They continued to score hits on the R&B charts through much of the 80s as well, making for a career longevity that no one would have predicted for Staxs formerly star-crossed number-two house band.   The Bar-Kays were formed in Memphis, TN, in 1966, growing out of a local group dubbed the Imperials. Modeled on classic Memphis soul instrumental outfits like the Mar-Keys and Booker T. & the MGs, the Bar-Kays originally included guitarist Jimmy King (not the famed bluesman), trumpeter Ben Cauley, organist Ronnie Caldwell, saxophonist Phalon Jones, bassist James Alexander, and drummer Carl Cunningham. Adopting a mutated version of their favorite brand of rum (Bacardi) as their name, the band started playing heavily around Memphis, and eventually caught the attention of Stax/Volt, which signed the sextet in early 1967. With help from house drummer Al Jackson, Jr., the label began grooming the Bar-Kays as a second studio backing group that would spell Booker T. & the MGs on occasion. That spring, the Bar-Kays cut their first single, Soul Finger, a playful, party-hearty instrumental punctuated by a group of neighborhood children shouting the title. Soul Finger reached the pop Top 20 and went all the way to number three on the R&B chart, establishing the Bar-Kays in the public eye (although the follow-up, Give Everybody Some, barely scraped the R&B Top 40). Producer Allen Jones began to take an interest in the group and became their manager and mentor; even better, Otis Redding chose them as his regular backing band that summer.   Unfortunately, disaster struck on December 10, 1967. En route to a gig in Madison, WI, Reddings plane crashed into frozen Lake Monona. He, his road manager, and four members of the Bar-Kays were killed. Trumpeter Ben Cauley survived the crash, and bassist James Alexander had not been on the flight; they soon assumed the heavy task of rebuilding the group. Adding insult to injury, the third and final single released by the original lineup, a cover of the Beatles A Hard Days Night, was virtually ignored. Nonetheless, with Allen Jones help, Cauley and Alexander assembled a new Bar-Kays lineup featuring guitarist Michael Toles, keyboardist Ronnie Gordon, saxophonist Harvey Henderson, and drummers Roy Cunningham and Willie Hall. At first, their sound was similar to the original lineup, and they were used as the house band on numerous Stax/Volt recording sessions; they also backed Isaac Hayes on his groundbreaking 1969 opus Hot Buttered Soul. Still, they were unable to land a hit of their own, and Cunningham and Gordon both left the group in 1970; the latter was replaced on keyboards by Winston Stewart.   With 1971s Black Rock album, the Bar-Kays debuted their first-ever lead vocalist, Larry Dodson, and incorporated some of the psychedelic-inspired rock/funk fusions of Sly & the Family Stone and Funkadelic. After playing on Isaac Hayes hit Shaft soundtrack, Cauley and Toles both joined his backing band permanently, and were replaced by trumpeter Charles Scoop Allen and guitarist Vernon Burch. This new lineup took a more mainstream funk direction, scoring a minor hit with a takeoff on Jimi Hendrixs Foxy Lady dubbed Copy Cat. The follow-up, another good-humored goof on a recent hit, was Son of Shaft, which in 1972 became the groups first Top Ten R&B hit since Soul Finger. That summer, the Bar-Kays played a well-received set at Wattstax (the black answer to Woodstock), but it wasnt enough to keep their commercial momentum going, especially as Stax/Volt headed toward eventual bankruptcy in 1975.   Armed with new guitarist Lloyd Smith (whod joined when Burch left in 1973), new drummer Michael Beard, and trombonist Frank Thompson, the Bar-Kays signed with Mercury in 1976 and began the most commercially productive phase of their career. Writing most of their own material and using more synthesizers, their label debut, Too Hot to Stop, was a hit, powered by the smash R&B single Shake Your Rump to the Funk. The group consolidated their success by opening for George Clintons P-Funk machine on an extensive tour, and that loose, wild aesthetic was now a more accurate reflection of the Bar-Kays brand of funk, although they were more easily able to bridge into disco. Follow-up Flying High on Your Love (1977) was the bands first gold record, and Money Talks — a Fantasy reissue of some previously unreleased Stax material — produced another Top Ten hit in Holy Ghost the following year. Drummer Sherman Guy and keyboardist Mark Bynum subsequently joined the band, and a string of hit albums followed: 1979s Injoy (which featured the Top Five R&B hit Move Your Boogie Body), 1980s As One, 1981s Nightcruising (which spawned two hits in Hit and Run and Freaky Behavior), and 1982s Propositions (more hits in Do It (Let Me See You Shake) and She Talks to Me With Her Body). All of those albums, save for As One, went gold.   In 1983, Sherman Guy and Charles Allen left the group, presaging a more commercial direction in keeping with the urban sound of the early 80s. 1984s Dangerous produced one of the groups biggest hits, Freakshow on the Dancefloor, and a couple more R&B chart hits in Dirty Dancer and Sex-O-Matic. Their sound was becoming derivative, however, and although the group kept recording for Mercury through 1989, the changing musical landscape meant that the hits dried up. By 1987, only Larry Dodson, Harvey Henderson, and Winston Stewart remained; that same year, Allen Jones died of a heart attack, and the group scored its last R&B Top Ten hit with Certified True. When their contract with Mercury was up, the Bar-Kays called it quits with 1988s Animal. Dodson and original bassist James Alexander put together a short-lived new version of the Bar-Kays for the 1994 album 48 Hours, released on the small Basix label.
  Initially a funky instrumental soul combo on Stax/Volt, the Bar-Kays were nearly destroyed when most of the band perished in the same plane crash that claimed Otis Redding. Amazingly, the Bar-Kays not only regrouped but prospered, evolving into a popular funk ensemble over the course of the 70s. They continued to score hits on the R&B charts through much of the 80s as well, making for a career longevity that no one would have predicted for Staxs formerly star-crossed number-two house band.   The Bar-Kays were formed in Memphis, TN, in 1966, growing out of a local group dubbed the Imperials. Modeled on classic Memphis soul instrumental outfits like the Mar-Keys and Booker T. & the MGs, the Bar-Kays originally included guitarist Jimmy King (not the famed bluesman), trumpeter Ben Cauley, organist Ronnie Caldwell, saxophonist Phalon Jones, bassist James Alexander, and drummer Carl Cunningham. Adopting a mutated version of their favorite brand of rum (Bacardi) as their name, the band started playing heavily around Memphis, and eventually caught the attention of Stax/Volt, which signed the sextet in early 1967. With help from house drummer Al Jackson, Jr., the label began grooming the Bar-Kays as a second studio backing group that would spell Booker T. & the MGs on occasion. That spring, the Bar-Kays cut their first single, Soul Finger, a playful, party-hearty instrumental punctuated by a group of neighborhood children shouting the title. Soul Finger reached the pop Top 20 and went all the way to number three on the R&B chart, establishing the Bar-Kays in the public eye (although the follow-up, Give Everybody Some, barely scraped the R&B Top 40). Producer Allen Jones began to take an interest in the group and became their manager and mentor; even better, Otis Redding chose them as his regular backing band that summer.   Unfortunately, disaster struck on December 10, 1967. En route to a gig in Madison, WI, Reddings plane crashed into frozen Lake Monona. He, his road manager, and four members of the Bar-Kays were killed. Trumpeter Ben Cauley survived the crash, and bassist James Alexander had not been on the flight; they soon assumed the heavy task of rebuilding the group. Adding insult to injury, the third and final single released by the original lineup, a cover of the Beatles A Hard Days Night, was virtually ignored. Nonetheless, with Allen Jones help, Cauley and Alexander assembled a new Bar-Kays lineup featuring guitarist Michael Toles, keyboardist Ronnie Gordon, saxophonist Harvey Henderson, and drummers Roy Cunningham and Willie Hall. At first, their sound was similar to the original lineup, and they were used as the house band on numerous Stax/Volt recording sessions; they also backed Isaac Hayes on his groundbreaking 1969 opus Hot Buttered Soul. Still, they were unable to land a hit of their own, and Cunningham and Gordon both left the group in 1970; the latter was replaced on keyboards by Winston Stewart.   With 1971s Black Rock album, the Bar-Kays debuted their first-ever lead vocalist, Larry Dodson, and incorporated some of the psychedelic-inspired rock/funk fusions of Sly & the Family Stone and Funkadelic. After playing on Isaac Hayes hit Shaft soundtrack, Cauley and Toles both joined his backing band permanently, and were replaced by trumpeter Charles Scoop Allen and guitarist Vernon Burch. This new lineup took a more mainstream funk direction, scoring a minor hit with a takeoff on Jimi Hendrixs Foxy Lady dubbed Copy Cat. The follow-up, another good-humored goof on a recent hit, was Son of Shaft, which in 1972 became the groups first Top Ten R&B hit since Soul Finger. That summer, the Bar-Kays played a well-received set at Wattstax (the black answer to Woodstock), but it wasnt enough to keep their commercial momentum going, especially as Stax/Volt headed toward eventual bankruptcy in 1975.   Armed with new guitarist Lloyd Smith (whod joined when Burch left in 1973), new drummer Michael Beard, and trombonist Frank Thompson, the Bar-Kays signed with Mercury in 1976 and began the most commercially productive phase of their career. Writing most of their own material and using more synthesizers, their label debut, Too Hot to Stop, was a hit, powered by the smash R&B single Shake Your Rump to the Funk. The group consolidated their success by opening for George Clintons P-Funk machine on an extensive tour, and that loose, wild aesthetic was now a more accurate reflection of the Bar-Kays brand of funk, although they were more easily able to bridge into disco. Follow-up Flying High on Your Love (1977) was the bands first gold record, and Money Talks — a Fantasy reissue of some previously unreleased Stax material — produced another Top Ten hit in Holy Ghost the following year. Drummer Sherman Guy and keyboardist Mark Bynum subsequently joined the band, and a string of hit albums followed: 1979s Injoy (which featured the Top Five R&B hit Move Your Boogie Body), 1980s As One, 1981s Nightcruising (which spawned two hits in Hit and Run and Freaky Behavior), and 1982s Propositions (more hits in Do It (Let Me See You Shake) and She Talks to Me With Her Body). All of those albums, save for As One, went gold.   In 1983, Sherman Guy and Charles Allen left the group, presaging a more commercial direction in keeping with the urban sound of the early 80s. 1984s Dangerous produced one of the groups biggest hits, Freakshow on the Dancefloor, and a couple more R&B chart hits in Dirty Dancer and Sex-O-Matic. Their sound was becoming derivative, however, and although the group kept recording for Mercury through 1989, the changing musical landscape meant that the hits dried up. By 1987, only Larry Dodson, Harvey Henderson, and Winston Stewart remained; that same year, Allen Jones died of a heart attack, and the group scored its last R&B Top Ten hit with Certified True. When their contract with Mercury was up, the Bar-Kays called it quits with 1988s Animal. Dodson and original bassist James Alexander put together a short-lived new version of the Bar-Kays for the 1994 album 48 Hours, released on the small Basix label.
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The Bar Kays
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