

Product Description The incendiary soul/jazz/funk of The Royal Sessions is a hard-hitting and authentic modern take on Memphis' original soul-stew sound - a mixture of original instrumental and vocal features that fuse R&B fundamentals with elements of modern hip-hop. An all-star section of Stax sidemen - Ronnie Williams (The Bar-Kays, David Porter) on Hammond B-3 organ, drummer Willie Hall (The Bar-Kays, the Blues Brothers), and Charles "Skip" Pitts (Isaac Hayes) on wah-wah guitar - joins garage rock prodigy Scott Bomar (Impala) on bass to lay down deep funk grooves for a mighty horn section consisting of Memphis' finest young players. Recorded and mixed at Willie Mitchell's (Hi Records, Al Green) Royal Studios, The Royal Sessions is steeped in the Memphis tradition. But it's much more than an homage: it's the sound of Memphis now- familiar, fresh, and unquestionably fantastic. Review Funky, greasy, gritty soul, timeless heat-seeking groove stealth... the perfect disc for that time when the party kicks into overdrive. -- All Music Guide, April 12, 2004The long-absent R&B instrumental sound of bands such as Booker T... revived by some of Memphis' most-storied session players. -- USA Today, January 21, 2004Visceral... a Memphis tour-de-force. -- NPR's All Songs Considered, March 23, 2004 P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); About the Artist The Bo-Keys don't simply replay the Memphis instrumental tradition - they deliver a hard-hitting and authentic take on the city's original soul-stew sound. A devotee of Stax instrumental groups like the Mar-Keys and Booker T. & the MGs, bandleader and bassist Scott Bomar formed the Bo-Keys as an homage to the quintessential Memphis sound - yet he has both feet firmly planted in the 21st Century. Their story goes back to 1998, when Bomar was asked to put together a band to back Stax sensation Sir Mack Rice. The idea for a soul-jazz combo was born, but it took Bomar a few more years to assemble the perfect line-up for the Bo-Keys. Organist Ronnie Williams got his start on Beale Street, backing R&B sax legend Johnny London on a handful of Sun singles before moving to Stax, where he'd played his Hammond B-3 on sessions with the Bar-Kays and David Porter. Drummer Willie Hall is also a Stax veteran, playing with Isaac Hayes and the Blues Brothers then working as a session man in Los Angeles before eventually returning home to Memphis. Trumpeter Marc Franklin and tenor saxman Jim Spake are, like Bomar, young players on the Memphis scene. But over the last decade, both men have anchored some mighty horn sections, recording and performing live with such legends as Rufus Thomas, Ike Turner, Bobby "Blue" Bland, and Al Green. With an energy and raw talent that's reminiscent of the Memphis Horns, Franklin and Spake are living proof that Memphis music is alive and well. Finally, a chance meeting between Bomar and guitarist Charles "Skip" Pitts - at Memphis' Stax Music Academy, where both were teaching at-risk youth - led to the current incarnation of the Bo-Keys. Isaac Hayes' right hand man (that's Skip's wah-wah you hear on the intro to "Theme From Shaft"), Pitts also lent his unforgettable grooves to Rufus Thomas' "Do The Funky Chicken" and the Soul Children's "I'll Be the Other Woman." Bomar's concept was for an updated version of the incendiary Memphis sound embodied by players like Willie Hall and Skip Pitts. Not only did he capture that sound, he recruited the original musicians who inspired him in the beginning. And now Bomar's vision was fulfilled: in spring 2003, the Bo-Keys headed into Willie Mitchell's Royal Studio to record their debut album. It's the sound of Memphis now - familiar, fresh, and unquestionably fantastic, with "The Royal Sessions", the Bo-Keys have finally arrived. See more
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