Stax Records co-founder
Estelle Axton dies
The Associated Press (Published February 25‚ 2004)
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -
Estelle Axton, co-founder of the famed Stax Records Co., which generated hits
from acts including Sam and Dave, Otis Redding Jr. and The Staple Singers,
has died. She was 85.
Axton died of natural
causes Tuesday at the hospice at Saint Francis Hospital, said her son-in-law,
Fred Fredrick.
The musicians on the soul
record label called Axton 'Lady A,' and others who knew her
described her as a calming, nurturing presence in the Memphis neighborhood.
'Were it not for
her, there's no way Stax could have become what it became,' said David
Porter. Porter and Isaac Hayes co-wrote numerous Stax hits, including Sam and
Dave's 'Soul Man' and 'Hold On, I'm Coming.'
Hayes said Axton was
responsible for the racial harmony at Stax.
'You didn't feel any
backoff from her, no differentiation that you were black and she was
white,' Hayes said. 'Being in a town where that attitude was
plentiful, she just made you feel secure. ... She was like a mother to us
all.'
Axton and other family
members went on to establish the Fretone label which produced Rick Dees' 1977
hit 'Disco Duck.'
Porter said Axton
encouraged him and others in the Stax neighborhood after she mortgaged her
home to help start the record company with her brother, Jim Stewart.
Stax began as Satellite
Records in 1957 but was forced to change the name because a California
company already was using it.
The siblings combined
their last names - the 'St' from Stewart and the 'Ax'
from Axton - to come up with Stax, which became a rival to Detroit's giant
Motown sound in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Axton's daughter Doris
Fredrick worked in the Stax record shop said her mother's experience as a
teacher gave her a special nurturing ability.
'She worked 12 hours
a day. She had time for anybody that came through the door,' Doris
Fredrick said. 'I'd say, 'I'm sorry she's booked today.' And she'd come
out and say, 'Oh no, I have time for them. I'm never too busy' if it was the
neighborhood kids or someone who wanted to play a song for her.'