Little Lady Gone -Genie
60 Minutes Of Your Love
UK Liberty/Minit - 1966
(Ain't That ) A LOT OF LOVE - Minit 1966
Born 2nd August 1941 - Memphis, Tennessee
Died 3rd April 2003 - Memphis, Tennessee
60 Minutes of Your time and A Lot Of Love were absolute smash hits at Manchester's
famous soul clubs; The Wheel,
The Blue Note, The Jigsaw, Rowntrees, and the
Boneyard at Bolton.
Homer Banks,
together with Raymond Jackson and Bettye Crutcher wrote a considerable amount
of stax music
including Who's Making Love for Johnny Taylor (1968). 'A
Lot Of Love' was covered by
Taj Mahal and became a hit on the latter-day soul
scene known now as Northern Soul. It's a mystery why they choose Taj Mahal's
version -
maybe it was more unobtainable than Homers version? They tend to value rarity
above originality or quality. This is not to put Taj down in anyway who
was and still is a great performer.Taj did great
original tracks in his own right totally ignored by the later Northern Soul crowd, which
earlier soul fans in Manchester adored, (eg, Everybody's Gotta Change Sometime).
In 1999 A Lot Of Love was done by
Simply Red and by Tom Jones. The Lot Of Love story continues as the backing
riff was borrowed by the
Spencer Davis Group on their hit 'Gimme Some Lovin'
long before digital sampling was around.
Homer was born on the 2
nd of August 1941 in
Memphis
and died in 2003 see Guardian Obituary below:
Songwriter
and producer Homer Banks, who has died of cancer aged 61, was one of the
unsung heroes behind Stax Records, the Memphis label responsible for much of
the finest southern soul music of the 1960s and 70s. Many of the songs Banks
cowrote have become contemporary classics, none more so than If Loving You
Is Wrong (I Don't Want To Be Right) - an immensely powerful song of guilt
and deception that has been recorded by dozens of singers.
Banks attended the
segregated Booker T Washington high school in Memphis. The school's
enthusiastic music teachers helped shape the talents of many leading Stax
personnel. At 16, Banks formed the Soul Consolidators gospel group, who
performed across the mid-south, using Banks's original material.
Back in Memphis after military
service (1962-64), Banks focused on music, yet Stax paid him no attention.
Fledgling songwriting duo
Isaac Hayes and
David Porter recorded Banks,
albeit for Genie, a tiny Memphis label. Stax founder Jim Stewart barred
Banks, suspecting that he was trying to lure his songwriters away. Yet
cofounder
Estelle Axton noted
Banks' ability and hired him to work behind
the counter at the record shop attached to Stax's Satellite Studios. Banks
spent three years selling vinyl and called it 'a great education
because I found the pulse of the public, what they could turn on to and off
to'.
Banks went on to record five singles for Minit, which failed to chart, but proved he was a fine
singer. Finally Axton pressured Stewart into giving Banks a songwriting
contract, although Banks had to struggle to place his songs and get a
contract that rewarded him properly, rather than simply taking his songs for
a flat fee.
Soon Banks and cowriter
Allen Jones were placing songs with
Johnnie Taylor and Sam & Dave, but
it was when the legendary gospel group the Staple Singers arrived that he
came into his own. Banks wrote their first Stax single, Long Walk To DC,
which emphasised how Stax soul was the principal soundtrack to the civil
rights movement and the southern black dream of freedom.
'At the time I was
caught up in the cultural revolution,' recalled Banks. 'They were
a group that were really open for that type of material.'
Banks cowrote many of
the Staple Singers' biggest hits, including If You're Ready (Come Go With Me).
'Homer would have some bad ad-libbing on his records,' Mavis
Staples told Stax biographer Rob Bowman. 'I would use some of Homer's
stuff because I knew Homer could phrase.'
Banks formed a
songwriting trio with Bettye Crutcher and Raymond Jackson. Calling
themselves We Three, their debut 1968 effort Who's Making Love was rejected
by the Stax producers' pool, but
Detroit producer Don Davis, who was
producing soul singer Johnnie Taylor for Stax, picked up on the song and had
Taylor record it.
Who's Making Love
quickly became Stax's biggest hit, reaching No 1 in the rhythm and blues
chart and No 5 in the pop chart. By 1969 We Three were Stax's most important
songwriters.
Banks co-rote If Loving
You Is Wrong (I Don't Want To Be Right) and initially recorded it with the
Emotions and Veda Brown, although neither version was deemed suitable for
release. Banks played the demo for singer Luther Ingram, who liked it but
decided it should be slowed down. Released in May 1972, the song was a
rhythm and blues No 1 and No 3 in the pop charts. It quickly became an
essential part of Isaac Hayes's and
Millie Jackson's repertoires.
Banks kept writing hits
for Stax as the company faltered.
The Soul Children's I'll Be The Other
Woman was another extraordinarily sensitive adultery ballad, while Shirley
Brown's 1974 Woman To Woman was the last hit Stax would enjoy before the
company collapsed.
Banks and writing
partner Carl Hampton were immediately offered a publishing deal by A&M
Records and shifted to California. Banks continued to write and produce, if
never quite scaling the heights he had at Stax.
He cut the solo
Passport To Ecstasy in 1977, but disco meant that his immaculately crafted,
intense songs were too subtle for a market now simply wanting to boogie.
Still, the quality of Banks's Stax songs meant they were continually in
demand - Tom Jones,
Rod Stewart, the
Rolling Stones, Elvis Costello, Taj
Mahal, Simply Red, the Band, U-Roy, Cybill Shepherd and Nana Mouskouri all
recorded his work.
'Most people just
can't craft a song like he could,' noted his Stax colleague Lester
Snell. 'There's a difference between writing a song and crafting a
song, and he was a master at it - where every word had so much weight.'
'Stax was like my
life,' noted Banks. 'Black people were really proud of Stax
because Memphis had a heartbeat when Stax was happening.' His wife and
son survive him.
(
© Guardian 2003)