Harman Patil (Editor)

The Memphis Horns

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Origin
  
United States

Albums
  
Get Up & Dance

Labels
  
Stax, Island

The Memphis Horns Andrew Love Of The Memphis Horns Has Died The Record NPR

Associated acts
  
Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding, Rufus Thomas, Sam & Dave, The Doobie Brothers, Steve Winwood, U2, Al Green, Neil Diamond, Elvis Presley, Stephen Stills, Sting, Peter Gabriel, Robert Cray, Neil Young, Elio e le Storie Tese

Past members
  
Wayne Jackson Andrew Love

Genres
  
Soul music, Blues, Rock music

Awards
  
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award

Members
  
Wayne Jackson, Andrew Love, Ben Cauley, Jack Hale, Ed Logan

The memphis horns wayne jackson andrew love with special guests


The Memphis Horns were an American horn section made famous by their many appearances on Stax Records. They have been called "arguably the greatest soul horn section ever." Originally a sextet, the Memphis Horns gradually slimmed down to a duo, Wayne Jackson (November 24, 1941 – June 21, 2016) on trumpet and Andrew Love (November 21, 1941 - April 12, 2012) on tenor saxophone.

Contents

The Memphis Horns appeared on nearly every recording for Stax that included a horn section — with Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding, Rufus Thomas, Sam and Dave and others — as well as on other releases, including The Doobie Brothers' What Were Once Vices Are Now Habits and U2's Rattle and Hum, as well as a few solo records.

In the 1970s, they recorded with Al Green, Neil Diamond, Elvis Presley, Mike Harrison, Don Harrison Band, and Stephen Stills. They toured with Stills in 1971. In the 1980s, they played behind Sting and Peter Gabriel.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Jackson and Love worked extensively with the blues outfit, The Robert Cray Band. They provided their trademark funky/soul horns backing to five of the band's albums: Strong Persuader (1986); Don't Be Afraid of the Dark (1988); Midnight Stroll (1990); I Was Warned (1992); Sweet Potato Pie (1997).

In 1992, they released their own album Flame Out, produced by fellow Stax alumnus Terry Manning.

Following the retirement of Love, Jackson and another musician who had been working with Memphis Horns, Tom McGinley, continued to record on projects such as Neil Young's Prairie Wind (2005).

In 2007, Jackson reunited with former longtime member Jack Hale, reforming The Memphis Horns (also including McGinley) in order to join a supergroup backing singer-songwriter Andrew Jon Thomson on his "All Star Superband" multi-album project. In 2008, this line-up of Memphis Horns played on some songs on the Raconteurs record, Consolers of the Lonely. The same year the Memphis Horns recorded with Jack White (White Stripes, the Raconteurs) and Alicia Keys on the song "Another Way to Die," for the 22nd James Bond movie, Quantum of Solace. In 2008, the Memphis Horns were also inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, TN.

In 2012, the Memphis Horns received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award for outstanding artistic significance in music.

The memphis horns just for your love


Personnel

  • Wayne Jackson - trumpet
  • Andrew Love - tenor saxophone
  • Floyd Newman - baritone saxophone
  • Lewis Collins - saxophone, flute
  • Jack Hale - trombone
  • Jack Hale, Jr. - trumpet, french horn, (born in 1955, in Memphis, Tennessee, United States
  • Ed Logan - tenor saxophone (born Edward Logan, 12 February 1945, in Memphis, Tennessee, United States died 13 April 2000, in Mobile, Alabama, United States)
  • James Mitchell - baritone saxophone (born 27 May 1949, in Ashland, Mississippi, United States)
  • Ben Cauley - trumpet
  • Roger Hopps - trumpet
  • Joe Arnold - saxophone
  • Calvin Caples - baritone saxophone
  • Discography

  • The Memphis Horns (1970)
  • Horns For Everything (1972)
  • High On Music (1976)
  • Get Up and Dance (1977)
  • The Memphis Horns Band II (1978)
  • Welcome To Memphis (1979)
  • Flame Out (1992)
  • The Memphis Horns With Special Guests (1995)
  • Wishing You A Merry Christmas (1996)
  • Songs

    Just For Your LoveGet Up & Dance · 1977
    What The FunkGet Up & Dance · 1977
    Soul BowlThe Memphis Horns · 1970

    References

    The Memphis Horns Wikipedia