Isaac Hayes
Isaac Hayes lived a remarkable life. One that took him from
poverty and orphanhood in 1940s Tennessee, to success in the 1960s
as a soul songwriter for Stax in Memphis, to millionaire wealth
and global fame as composer of the Oscar-winning Shaft score,
and then to bankruptcy and ultimately to prison (in 1989 for
non-payment of alimony and child support), followed by a financial
and creative recovery, and finally to a stroke in 2006 that was
blamed for some uncharacteristically erratic appearances from this
most elegant of men.
He fathered 12 children, had been married
several times, and was - amongst his other achievements - an
honorary king in Ghana.
Hayes was raised by his grandmother in the musical hotbed of
Memphis, and after singing in a local gospel choir and playing in
the high school band, Hayes began to form his own soul music
groups and put out singles. His career took off when he began to
concentrate on song writing and teamed up with fellow Memphis
songsmith David Porter.
Together, they penned several hits for the
duo act Sam and Dave, including Soul Man and Hold On,
I'm Comin'. Still, Hayes wanted to be a performer and began
recording albums of his own, starting with 1967s Presenting
Isaac Hayes. Its low-key, jazzy feel was a hint of the great
things soon to come from Hayes as a solo artist.
Between the years of 1969 and 1973, when encouraged by Stax to
record anything he liked, Hayes had the notion of taking a
rock-style approach to making soul albums.
To the instant delight
of late night radio DJ's in America (who were looking for longer
and longer pieces of music to play), Hayes broke free of the soul
genre's three-minute confines and produced dramatic - and very
lengthy - versions of familiar pop hits (Walk On By, The
Look Of Love, (They Long To Be) Close To You) in
which psychedelic guitars were placed alongside lush strings and
gorgeous flutes, gospel-influenced organ and cooing female backing
singers.
Hayes' own baritone voice floated on top, addressing the
listener in a tone of oddly bashful regret, often speaking rather
than singing.
The results were spectacular. Hot Buttered Soul (1969),
the first of these LPs, sold an estimated five million copies. Its
mammoth version of Jimmy Webb's By The Time I Get To Phoenix -
which sees Hayes 'introduce' the song while his drummer
patiently taps a ride cymbal for eight-and-a-half-minutes -
rewrote all the rules for Memphis, and soul-based music.
Hayes' breakthrough as a solo artist was unexpected. His debut
album, Presenting Isaac Hayes (1968), had been a
low-selling jazz trio LP, which he later admitted to recording
while drunk.
His reputation in the music industry was based on
songwriting - particularly the hits he had co-written with David
Porter for Sam & Dave (such as Soul Man, Hold On,
I'm Coming and Soul Sister, Brown Sugar) - so it
was ironic that this massively successful chapter of Hayes' life
(from Hot Buttered Soul onwards) consisted primarily
of interpreting other people's songs. But nobody interpreted
other people's songs like Isaac Hayes!
Their length, for one thing, increased to around the 12 minute
mark as Hayes began a full-scale vocal and musical seduction
process involving every instrument in the soul orchestra. Men
would play his albums to their girlfriends, he revealed, and stop
him in the street the next day to offer their profuse gratitude
for his music's stunning effect.
Whereas songwriters like Curtis Mayfield, Marvin Gaye and
Stevie Wonder turned to socio-political lyrics and made listeners
confront issues of identity and empowerment in everyday black
America life, Ike for the most part stayed on the romantic side of
the street - though he was certainly an activist in real life -
and most of the songs he wrote and recorded in the early 70s are
about what happens late in the evening between a man and a woman,
rather than people's struggles on the street during the day.
As the 1970s began, Isaac Hayes continued to develop his
distinctly epic flavour of soul on albums like The Isaac Hayes
Movement and To Be Continued. He reached a new level
of fame in 1971 when he composed the score for the film Shaft.
Hayes gave this detective story about "a black private dick
who's a sex machine with all the chicks" a classic sound
that blended R&B grit with orchestral smoothness.
Its finest
moment was Number 1 hit Theme From Shaft, a silky groove
driven by wah-wah guitar and a half-spoken, half-sung rap from
Hayes. Shaft became a big hit, spawning a wave of black
action films that imitated the rich sounds of Hayes' score and
netting Hayes an Oscar nomination for Best Score to go with his
win for Best Song.
Isaac Hayes continued to score hits throughout the 1970s with
songs like the bass-driven Joy and his moody remake of Never
Can Say Goodbye. He also devoted much time to film scores
like Three Tough Guys and Truck Turner (in which
he also starred as the title character, a bounty hunter).
During
this time, his combination of romance-minded music and a striking
visual image (a shaved head, big gold chains) helped him become
one of the more interesting sex symbols of the 1970s.
Hayes
further cemented this sex-symbol image by recording duet albums
with both Millie Jackson and Dionne Warwick. He also continued to
score hits throughout the 1970s with danceable R&B like Zeke
The Freak and Don't Let Go.
The arrival of Disco effectively put an end to Hayes' musical
success in the latter part of the 70s, and he turned to a new
career as an actor and started turning up in episodes of The
Rockford Files.
Acting remained his main source of income in
the 1980s - he usually played bad guys, and starred in John
Carpenter's Escape From New York - which added a
degree of 'heaviness' to his already formidable image. But
behind the forbidding glare and intimidating bling he remained a
warm, humorous, and entertaining performer (witness his
performance on his 1973 album, Live At The Sahara Tahoe).
In the latter half of 1980s, he began to work his way back into
the music scene with albums like U-Turn and Love
Attack. He even scored a Top-10 R&B hit in 1986 with Ike's
Rap, a song that brought the rap style he pioneered into the
modern era. Just the same, Hayes returned his attentions to acting
by the end of the decade.
In 1995, after years of being namechecked by the new breed of
rappers, Hayes signed a new record deal and embarked on a comeback
with Branded - his first album in seven years.
But
it was the TV show South Park which was to become
his main claim to fame from the late 90s until his stroke in 2006.
The series was a surprising project for him to endorse but it paid
well, and the likeable, sexually encyclopaedic school chef made
Isaac Hayes a star all over again, until after six years - and a
UK Number One hit with Chocolate Salty Balls - he
left the show suddenly, unable to see the funny side of an episode
about Scientology (he had converted in the early 90s).
Hayes died on 10 August 2008.
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