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Otis Redding

Otis Ray Redding Jr. (September 9, 1941 – December 10, 1967) was an American singer and songwriter. He is regarded as one of the greatest singers in the history of American popular music and a seminal artist in soul music and rhythm and blues. Nicknamed the "King of Soul", Redding's style of singing gained inspiration from the gospel music that preceded the genre. His singing style influenced many other soul artists of the 1960s.

Otis Redding
Redding in 1967
Background information
Birth nameOtis Ray Redding Jr.
Also known as
  • The Big O[1]
  • The Mad Man from Macon[1]
  • Rockhouse Redding[2]
  • The King of Soul
Born(1941-09-09)September 9, 1941
Dawson, Georgia, U.S.
DiedDecember 10, 1967(1967-12-10) (aged 26)
Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • songwriter
Years active1958–1967
Labels
Websiteotisredding.com

Redding was born in Dawson, Georgia, and at age two, moved to Macon. Redding quit school at age 15 to support his family, working with Little Richard's backing band, the Upsetters, and by performing in talent shows at the historic Douglass Theatre in Macon. In 1958, he joined Johnny Jenkins's band, the Pinetoppers, with whom he toured the Southern states as a singer and driver. An unscheduled appearance on a Stax recording session led to a contract and his first hit single, "These Arms of Mine", in 1962.

Stax released Redding's debut album, Pain in My Heart, two years later. Initially popular mainly with African-Americans, Redding later reached a wider American pop music audience. Along with his group, he first played small shows in the American South. Redding later performed at the popular Los Angeles night club Whisky a Go Go and toured Europe, performing in London, Paris and other major cities. He also performed at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967.

Shortly before his death in a plane crash, Redding wrote and recorded his iconic "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" with Steve Cropper. The song became the first posthumous number-one record on both the Billboard Hot 100 and R&B charts. The album The Dock of the Bay was the first posthumous album to reach number one on the UK Albums Chart. Redding's premature death devastated Stax. Already on the verge of bankruptcy, the label soon discovered that the Atco division of Atlantic Records owned the rights to his entire song catalog.

Redding received many posthumous accolades, including two Grammy Awards, the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Black Music & Entertainment Walk of Fame.[4] and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. In addition to "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay", "Respect" and "Try a Little Tenderness" are among his best-known songs.

Early life

Redding was born in Dawson, Georgia, the fourth of six children, and the first son of Otis Redding Sr. and Fannie Roseman. Redding Sr. was a sharecropper and then worked at Robins Air Force Base, near Macon, and occasionally preached in local churches. When Redding was three, the family moved to Tindall Heights, a predominantly African-American public housing project in Macon.[5] At an early age, he sang in the Vineville Baptist Church choir and learned guitar and piano. From age 10, Redding took drum and singing lessons. At Ballard-Hudson High School, he sang in the school band. Every Sunday he earned $6 by performing gospel songs for Macon radio station WIBB,[6][7] and he won the $5 prize in a teen talent show for 15 consecutive weeks.[8] His passion was singing, and he often cited Little Richard and Sam Cooke as influences. Redding said that he "would not be here" without Little Richard and that he "entered the music business because of Richard – he is my inspiration. I used to sing like Little Richard, his rock 'n' roll stuff ... My present music has a lot of him in it."[9][10]

At age 15, Redding left school to help financially support his family; his father had contracted tuberculosis and was often hospitalized, leaving his mother as the family's primary income earner.[5] He worked as a well digger, as a gasoline station attendant, and occasionally as a musician. Pianist Gladys Williams, a locally well-known musician in Macon and another who inspired Redding, often performed at the Hillview Springs Social Club, and Redding sometimes played piano with her band there.[11] Williams hosted Sunday talent shows, which Redding attended with two friends, singers Little Willie Jones and Eddie Ross.[12]

Redding's breakthrough came in 1958 on disc jockey Hamp Swain's "The Teenage Party", a talent contest at the local Roxy and Douglass Theatres.[13][7] Johnny Jenkins, a locally prominent guitarist, was in the audience and, finding Redding's backing band lacking in musical skills, offered to accompany him. Redding sang Little Richard's "Heebie Jeebies". The combination enabled Redding to win Swain's talent contest for fifteen consecutive weeks; the cash prize was $5 (US$47 in 2021 dollars[14]).[15] Jenkins later worked as lead guitarist and played with Redding during several later gigs.[16] Redding was soon invited to replace Willie Jones as frontman of Pat T. Cake and the Mighty Panthers, featuring Johnny Jenkins.[12] Redding was then hired by the Upsetters when Little Richard abandoned rock and roll in favor of gospel music. Redding was well paid, making about $25 per gig (US$235 in 2021 dollars[14]),[5][6] but did not stay long.[17] In mid-1960, Otis moved to Los Angeles with his sister, Deborah, while his wife Zelma and their children stayed in Macon, Georgia.[18] In Los Angeles Redding recorded his first songs, including "Tuff Enuff" written by James McEachin, "She's All Right", written with McEachin, and two Redding wrote alone, called "I'm Gettin' Hip" and "Gamma Lamma" (which he recorded as a single in 1961, under the title "Shout Bamalama").[6]

Career

Early career

A member of Pat T. Cake and the Mighty Panthers, Redding toured the Southern United States on the Chitlin' Circuit, a string of venues that were hospitable to African-American entertainers during the era of racial segregation, which lasted into the early 1960s.[19] Johnny Jenkins left the band to become the featured artist with the Pinetoppers.[20] Around this time, Redding met Phil Walden, the future founder of the recording company Phil Walden and Associates, and later Bobby Smith, who ran the small label Confederate Records. He signed with Confederate and recorded a single, "Shout Bamalama" (a rewrite of "Gamma Lamma") and "Fat Girl", together with his band Otis and the Shooters.[6][21] Around this time he and the Pinetoppers attended a "Battle of the Bands" show in Lakeside Park.[22] Wayne Cochran, the only solo artist signed to Confederate, became the Pinetoppers' bassist.[20]

When Walden started to look for a record label for Jenkins, Atlantic Records representative Joe Galkin showed interest and around 1962 sent him to the Stax studio in Memphis. Redding drove Jenkins to the session, as the latter did not have a driver's license.[23] The session with Jenkins, backed by Booker T. & the M.G.'s, was unproductive and ended early; Redding was allowed to perform two songs. The first was "Hey Hey Baby", which studio chief Jim Stewart thought sounded too much like Little Richard. The second was "These Arms of Mine", featuring Jenkins on guitar and Steve Cropper on piano. Stewart later praised Redding's performance, saying, "Everybody was fixin' to go home, but Joe Galkin insisted we give Otis a listen. There was something different about [the ballad]. He really poured his soul into it."[24][25] Stewart signed Redding and released "These Arms of Mine", with "Hey Hey Baby" on the B-side. The single was released by Volt in October 1962 and charted in March the following year.[26] It became one of his most successful songs, selling more than 800,000 copies.[27]

Apollo Theater and Otis Blue

"These Arms of Mine" and other songs from the 1962–1963 sessions were included on Redding's debut album, Pain in My Heart. "That's What My Heart Needs" and "Mary's Little Lamb" were recorded in June 1963. The latter is the only Redding track with both background singing and brass. It became his worst-selling single.[26][28] The title track, recorded in September 1963, sparked copyright issues, as it sounded like Irma Thomas's "Ruler of My Heart".[26] Despite this, Pain in My Heart was released on March 1964,[29][30] with the single peaking at number 11 on the R&B chart, number 61 on the Billboard Hot 100, and the album at number 103 on the Billboard 200.[31]

In November 1963, Redding, accompanied by his brother Rodgers and an associate, former boxer Sylvester Huckaby (a childhood friend of Redding's), traveled to New York to perform at the Apollo Theater for the recording of a live album for Atlantic Records. Redding and his band were paid $400 per week (US$3,540 in 2021 dollars[14]) but had to pay $450 (US$3,983 in 2021 dollars[14]) for sheet music for the house band, led by King Curtis, which left them in financial difficulty. The trio asked Walden for money. Huckaby's description of their circumstances living in the "big old raggedy" Hotel Theresa is quoted by Peter Guralnick in his book Sweet Soul Music. He noted meeting Muhammad Ali and other celebrities. Ben E. King, who was the headliner at the Apollo when Redding performed there, gave him $100 (US$885 in 2021 dollars[14]) when he learned about Redding's financial situation. The resulting album featured King, the Coasters, Doris Troy, Rufus Thomas, the Falcons and Redding.[32] Around this time Walden and Rodgers were drafted by the army; Walden's younger brother Alan joined Redding on tour, while Earl "Speedo" Simms replaced Rodgers as Redding's road manager.[33]

Most of Redding's songs after "Security", from his first album, had a slow tempo. Disc jockey A. C. Moohah Williams accordingly labeled him "Mr. Pitiful",[34] and subsequently, Cropper and Redding wrote the eponymous song.[24] That and top 100 singles " Chained and Bound", "Come to Me" and "That's How Strong My Love Is"[35] were included on Redding's second studio album, The Great Otis Redding Sings Soul Ballads, released in March 1965.[36] Jenkins began working independently from the group out of fear Galkin, Walden and Cropper would plagiarize his playing style, and so Cropper became Redding's leading guitarist.[37] Around 1965, Redding co-wrote "I've Been Loving You Too Long" with Jerry Butler, the former lead singer of the Impressions. That summer, Redding and the studio crew arranged new songs for his next album. Ten of the eleven songs were recorded in a 24-hour period on July 9 and 10 in Memphis. Two songs, "Ole Man Trouble" and "Respect", had been finished earlier, during the Otis Blue session. "Respect" and "I've Been Loving You" were later recut in stereo. The album, entitled Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul, was released in September 1965.[38] Otis Blue also includes Redding's much-loved cover of "A Change Is Gonna Come" in 1965.[39]

Whisky a Go Go and "Try a Little Tenderness"

Redding's success allowed him to buy a 300-acre (1.2 km2) ranch in Georgia, which he called the "Big O Ranch".[42] Stax was also doing well. Walden signed more musicians, including Percy Sledge, Johnnie Taylor, Clarence Carter and Eddie Floyd, and together with Redding, they founded two production companies. "Jotis Records" (derived from Joe Galkin and Otis) released four recordings, two by Arthur Conley and one by Billy Young and Loretta Williams. The other was named Redwal Music (derived from Redding and Walden), which was shut down shortly after its creation.[43] Since Afro-Americans still formed the majority of fans, Redding chose to perform at Whisky a Go Go on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles. Redding was one of the first soul artists to perform for rock audiences in the western United States. His performance received critical acclaim, including positive press in the Los Angeles Times, and he penetrated mainstream popular culture. Bob Dylan attended the performance and offered Redding an altered version of one of his songs, "Just Like a Woman".[24]

In late 1966, Redding returned to the Stax studio and recorded several tracks, including "Try a Little Tenderness", written by Jimmy Campbell, Reg Connelly and Harry M. Woods in 1932.[40] This song had previously been recorded by Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra, and the publishers unsuccessfully tried to stop Redding from recording the song from a "negro perspective". Today often considered his signature song,[44] Jim Stewart reckoned, "If there's one song, one performance that really sort of sums up Otis and what he's about, it's 'Try a Little Tenderness'. That one performance is so special and so unique that it expresses who he is." On this version Redding was backed by Booker T. & the M.G.'s, while staff producer Isaac Hayes worked on the arrangement.[45][46] "Try a Little Tenderness" was included on his next album, Complete & Unbelievable: The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul. The song and the album were critically and commercially successful—the former peaked at number 25 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and at number 4 on the R&B chart.[47]

The spring of 1966 marked the first time that Stax booked concerts for its artists.[48] The majority of the group arrived in London on March 13,[46][49] but Redding had flown in days earlier for interviews, such as at "The Eamonn Andrews Show". When the crew arrived in London, the Beatles sent a limousine to pick them up.[48] Booking agent Bill Graham proposed that Redding play at the Fillmore Auditorium in late 1966. The gig was commercially and critically successful, paying Redding around $800 to $1000 (US$8,352 in 2021 dollars[14]) a night.[50][46] It prompted Graham to remark afterward, "That was the best gig I ever put on in my entire life."[51] Redding began touring Europe six months later.[52]

Carla Thomas

In March 1967, Stax released King & Queen, an album of duets between Redding and Carla Thomas, which became a certified gold record. It was Jim Stewart's idea to produce a duet album, as he expected that "[Redding's] rawness and [Thomas's] sophistication would work".[53] The album was recorded in January 1967, while Thomas was earning her M.A. in English at Howard University. Six out of ten songs were cut during their joint session; the rest were overdubbed by Redding in the days following, because of his concert obligations. Three singles were lifted from the album: "Tramp" was released in April, followed by "Knock on Wood" and "Lovey Dovey". All three reached at least the top 60 on both the R&B and Pop charts.[53] The album charted at number 5 and 36 on the Billboard Pop and R&B charts, respectively.[35]

Redding returned to Europe to perform at the Paris Olympia. The live album Otis Redding: Live in Europe was released three months later, featuring this and other live performances in London and Stockholm, Sweden.[42] His decision to take his protege Conley (whom Redding and Walden had contracted directly to Atco/Atlantic Records rather than to Stax/Volt) on the tour, instead of more established Stax/Volt artists such as Rufus Thomas and William Bell, produced negative reactions.[46][54]

Monterey Pop

In 1967, Redding performed at the influential Monterey Pop Festival as the closing act on Saturday night, the second day of the festival. He was invited through the efforts of promoter Jerry Wexler.[55] Until that point, Redding was still performing mainly for black audiences.[56] At the time, he "had not been considered a commercially viable player in the mainstream white American market."[57] But after delivering one of the most electric performances of the night, and having been the act to most involve the audience, "his performance at Monterey Pop was therefore a natural progression from local to national acclaim,...the decisive turning-point in Otis Redding's career."[57] His act included his own song "Respect" and a version of the Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction".[58] Redding and his backing band (Booker T. & the M.G.'s with the Mar-Keys horn section) opened with Cooke's "Shake", after which he delivered an impromptu speech, asking the audience if they were the "love crowd"[59] and looking for a big response. The ballad "I've Been Loving You" followed. The last song was "Try a Little Tenderness", including an additional chorus. "I got to go, y'all, I don't wanna go", said Redding and left the stage of his last major concert.[44] According to Booker T. Jones, "I think we did one of our best shows, Otis and the MG's. That we were included in that was also something of a phenomenon. That we were there? With those people? They were accepting us and that was one of the things that really moved Otis. He was happy to be included and it brought him a new audience. It was greatly expanded in Monterey."[60] According to Sweet Soul Music, musicians such as Brian Jones and Jimi Hendrix were captivated by his performance; Robert Christgau wrote in Esquire, "The Love Crowd screamed one's mind to the heavens."[61]

Before Monterey, Redding wanted to record with Conley, but Stax was against the idea. The two moved from Memphis to Macon to continue writing. The result was "Sweet Soul Music" (based on Cooke's "Yeah Man"),[43] which peaked at number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.[62][63] By that time, Redding had developed polyps on his larynx, which he tried to treat with tea and lemon or honey. He was hospitalized in September 1967 at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York to undergo surgery.[64]

"Dock of the Bay"

In early December 1967, Redding again recorded at Stax. One new song was "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay", which was written with Cropper.[65] Redding was inspired by the Beatles album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and tried to create a similar sound, against the label's wishes. His wife Zelma disliked its atypical melody. The Stax crew were also dissatisfied with the new sound; Stewart thought that it was not R&B, while bassist Donald "Duck" Dunn feared it would damage Stax's reputation. However, Redding wanted to expand his musical style and thought it was his best song, correctly believing it would top the charts.[66] He whistled at the end, either forgetting Cropper's "fadeout rap" or paraphrasing it intentionally.[67]

Personal life and wealth

Redding, who was 6 feet 1 inch (1.85 m) tall and weighed 220 pounds (100 kg), was an athletic family man who loved football and hunting.[68][69] He was described as vigorous, trustworthy,[70] full of fun[71] and a successful businessman. He was active in philanthropic projects. His keen interest in black youth led to plans for a summer camp for disadvantaged children.[72]

Marriage and children

At age 18, Redding met 17-year-old Zelma Atwood at "The Teenage Party". Approximately one year later, she gave birth to their son Dexter in the summer of 1960 and married Redding in August 1961.[24] In mid-1960, Otis moved to Los Angeles with his sister, Deborah, while Zelma and the children stayed in Macon, Georgia.[18]

Redding and his wife had four children: Dexter, Demetria, Karla, and Otis III (December 17, 1964 – April 18, 2023).[73][74] Otis, Dexter, and cousin Mark Lockett later founded the Reddings, a band managed by Zelma.[75] She also maintained or worked at the janitorial service Maids Over Macon, several nightclubs, and booking agencies.[76]

Wealth

Redding's music made him wealthy. According to several advertisements, he had around 200 suits and 400 pairs of shoes, and he earned about $35,000 per week for his concerts.[77] He spent about $125,000 in the "Big O Ranch". As the owner of Otis Redding Enterprises, his performances, music publishing ventures and royalties from record sales earned him more than a million dollars in 1967 alone.[78] That year, one columnist said, "he sold more records than Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin combined."[79] After the release of Otis Blue, Redding became a "catalogue" artist, meaning his albums were not immediate blockbusters, but rather sold steadily over time.[43]

Death

By 1967, the band was traveling to performances in Redding's Beechcraft H18 airplane. On December 9, they appeared on the Upbeat television show produced in Cleveland. They played three concerts in two nights at a club called Leo's Casino.[62][80][81] After a phone call with his wife and children, Redding's next stop was Madison, Wisconsin; the next day, Sunday, December 10, they were to play at the Factory nightclub, near the University of Wisconsin.[82][80][83]

Although the weather was poor, with heavy rain and fog, and despite warnings, the plane took off.[84][85] Four miles (6.5 km) from their destination at Truax Field in Madison, pilot Richard Fraser radioed for permission to land. Shortly thereafter, the plane crashed into Lake Monona. Bar-Kays member Ben Cauley, the accident's only survivor,[62] was sleeping shortly before the accident. He woke just before impact to see bandmate Phalon Jones look out a window and exclaim, "Oh, no!" Cauley said the last thing he remembered before the crash was unbuckling his seat belt. He then found himself in frigid water, grasping a seat cushion to keep afloat.[84][64] As a non-swimmer, he was unable to rescue the others.[86] The cause of the crash was never determined.[87] Besides Redding, the other victims of the crash were four members of the Bar-Kays—guitarist Jimmy King, tenor saxophonist Phalon Jones, organist Ronnie Caldwell, and drummer Carl Cunningham; their valet, Matthew Kelly; and the pilot Fraser.[84][88]

Redding's body was recovered the next day when the lake was searched.[89] The family postponed the funeral from December 15, to December 18, so that more could attend,[78] and the service took place at the City Auditorium in Macon. More than 4,500 people came to the funeral, overflowing the 3,000-seat hall. Redding was entombed at his ranch in Round Oak, about twenty miles (30 km) north of Macon.[90] Jerry Wexler delivered the eulogy.[91] Redding died just three days after re-recording "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay",[92][62] and was survived by Zelma and four children, Otis III, Dexter, Demetria, and Karla.[74] On November 8, 1987, a memorial plaque was placed on the lakeside deck of the Madison convention center, Monona Terrace.[93]

"Respect is something Otis achieved for himself in a way few people do. Otis sang 'Respect when I come home.' And Otis has come home."

-Eulogy delivered by Jerry Wexler.[91]

Posthumous releases and proposed recordings and television appearances

"(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" was released in January 1968. It became Redding's only single to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and the first posthumous number-one single in U.S. chart history.[94] It sold approximately four million copies worldwide and received more than eight million airplays.[95][96] The album The Dock of the Bay was the first posthumous album to reach the top spot on the UK Albums Chart.[97]

Shortly after Redding's death, Atlantic Records, distributor of the Stax/Volt releases, was purchased by Warner Bros. Stax was required to renegotiate its distribution deal and was surprised to learn that Atlantic actually owned the entire Stax/Volt catalog. Stax was unable to regain the rights to its recordings and severed its Atlantic relationship. Atlantic also held the rights to all unreleased Otis Redding masters.[98] It had enough material for three studio albums—The Immortal Otis Redding (1968), Love Man (1969), and Tell the Truth (1970)—all issued on its Atco Records label.[98] A number of successful singles emerged from these LPs, among them "Amen" (1968), "Hard to Handle" (1968), "I've Got Dreams to Remember" (1968), "Love Man" (1969), and "Look at That Girl" (1969).[98] Singles were also lifted from two live Atlantic-issued Redding albums, In Person at the Whisky a Go Go, recorded in 1966 and issued in 1968 on Atco, and Historic Performances Recorded at the Monterey International Pop Festival, a Reprise Records release featuring some of the live performances at the festival by the Jimi Hendrix Experience on side one and Redding on side two.[99]

Redding had at least two television appearances booked for 1968; one on The Ed Sullivan Show and the other on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour.

In September 2007, the first official DVD anthology of Redding's live performances was released by Concord Music Group, then owners of the Stax catalog. Dreams to Remember: The Legacy of Otis Redding featured 16 full-length performances and 40 minutes of new interviews documenting his life and career.[100] On May 18, 2010, Stax Records released a two-disc recording of three complete sets from his Whisky a Go Go date in April 1966.[101] All seven sets from his three-day residency at the venue were released as Live at the Whisky a Go Go: The Complete Recordings in 2016,[102] a 6-CD box set that won a Grammy Award for Best Album Notes.[103]

Carla Thomas claimed that the pair had planned to record another duet album in December the same year, but Phil Walden denied this. Redding had proposed to record an album featuring cut and rearranged songs in different tempos; for example, ballads would be uptempo and vice versa.[53] Another suggestion was to record an album entirely consisting of country standards.[104]

In 2011, Kanye West and Jay-Z released "Otis" as a single off of their collaborative album, Watch the Throne.[105] Redding was credited as a feature on the song. The song was produced by West who built it off of a sample of Redding's version of "Try a Little Tenderness".

Musicianship

Style

Early on Redding copied the rock and soul style of his role model Little Richard. He was also influenced by soul musicians such as Sam Cooke, whose live album Sam Cooke at the Copa was a strong influence,[70] but later explored other popular genres. He studied the recordings of the Beatles and Bob Dylan. His song "Hard to Handle" has elements of rock and roll and influences of Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix.[106] Most of his songs were categorized as Southern soul[107] and Memphis soul.[108]

His hallmark was his raw voice and ability to convey strong emotion. Richie Unterberger of Allmusic noted his "hoarse, gritty vocals, brassy arrangements, an emotional way with both party tunes and aching ballads."[109] In the book Rock and Roll: An Introduction, authors Michael Campbell and James Brody suggested that "Redding's singing calls to mind a fervent black preacher. Especially in up-tempo numbers, his singing is more than impassioned speech but less than singing with precise pitch."[110] According to the book, "Redding finds a rough midpoint between impassioned oratory and conventional singing. His delivery overflows with emotion" in his song "I Can't Turn You Loose".[110] Booker T. Jones described Redding's singing as energetic and emotional but said that his vocal range was limited, reaching neither low nor high notes.[111] Peter Buckley, in The Rough Guide to Rock, describes his "gruff voice, which combined Sam Cooke's phrasing with a brawnier delivery" and later suggested he "could testify like a hell-bent preacher, croon like a tender lover or get down and dirty with a bluesy yawp".[112]

Redding received advice from Rufus Thomas about his clumsy stage appearance. Jerry Wexler said Redding "didn't know how to move", and stood still, moving only his upper body, although he acknowledged that Redding was well received by audiences for his strong message.[113] Guralnick described Redding's painful vulnerability in Sweet Soul Music, as an attractive one for the audience, but not for his friends and partners. His early shyness was well known.[114]

Songwriting

In his early career Redding mostly covered songs from popular artists, such as Richard, Cooke and Solomon Burke. Around the mid-1960s he began writing his own songs—always taking along his cheap red acoustic guitar—and sometimes asked for Stax members' opinion of his lyrics. He often worked on lyrics with other musicians, such as Simms, Rodgers, Huckaby, Phil Walden, and Cropper. During his recovery from his throat operation, Redding wrote about 30 songs in two weeks.[68] Redding was the sole copyright holder on all of his songs.[115]

In "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" he abandoned familiar romantic themes for "sad, wistful introspections, amplified by unforgettable descending guitar riffs by Cropper".[116] The website of the Songwriters Hall of Fame noted that the song "was a kind of brooding, dark voicing of despair, ('I've got nothin' to live for/Look like nothin's gonna come my way')" although "his music, in general, was exultant and joyful." According to journalist Ruth Robinson, author of the liner notes for the 1993 box set, "It is currently a revisionist theory to equate soul with the darker side of man's musical expression, blues. That fanner of the flame of 'Trouble's got a hold on me' music, might well be the father of the form if it is, the glorified exaltation found in church on any Sunday morning is its mother." The Songwriters Hall of Fame website adds that "glorified exaltation indeed was an apt description of Otis Redding's songwriting and singing style."[117] Booker T. Jones compared Redding with Leonard Bernstein, stating, "He was the same type person. He was a leader. He'd just lead with his arms and his body and his fingers."[114]

Redding favored short and simple lyrics; when asked whether he intended to cover Dylan's "Just Like a Woman", he responded that the lyrics contained "too much text".[70] Furthermore, he stated in an interview,

Basically, I like any music that remains simple and I feel this is the formula that makes "soul music" successful. When any music form becomes cluttered and/or complicated you lose the average listener's ear. There is nothing more beautiful than a simple blues tune. There is beauty in simplicity whether you are talking about architecture, art or music.[72]

Redding also authored his (sometimes difficult) recordings' horn arrangements, humming to show the players what he had in mind. The recording of "Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa (Sad Song)" captures his habit of humming with the horn section.[118]

Legacy

 
"Otis Redding Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay", statue in Gateway Park by Bradley Cooley and Bradley Cooley, Jr of Bronze By Cooley, 2003

Redding has been called the "King of Soul",[119] an honorific also given to Brown[120] and Cooke.[121][122][123] He remains one of the genre's most recognized artists. His lean and powerful style exemplified the Stax sound;[112][124][125] he was said to be "the heart and soul of Stax",[126] while artists such as Al Jackson, Dunn and Cropper helped to expand its structure.[125] His open-throated singing,[124] the tremolo/vibrato, the manic, electrifying stage performances[127] and perceived honesty were particular hallmarks, along with the use of interjections (such as "gotta, gotta, gotta"), some of which came from Cooke.[70][126] Producer Stewart thought the "begging singing" was stress-induced and enhanced by Redding's shyness.[114] His LP releases earned him recognition from music critic Robert Christgau as "one of soul's few reliable long-form artists"; Christgau deems Otis Blue his "first great album",[128] and Mat Snow regards it as an early indication of the album era, in which the LP would overtake singles in commercial and artistic importance.[129]

Along with soul and R&B, Redding's contributions to rock music have been noted by music scholars, particularly the "black rock" performed by his contemporaries Wilson Pickett and Sly and the Family Stone.[130] "His musical palette, a cosmic alloy of gospel and blues, hammered into a gritty but elegant template by both black and white musicians, remodeled soul and rock and anchored the most infectious native music America had heard since the big bands", wrote biographer Mark Ribowsky.[131] Artists from many genres have named Redding as a musical influence. George Harrison called "Respect" an inspiration for "Drive My Car".[132] The Rolling Stones also mentioned Redding as a major influence.[133][134] Other artists influenced by Redding include Led Zeppelin,[135][136] Grateful Dead,[137] Lynyrd Skynyrd,[138] the Doors,[137] and virtually every soul and R&B musician from the early years, such as Al Green, Etta James,[42] William Bell,[137] Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye and Conley.[139] Janis Joplin was influenced by his singing style, according to Sam Andrew, a guitarist in her band Big Brother and the Holding Company. She stated that she learned "to push a song instead of just sliding over it" after hearing Redding.[140]

The Bee Gees' Barry Gibb and Robin Gibb wrote the song "To Love Somebody" for Redding to record. He loved it, and he was going to "cut it", as Barry put it, on his return from his final concert. They dedicated the song to his memory.[141]

Awards and honors

After Redding's death, the Académie du Jazz in France named an award after him. The Prix Otis Redding is given to the best record release in the field of R&B. Redding was the first recipient of the award for The Otis Redding Story on Stax;[142] following winners of the award include Aretha Franklin, Ike & Tina Turner, and Curtis Mayfield.[143][144] In 1968, the National Association of Television and Radio Announcers (NATRA) created the Otis Redding Award in his honor.[145]

Readers of the British music newspaper Melody Maker voted Redding the top vocalist of 1967, superseding Elvis Presley, who had topped the list for the prior 10 years.[95][139][146]

Redding posthumously won two Grammy Awards for "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" at the 11th Annual Grammy Awards in 1969.[147] The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted Redding in 1989, declaring his name to be "synonymous with the term soul music that arose out of the black experience in America through the transmutation of gospel and rhythm and blues into a form of funky, secular testifying."[148] In 1988, he was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame.[96] Five years later, the United States Post Office issued a 29-cent commemorative postage stamp in his honor.[149] Redding was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1994,[117] and in 1999 he received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[150] The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame included three Redding recordings, "Shake", "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay", and "Try a Little Tenderness", on its list of "The 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll".[151]

American music magazine Rolling Stone ranked Redding at number 21 on their list of the "100 Greatest Artists of All Time"[152] and eighth on their list of the "100 Greatest Singers of All Time".[111] Q ranked Redding fourth among "100 Greatest Singers", after only Frank Sinatra, Franklin and Presley.[153]

Five of his albums, Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul, Dreams to Remember: The Otis Redding Anthology, The Dock of the Bay, Complete & Unbelievable: The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul and Live in Europe, were ranked by Rolling Stone on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. The first album was singled out for praise by music critics; apart from the Rolling Stone listing at number 74, NME ranked it 35th on their list of the "Greatest Albums of All Time".[154] Music critic Robert Christgau said that Otis Blue was "the first great album by one of soul's few reliable long-form artists",[155] and that Redding's "original LPs were among the most intelligently conceived black albums of the '60s".[156]

In 2002, the city of Macon honored its native son by unveiling a memorial statue (32°50′19.05″N 83°37′17.30″W / 32.8386250°N 83.6214722°W / 32.8386250; -83.6214722) in the city's Gateway Park. The park is next to the Otis Redding Memorial Bridge, which crosses the Ocmulgee River. The Rhythm and Blues Foundation named Redding as the recipient of its 2006 Pioneer Award.[157] Billboard awarded Redding the "Otis Redding Excellence Award" the same year.[42] A year later he was inducted into the Hollywood's Rockwalk in California.[96]

In 2007, Otis Redding's widow founded the Otis Redding Foundation[158] in her husband's honor. The Foundation continues to offer music and arts education programs in Macon.

On August 17, 2013, in Cleveland, Ohio, the city where he did his last show at Leo's Casino, Redding was inducted into the inaugural class of the Rhythm & Blues Music Hall of Fame at Cleveland State University.[159]

Discography

See also

References

Citations

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Sources

  • Appiah, Kwame Anthony; Gates, Henry Louis; Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. (2004). Africana: An A-to-Z Reference of Writers, Musicians, and Artists of the African American Experience. Running Press. ISBN 978-0-7624-2042-1. OCLC 57444998.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  • Brown, Geoff (2001). Otis Redding: Try a Little Tenderness (new ed.). Edinburgh: Canongate. ISBN 978-1-84195-316-8.
  • Browne, Pat; Browne, Ray B. (2001). The Guide to United States Popular Culture. Bowling Green State University Popular Press. ISBN 978-0-87972-821-2. OCLC 44573365.
  • Buckley, Peter (November 20, 2003). The Rough Guide Rock: The Definitive Guide to More than 1200 Artists and Bands. Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1-84353-105-0. OCLC 41389620.
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  • Freeman, Scott (2002). Otis!: The Otis Redding Story. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-30297-9. OCLC 47443887.
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  • Johnson, John J, ed. (July 27, 1987). "20 Years Later Otis Redding Still Buried in Tomb on Family's Ga. Farm". Jet. Vol. 72, no. 18. ISSN 0021-5996.
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Further reading

  • Schiesel, Jane (1973). The Otis Redding Story (1st ed.). Garden City, New York: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-02335-1.
  • Delehant, Jim (2004). "The Blues Changes from Day to Day: Otis Redding Interview". In David Brackett (ed.). The Pop, Rock, and Soul Reader: Histories and Debates. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195125702. OCLC 628872571.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Otis Redding at IMDb
  • Otis Redding discography at Discogs
  • Otis Redding at Find a Grave
  • Karla Redding-Andrews Interview NAMM Oral History Library (2021)

otis, redding, otis, redding, september, 1941, december, 1967, american, singer, songwriter, regarded, greatest, singers, history, american, popular, music, seminal, artist, soul, music, rhythm, blues, nicknamed, king, soul, redding, style, singing, gained, in. Otis Ray Redding Jr September 9 1941 December 10 1967 was an American singer and songwriter He is regarded as one of the greatest singers in the history of American popular music and a seminal artist in soul music and rhythm and blues Nicknamed the King of Soul Redding s style of singing gained inspiration from the gospel music that preceded the genre His singing style influenced many other soul artists of the 1960s Otis ReddingRedding in 1967Background informationBirth nameOtis Ray Redding Jr Also known asThe Big O 1 The Mad Man from Macon 1 Rockhouse Redding 2 The King of SoulBorn 1941 09 09 September 9 1941Dawson Georgia U S DiedDecember 10 1967 1967 12 10 aged 26 Madison Wisconsin U S GenresSoul R amp B southern soul 3 Occupation s SingersongwriterYears active1958 1967LabelsConfederate Records Stax Volt Atco Rhino SundazedWebsiteotisredding wbr com Redding was born in Dawson Georgia and at age two moved to Macon Redding quit school at age 15 to support his family working with Little Richard s backing band the Upsetters and by performing in talent shows at the historic Douglass Theatre in Macon In 1958 he joined Johnny Jenkins s band the Pinetoppers with whom he toured the Southern states as a singer and driver An unscheduled appearance on a Stax recording session led to a contract and his first hit single These Arms of Mine in 1962 Stax released Redding s debut album Pain in My Heart two years later Initially popular mainly with African Americans Redding later reached a wider American pop music audience Along with his group he first played small shows in the American South Redding later performed at the popular Los Angeles night club Whisky a Go Go and toured Europe performing in London Paris and other major cities He also performed at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967 Shortly before his death in a plane crash Redding wrote and recorded his iconic Sittin On The Dock of the Bay with Steve Cropper The song became the first posthumous number one record on both the Billboard Hot 100 and R amp B charts The album The Dock of the Bay was the first posthumous album to reach number one on the UK Albums Chart Redding s premature death devastated Stax Already on the verge of bankruptcy the label soon discovered that the Atco division of Atlantic Records owned the rights to his entire song catalog Redding received many posthumous accolades including two Grammy Awards the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame the Black Music amp Entertainment Walk of Fame 4 and the Songwriters Hall of Fame In addition to Sittin On The Dock of the Bay Respect and Try a Little Tenderness are among his best known songs Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 Apollo Theater and Otis Blue 2 3 Whisky a Go Go and Try a Little Tenderness 2 4 Carla Thomas 2 5 Monterey Pop 2 6 Dock of the Bay 3 Personal life and wealth 3 1 Marriage and children 3 2 Wealth 4 Death 4 1 Posthumous releases and proposed recordings and television appearances 5 Musicianship 5 1 Style 5 2 Songwriting 6 Legacy 6 1 Awards and honors 7 Discography 7 1 Studio albums 7 2 Posthumous studio albums 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditRedding was born in Dawson Georgia the fourth of six children and the first son of Otis Redding Sr and Fannie Roseman Redding Sr was a sharecropper and then worked at Robins Air Force Base near Macon and occasionally preached in local churches When Redding was three the family moved to Tindall Heights a predominantly African American public housing project in Macon 5 At an early age he sang in the Vineville Baptist Church choir and learned guitar and piano From age 10 Redding took drum and singing lessons At Ballard Hudson High School he sang in the school band Every Sunday he earned 6 by performing gospel songs for Macon radio station WIBB 6 7 and he won the 5 prize in a teen talent show for 15 consecutive weeks 8 His passion was singing and he often cited Little Richard and Sam Cooke as influences Redding said that he would not be here without Little Richard and that he entered the music business because of Richard he is my inspiration I used to sing like Little Richard his rock n roll stuff My present music has a lot of him in it 9 10 At age 15 Redding left school to help financially support his family his father had contracted tuberculosis and was often hospitalized leaving his mother as the family s primary income earner 5 He worked as a well digger as a gasoline station attendant and occasionally as a musician Pianist Gladys Williams a locally well known musician in Macon and another who inspired Redding often performed at the Hillview Springs Social Club and Redding sometimes played piano with her band there 11 Williams hosted Sunday talent shows which Redding attended with two friends singers Little Willie Jones and Eddie Ross 12 Redding s breakthrough came in 1958 on disc jockey Hamp Swain s The Teenage Party a talent contest at the local Roxy and Douglass Theatres 13 7 Johnny Jenkins a locally prominent guitarist was in the audience and finding Redding s backing band lacking in musical skills offered to accompany him Redding sang Little Richard s Heebie Jeebies The combination enabled Redding to win Swain s talent contest for fifteen consecutive weeks the cash prize was 5 US 47 in 2021 dollars 14 15 Jenkins later worked as lead guitarist and played with Redding during several later gigs 16 Redding was soon invited to replace Willie Jones as frontman of Pat T Cake and the Mighty Panthers featuring Johnny Jenkins 12 Redding was then hired by the Upsetters when Little Richard abandoned rock and roll in favor of gospel music Redding was well paid making about 25 per gig US 235 in 2021 dollars 14 5 6 but did not stay long 17 In mid 1960 Otis moved to Los Angeles with his sister Deborah while his wife Zelma and their children stayed in Macon Georgia 18 In Los Angeles Redding recorded his first songs including Tuff Enuff written by James McEachin She s All Right written with McEachin and two Redding wrote alone called I m Gettin Hip and Gamma Lamma which he recorded as a single in 1961 under the title Shout Bamalama 6 Career EditEarly career Edit A member of Pat T Cake and the Mighty Panthers Redding toured the Southern United States on the Chitlin Circuit a string of venues that were hospitable to African American entertainers during the era of racial segregation which lasted into the early 1960s 19 Johnny Jenkins left the band to become the featured artist with the Pinetoppers 20 Around this time Redding met Phil Walden the future founder of the recording company Phil Walden and Associates and later Bobby Smith who ran the small label Confederate Records He signed with Confederate and recorded a single Shout Bamalama a rewrite of Gamma Lamma and Fat Girl together with his band Otis and the Shooters 6 21 Around this time he and the Pinetoppers attended a Battle of the Bands show in Lakeside Park 22 Wayne Cochran the only solo artist signed to Confederate became the Pinetoppers bassist 20 When Walden started to look for a record label for Jenkins Atlantic Records representative Joe Galkin showed interest and around 1962 sent him to the Stax studio in Memphis Redding drove Jenkins to the session as the latter did not have a driver s license 23 The session with Jenkins backed by Booker T amp the M G s was unproductive and ended early Redding was allowed to perform two songs The first was Hey Hey Baby which studio chief Jim Stewart thought sounded too much like Little Richard The second was These Arms of Mine featuring Jenkins on guitar and Steve Cropper on piano Stewart later praised Redding s performance saying Everybody was fixin to go home but Joe Galkin insisted we give Otis a listen There was something different about the ballad He really poured his soul into it 24 25 Stewart signed Redding and released These Arms of Mine with Hey Hey Baby on the B side The single was released by Volt in October 1962 and charted in March the following year 26 It became one of his most successful songs selling more than 800 000 copies 27 Apollo Theater and Otis Blue Edit These Arms of Mine source source Sample of These Arms of Mine Redding s first released Volt single it became his most successful until I ve Been Loving You Problems playing this file See media help These Arms of Mine and other songs from the 1962 1963 sessions were included on Redding s debut album Pain in My Heart That s What My Heart Needs and Mary s Little Lamb were recorded in June 1963 The latter is the only Redding track with both background singing and brass It became his worst selling single 26 28 The title track recorded in September 1963 sparked copyright issues as it sounded like Irma Thomas s Ruler of My Heart 26 Despite this Pain in My Heart was released on March 1964 29 30 with the single peaking at number 11 on the R amp B chart number 61 on the Billboard Hot 100 and the album at number 103 on the Billboard 200 31 In November 1963 Redding accompanied by his brother Rodgers and an associate former boxer Sylvester Huckaby a childhood friend of Redding s traveled to New York to perform at the Apollo Theater for the recording of a live album for Atlantic Records Redding and his band were paid 400 per week US 3 540 in 2021 dollars 14 but had to pay 450 US 3 983 in 2021 dollars 14 for sheet music for the house band led by King Curtis which left them in financial difficulty The trio asked Walden for money Huckaby s description of their circumstances living in the big old raggedy Hotel Theresa is quoted by Peter Guralnick in his book Sweet Soul Music He noted meeting Muhammad Ali and other celebrities Ben E King who was the headliner at the Apollo when Redding performed there gave him 100 US 885 in 2021 dollars 14 when he learned about Redding s financial situation The resulting album featured King the Coasters Doris Troy Rufus Thomas the Falcons and Redding 32 Around this time Walden and Rodgers were drafted by the army Walden s younger brother Alan joined Redding on tour while Earl Speedo Simms replaced Rodgers as Redding s road manager 33 Most of Redding s songs after Security from his first album had a slow tempo Disc jockey A C Moohah Williams accordingly labeled him Mr Pitiful 34 and subsequently Cropper and Redding wrote the eponymous song 24 That and top 100 singles Chained and Bound Come to Me and That s How Strong My Love Is 35 were included on Redding s second studio album The Great Otis Redding Sings Soul Ballads released in March 1965 36 Jenkins began working independently from the group out of fear Galkin Walden and Cropper would plagiarize his playing style and so Cropper became Redding s leading guitarist 37 Around 1965 Redding co wrote I ve Been Loving You Too Long with Jerry Butler the former lead singer of the Impressions That summer Redding and the studio crew arranged new songs for his next album Ten of the eleven songs were recorded in a 24 hour period on July 9 and 10 in Memphis Two songs Ole Man Trouble and Respect had been finished earlier during the Otis Blue session Respect and I ve Been Loving You were later recut in stereo The album entitled Otis Blue Otis Redding Sings Soul was released in September 1965 38 Otis Blue also includes Redding s much loved cover of A Change Is Gonna Come in 1965 39 Whisky a Go Go and Try a Little Tenderness Edit Try a Little Tenderness source source Sample of Try a Little Tenderness The song written by Jimmy Campbell Reg Connelly and Harry M Woods in the 1930s has been covered by many artists Redding s rendition has been named the 204th greatest song of all time by Rolling Stone 40 41 Problems playing this file See media help Redding s success allowed him to buy a 300 acre 1 2 km2 ranch in Georgia which he called the Big O Ranch 42 Stax was also doing well Walden signed more musicians including Percy Sledge Johnnie Taylor Clarence Carter and Eddie Floyd and together with Redding they founded two production companies Jotis Records derived from Joe Galkin and Otis released four recordings two by Arthur Conley and one by Billy Young and Loretta Williams The other was named Redwal Music derived from Redding and Walden which was shut down shortly after its creation 43 Since Afro Americans still formed the majority of fans Redding chose to perform at Whisky a Go Go on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles Redding was one of the first soul artists to perform for rock audiences in the western United States His performance received critical acclaim including positive press in the Los Angeles Times and he penetrated mainstream popular culture Bob Dylan attended the performance and offered Redding an altered version of one of his songs Just Like a Woman 24 In late 1966 Redding returned to the Stax studio and recorded several tracks including Try a Little Tenderness written by Jimmy Campbell Reg Connelly and Harry M Woods in 1932 40 This song had previously been recorded by Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra and the publishers unsuccessfully tried to stop Redding from recording the song from a negro perspective Today often considered his signature song 44 Jim Stewart reckoned If there s one song one performance that really sort of sums up Otis and what he s about it s Try a Little Tenderness That one performance is so special and so unique that it expresses who he is On this version Redding was backed by Booker T amp the M G s while staff producer Isaac Hayes worked on the arrangement 45 46 Try a Little Tenderness was included on his next album Complete amp Unbelievable The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul The song and the album were critically and commercially successful the former peaked at number 25 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and at number 4 on the R amp B chart 47 The spring of 1966 marked the first time that Stax booked concerts for its artists 48 The majority of the group arrived in London on March 13 46 49 but Redding had flown in days earlier for interviews such as at The Eamonn Andrews Show When the crew arrived in London the Beatles sent a limousine to pick them up 48 Booking agent Bill Graham proposed that Redding play at the Fillmore Auditorium in late 1966 The gig was commercially and critically successful paying Redding around 800 to 1000 US 8 352 in 2021 dollars 14 a night 50 46 It prompted Graham to remark afterward That was the best gig I ever put on in my entire life 51 Redding began touring Europe six months later 52 Carla Thomas Edit In March 1967 Stax released King amp Queen an album of duets between Redding and Carla Thomas which became a certified gold record It was Jim Stewart s idea to produce a duet album as he expected that Redding s rawness and Thomas s sophistication would work 53 The album was recorded in January 1967 while Thomas was earning her M A in English at Howard University Six out of ten songs were cut during their joint session the rest were overdubbed by Redding in the days following because of his concert obligations Three singles were lifted from the album Tramp was released in April followed by Knock on Wood and Lovey Dovey All three reached at least the top 60 on both the R amp B and Pop charts 53 The album charted at number 5 and 36 on the Billboard Pop and R amp B charts respectively 35 Redding returned to Europe to perform at the Paris Olympia The live album Otis Redding Live in Europe was released three months later featuring this and other live performances in London and Stockholm Sweden 42 His decision to take his protege Conley whom Redding and Walden had contracted directly to Atco Atlantic Records rather than to Stax Volt on the tour instead of more established Stax Volt artists such as Rufus Thomas and William Bell produced negative reactions 46 54 Monterey Pop Edit In 1967 Redding performed at the influential Monterey Pop Festival as the closing act on Saturday night the second day of the festival He was invited through the efforts of promoter Jerry Wexler 55 Until that point Redding was still performing mainly for black audiences 56 At the time he had not been considered a commercially viable player in the mainstream white American market 57 But after delivering one of the most electric performances of the night and having been the act to most involve the audience his performance at Monterey Pop was therefore a natural progression from local to national acclaim the decisive turning point in Otis Redding s career 57 His act included his own song Respect and a version of the Rolling Stones Satisfaction 58 Redding and his backing band Booker T amp the M G s with the Mar Keys horn section opened with Cooke s Shake after which he delivered an impromptu speech asking the audience if they were the love crowd 59 and looking for a big response The ballad I ve Been Loving You followed The last song was Try a Little Tenderness including an additional chorus I got to go y all I don t wanna go said Redding and left the stage of his last major concert 44 According to Booker T Jones I think we did one of our best shows Otis and the MG s That we were included in that was also something of a phenomenon That we were there With those people They were accepting us and that was one of the things that really moved Otis He was happy to be included and it brought him a new audience It was greatly expanded in Monterey 60 According to Sweet Soul Music musicians such as Brian Jones and Jimi Hendrix were captivated by his performance Robert Christgau wrote in Esquire The Love Crowd screamed one s mind to the heavens 61 Before Monterey Redding wanted to record with Conley but Stax was against the idea The two moved from Memphis to Macon to continue writing The result was Sweet Soul Music based on Cooke s Yeah Man 43 which peaked at number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 62 63 By that time Redding had developed polyps on his larynx which he tried to treat with tea and lemon or honey He was hospitalized in September 1967 at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York to undergo surgery 64 Dock of the Bay Edit In early December 1967 Redding again recorded at Stax One new song was Sittin On The Dock of the Bay which was written with Cropper 65 Redding was inspired by the Beatles album Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band and tried to create a similar sound against the label s wishes His wife Zelma disliked its atypical melody The Stax crew were also dissatisfied with the new sound Stewart thought that it was not R amp B while bassist Donald Duck Dunn feared it would damage Stax s reputation However Redding wanted to expand his musical style and thought it was his best song correctly believing it would top the charts 66 He whistled at the end either forgetting Cropper s fadeout rap or paraphrasing it intentionally 67 Personal life and wealth EditRedding who was 6 feet 1 inch 1 85 m tall and weighed 220 pounds 100 kg was an athletic family man who loved football and hunting 68 69 He was described as vigorous trustworthy 70 full of fun 71 and a successful businessman He was active in philanthropic projects His keen interest in black youth led to plans for a summer camp for disadvantaged children 72 Marriage and children Edit At age 18 Redding met 17 year old Zelma Atwood at The Teenage Party Approximately one year later she gave birth to their son Dexter in the summer of 1960 and married Redding in August 1961 24 In mid 1960 Otis moved to Los Angeles with his sister Deborah while Zelma and the children stayed in Macon Georgia 18 Redding and his wife had four children Dexter Demetria Karla and Otis III December 17 1964 April 18 2023 73 74 Otis Dexter and cousin Mark Lockett later founded the Reddings a band managed by Zelma 75 She also maintained or worked at the janitorial service Maids Over Macon several nightclubs and booking agencies 76 Wealth Edit Redding s music made him wealthy According to several advertisements he had around 200 suits and 400 pairs of shoes and he earned about 35 000 per week for his concerts 77 He spent about 125 000 in the Big O Ranch As the owner of Otis Redding Enterprises his performances music publishing ventures and royalties from record sales earned him more than a million dollars in 1967 alone 78 That year one columnist said he sold more records than Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin combined 79 After the release of Otis Blue Redding became a catalogue artist meaning his albums were not immediate blockbusters but rather sold steadily over time 43 Death EditBy 1967 the band was traveling to performances in Redding s Beechcraft H18 airplane On December 9 they appeared on the Upbeat television show produced in Cleveland They played three concerts in two nights at a club called Leo s Casino 62 80 81 After a phone call with his wife and children Redding s next stop was Madison Wisconsin the next day Sunday December 10 they were to play at the Factory nightclub near the University of Wisconsin 82 80 83 Although the weather was poor with heavy rain and fog and despite warnings the plane took off 84 85 Four miles 6 5 km from their destination at Truax Field in Madison pilot Richard Fraser radioed for permission to land Shortly thereafter the plane crashed into Lake Monona Bar Kays member Ben Cauley the accident s only survivor 62 was sleeping shortly before the accident He woke just before impact to see bandmate Phalon Jones look out a window and exclaim Oh no Cauley said the last thing he remembered before the crash was unbuckling his seat belt He then found himself in frigid water grasping a seat cushion to keep afloat 84 64 As a non swimmer he was unable to rescue the others 86 The cause of the crash was never determined 87 Besides Redding the other victims of the crash were four members of the Bar Kays guitarist Jimmy King tenor saxophonist Phalon Jones organist Ronnie Caldwell and drummer Carl Cunningham their valet Matthew Kelly and the pilot Fraser 84 88 Redding s body was recovered the next day when the lake was searched 89 The family postponed the funeral from December 15 to December 18 so that more could attend 78 and the service took place at the City Auditorium in Macon More than 4 500 people came to the funeral overflowing the 3 000 seat hall Redding was entombed at his ranch in Round Oak about twenty miles 30 km north of Macon 90 Jerry Wexler delivered the eulogy 91 Redding died just three days after re recording Sittin On The Dock of the Bay 92 62 and was survived by Zelma and four children Otis III Dexter Demetria and Karla 74 On November 8 1987 a memorial plaque was placed on the lakeside deck of the Madison convention center Monona Terrace 93 Respect is something Otis achieved for himself in a way few people do Otis sang Respect when I come home And Otis has come home Eulogy delivered by Jerry Wexler 91 Posthumous releases and proposed recordings and television appearances Edit Sittin On The Dock of the Bay was released in January 1968 It became Redding s only single to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and the first posthumous number one single in U S chart history 94 It sold approximately four million copies worldwide and received more than eight million airplays 95 96 The album The Dock of the Bay was the first posthumous album to reach the top spot on the UK Albums Chart 97 Shortly after Redding s death Atlantic Records distributor of the Stax Volt releases was purchased by Warner Bros Stax was required to renegotiate its distribution deal and was surprised to learn that Atlantic actually owned the entire Stax Volt catalog Stax was unable to regain the rights to its recordings and severed its Atlantic relationship Atlantic also held the rights to all unreleased Otis Redding masters 98 It had enough material for three studio albums The Immortal Otis Redding 1968 Love Man 1969 and Tell the Truth 1970 all issued on its Atco Records label 98 A number of successful singles emerged from these LPs among them Amen 1968 Hard to Handle 1968 I ve Got Dreams to Remember 1968 Love Man 1969 and Look at That Girl 1969 98 Singles were also lifted from two live Atlantic issued Redding albums In Person at the Whisky a Go Go recorded in 1966 and issued in 1968 on Atco and Historic Performances Recorded at the Monterey International Pop Festival a Reprise Records release featuring some of the live performances at the festival by the Jimi Hendrix Experience on side one and Redding on side two 99 Redding had at least two television appearances booked for 1968 one on The Ed Sullivan Show and the other on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour In September 2007 the first official DVD anthology of Redding s live performances was released by Concord Music Group then owners of the Stax catalog Dreams to Remember The Legacy of Otis Redding featured 16 full length performances and 40 minutes of new interviews documenting his life and career 100 On May 18 2010 Stax Records released a two disc recording of three complete sets from his Whisky a Go Go date in April 1966 101 All seven sets from his three day residency at the venue were released as Live at the Whisky a Go Go The Complete Recordings in 2016 102 a 6 CD box set that won a Grammy Award for Best Album Notes 103 Carla Thomas claimed that the pair had planned to record another duet album in December the same year but Phil Walden denied this Redding had proposed to record an album featuring cut and rearranged songs in different tempos for example ballads would be uptempo and vice versa 53 Another suggestion was to record an album entirely consisting of country standards 104 In 2011 Kanye West and Jay Z released Otis as a single off of their collaborative album Watch the Throne 105 Redding was credited as a feature on the song The song was produced by West who built it off of a sample of Redding s version of Try a Little Tenderness Musicianship EditStyle Edit Early on Redding copied the rock and soul style of his role model Little Richard He was also influenced by soul musicians such as Sam Cooke whose live album Sam Cooke at the Copa was a strong influence 70 but later explored other popular genres He studied the recordings of the Beatles and Bob Dylan His song Hard to Handle has elements of rock and roll and influences of Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix 106 Most of his songs were categorized as Southern soul 107 and Memphis soul 108 His hallmark was his raw voice and ability to convey strong emotion Richie Unterberger of Allmusic noted his hoarse gritty vocals brassy arrangements an emotional way with both party tunes and aching ballads 109 In the book Rock and Roll An Introduction authors Michael Campbell and James Brody suggested that Redding s singing calls to mind a fervent black preacher Especially in up tempo numbers his singing is more than impassioned speech but less than singing with precise pitch 110 According to the book Redding finds a rough midpoint between impassioned oratory and conventional singing His delivery overflows with emotion in his song I Can t Turn You Loose 110 Booker T Jones described Redding s singing as energetic and emotional but said that his vocal range was limited reaching neither low nor high notes 111 Peter Buckley in The Rough Guide to Rock describes his gruff voice which combined Sam Cooke s phrasing with a brawnier delivery and later suggested he could testify like a hell bent preacher croon like a tender lover or get down and dirty with a bluesy yawp 112 Redding received advice from Rufus Thomas about his clumsy stage appearance Jerry Wexler said Redding didn t know how to move and stood still moving only his upper body although he acknowledged that Redding was well received by audiences for his strong message 113 Guralnick described Redding s painful vulnerability in Sweet Soul Music as an attractive one for the audience but not for his friends and partners His early shyness was well known 114 Songwriting Edit In his early career Redding mostly covered songs from popular artists such as Richard Cooke and Solomon Burke Around the mid 1960s he began writing his own songs always taking along his cheap red acoustic guitar and sometimes asked for Stax members opinion of his lyrics He often worked on lyrics with other musicians such as Simms Rodgers Huckaby Phil Walden and Cropper During his recovery from his throat operation Redding wrote about 30 songs in two weeks 68 Redding was the sole copyright holder on all of his songs 115 In Sittin On The Dock of the Bay he abandoned familiar romantic themes for sad wistful introspections amplified by unforgettable descending guitar riffs by Cropper 116 The website of the Songwriters Hall of Fame noted that the song was a kind of brooding dark voicing of despair I ve got nothin to live for Look like nothin s gonna come my way although his music in general was exultant and joyful According to journalist Ruth Robinson author of the liner notes for the 1993 box set It is currently a revisionist theory to equate soul with the darker side of man s musical expression blues That fanner of the flame of Trouble s got a hold on me music might well be the father of the form if it is the glorified exaltation found in church on any Sunday morning is its mother The Songwriters Hall of Fame website adds that glorified exaltation indeed was an apt description of Otis Redding s songwriting and singing style 117 Booker T Jones compared Redding with Leonard Bernstein stating He was the same type person He was a leader He d just lead with his arms and his body and his fingers 114 Redding favored short and simple lyrics when asked whether he intended to cover Dylan s Just Like a Woman he responded that the lyrics contained too much text 70 Furthermore he stated in an interview Basically I like any music that remains simple and I feel this is the formula that makes soul music successful When any music form becomes cluttered and or complicated you lose the average listener s ear There is nothing more beautiful than a simple blues tune There is beauty in simplicity whether you are talking about architecture art or music 72 Redding also authored his sometimes difficult recordings horn arrangements humming to show the players what he had in mind The recording of Fa Fa Fa Fa Fa Sad Song captures his habit of humming with the horn section 118 Legacy Edit Otis Redding Sittin on the Dock of the Bay statue in Gateway Park by Bradley Cooley and Bradley Cooley Jr of Bronze By Cooley 2003 Redding has been called the King of Soul 119 an honorific also given to Brown 120 and Cooke 121 122 123 He remains one of the genre s most recognized artists His lean and powerful style exemplified the Stax sound 112 124 125 he was said to be the heart and soul of Stax 126 while artists such as Al Jackson Dunn and Cropper helped to expand its structure 125 His open throated singing 124 the tremolo vibrato the manic electrifying stage performances 127 and perceived honesty were particular hallmarks along with the use of interjections such as gotta gotta gotta some of which came from Cooke 70 126 Producer Stewart thought the begging singing was stress induced and enhanced by Redding s shyness 114 His LP releases earned him recognition from music critic Robert Christgau as one of soul s few reliable long form artists Christgau deems Otis Blue his first great album 128 and Mat Snow regards it as an early indication of the album era in which the LP would overtake singles in commercial and artistic importance 129 Along with soul and R amp B Redding s contributions to rock music have been noted by music scholars particularly the black rock performed by his contemporaries Wilson Pickett and Sly and the Family Stone 130 His musical palette a cosmic alloy of gospel and blues hammered into a gritty but elegant template by both black and white musicians remodeled soul and rock and anchored the most infectious native music America had heard since the big bands wrote biographer Mark Ribowsky 131 Artists from many genres have named Redding as a musical influence George Harrison called Respect an inspiration for Drive My Car 132 The Rolling Stones also mentioned Redding as a major influence 133 134 Other artists influenced by Redding include Led Zeppelin 135 136 Grateful Dead 137 Lynyrd Skynyrd 138 the Doors 137 and virtually every soul and R amp B musician from the early years such as Al Green Etta James 42 William Bell 137 Aretha Franklin Marvin Gaye and Conley 139 Janis Joplin was influenced by his singing style according to Sam Andrew a guitarist in her band Big Brother and the Holding Company She stated that she learned to push a song instead of just sliding over it after hearing Redding 140 The Bee Gees Barry Gibb and Robin Gibb wrote the song To Love Somebody for Redding to record He loved it and he was going to cut it as Barry put it on his return from his final concert They dedicated the song to his memory 141 Awards and honors Edit After Redding s death the Academie du Jazz in France named an award after him The Prix Otis Redding is given to the best record release in the field of R amp B Redding was the first recipient of the award for The Otis Redding Story on Stax 142 following winners of the award include Aretha Franklin Ike amp Tina Turner and Curtis Mayfield 143 144 In 1968 the National Association of Television and Radio Announcers NATRA created the Otis Redding Award in his honor 145 Readers of the British music newspaper Melody Maker voted Redding the top vocalist of 1967 superseding Elvis Presley who had topped the list for the prior 10 years 95 139 146 Redding posthumously won two Grammy Awards for Sittin On The Dock of the Bay at the 11th Annual Grammy Awards in 1969 147 The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted Redding in 1989 declaring his name to be synonymous with the term soul music that arose out of the black experience in America through the transmutation of gospel and rhythm and blues into a form of funky secular testifying 148 In 1988 he was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame 96 Five years later the United States Post Office issued a 29 cent commemorative postage stamp in his honor 149 Redding was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1994 117 and in 1999 he received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 150 The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame included three Redding recordings Shake Sittin On The Dock of the Bay and Try a Little Tenderness on its list of The 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll 151 American music magazine Rolling Stone ranked Redding at number 21 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time 152 and eighth on their list of the 100 Greatest Singers of All Time 111 Q ranked Redding fourth among 100 Greatest Singers after only Frank Sinatra Franklin and Presley 153 Five of his albums Otis Blue Otis Redding Sings Soul Dreams to Remember The Otis Redding Anthology The Dock of the Bay Complete amp Unbelievable The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul and Live in Europe were ranked by Rolling Stone on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time The first album was singled out for praise by music critics apart from the Rolling Stone listing at number 74 NME ranked it 35th on their list of the Greatest Albums of All Time 154 Music critic Robert Christgau said that Otis Blue was the first great album by one of soul s few reliable long form artists 155 and that Redding s original LPs were among the most intelligently conceived black albums of the 60s 156 In 2002 the city of Macon honored its native son by unveiling a memorial statue 32 50 19 05 N 83 37 17 30 W 32 8386250 N 83 6214722 W 32 8386250 83 6214722 in the city s Gateway Park The park is next to the Otis Redding Memorial Bridge which crosses the Ocmulgee River The Rhythm and Blues Foundation named Redding as the recipient of its 2006 Pioneer Award 157 Billboard awarded Redding the Otis Redding Excellence Award the same year 42 A year later he was inducted into the Hollywood s Rockwalk in California 96 In 2007 Otis Redding s widow founded the Otis Redding Foundation 158 in her husband s honor The Foundation continues to offer music and arts education programs in Macon On August 17 2013 in Cleveland Ohio the city where he did his last show at Leo s Casino Redding was inducted into the inaugural class of the Rhythm amp Blues Music Hall of Fame at Cleveland State University 159 Discography EditMain article Otis Redding discography Studio albums Edit Pain in My Heart 1964 The Great Otis Redding Sings Soul Ballads 1965 Otis Blue Otis Redding Sings Soul 1965 The Soul Album 1966 Complete amp Unbelievable The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul 1966 King amp Queen 1967 Posthumous studio albums Edit The Dock of the Bay 1968 The Immortal Otis Redding 1968 Love Man 1969 Tell the Truth 1970 Remember Me 1992 See also EditAlbum eraReferences EditCitations Edit a b Labrie 1968 p 38 Phelps 1997 p 179 Otis Redding Southern Soul 27 June 2022 Black Music amp Entertainment Walk of Fame Announced With First Three Inductees Billboard February 18 2021 Retrieved April 15 2021 a b c Guralnick 1999 pp 164 167 a b c d Bowman 1997 p 40 a b Brown 2001 p 10 Wall Street Journal Singing You Out of Your Shoes Dean Eddie May 27 2017 White 2003 p 229 Gulla 2007 pp 395 396 Brown 2001 p 11 a b Gulla 2007 pp 397 399 Guralnick 1999 pp 167 168 a b c d e f 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Guralnick 1999 p 166 Guralnick 1999 p 168 Gulla 2007 p 398 a b Otis Redding s Unfinished Life Still Resonates NPR Retrieved May 14 2017 Reed William April 26 2012 The Howard Theatre The People s Place Washington Informer Archived from the original on May 21 2012 Retrieved May 14 2012 a b Gulla 2007 pp 400 401 Guralnick 1999 p 159 Brown 2001 p 16 Otis Redding Stax Museum of American Soul Music Archived from the original on October 14 2011 Retrieved September 26 2011 a b c d Gulla 2007 pp 401 408 Freeman 2002 p 77 a b c Guralnick 1999 p 175 Gulla 2007 p 396 Brown 2001 pp 39 40 Billboard Billboard Advertising March 21 1964 Gould Jonathan 2017 Otis Redding An Unfinished Life New York Crown Archetype p 250 ISBN 978 0307453969 Otis Redding Billboard Retrieved November 13 2020 Guralnick 1999 pp 175 176 Guralnick 1999 pp 177 179 Guralnick 1999 p 183 a b Otis Redding Awards Allmusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved June 11 2012 Bowman 1997 p 57 Guralnick 1999 pp 178 180 Mendelsohn Jason Klinger Eric December 9 2011 Counterbalance No 61 Otis Blue Otis Redding Sings Soul Popmatters SPIN Music Group Retrieved November 21 2012 Otis Blue Otis Redding Sings Soul Otis Redding Retrieved November 13 2020 a b Bowman 1997 p 105 The RS 500 Greatest Songs of All Time Rolling Stone December 9 2004 Archived from the original on June 25 2008 Retrieved February 14 2012 a b c d Biography Otis Redding Official Website Archived from the original on November 26 2010 Retrieved August 3 2011 a b c Bowman 1997 p 59 a b Inglis 2006 pp 28 38 Bowman 1997 pp 105 107 a b c d Gulla 2007 pp 408 410 Complete amp Unbelievable The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul Allmusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved August 17 2011 a b Bowman 1997 p 117 Brown 2001 pp 116 117 Brown 2001 p 117 Graham amp Greenfield 2004 p 173 Bowman 1997 p 103 a b c Bowman 1997 pp 110 111 Guralnick 1999 pp 379 380 Comaratta Len October 3 2010 Rock History 101 Otis Redding at the Monterey Pop Festival Consequence of Sound Retrieved November 15 2011 Echols 2000 p 164 a b Inglis 2006 p 34 Inglis 2006 pp 34 37 Ribowsky 2015 pp 229 232 Brown 2001 p 2 Guralnick 1999 p 387 a b c d Gulla 2007 pp 411 413 Unterberger Richie Sweet Soul Music Rovi Corporation Allmusic Retrieved February 26 2013 a b Jet 1967 p 55 Everitt 2004 p 53 Guralnick 1999 pp 388 391 Bowman 1997 pp 132 391 a b Guralnick 1999 p 390 Gulla 2007 p 397 a b c d Guralnick 1999 p 182 Jet 1967 p 62 a b Labrie 1968 p 40 Otis Redding III 1964 2023 a b Otis Redding Remembered At Special Day In Macon Jet Vol 73 no 15 January 11 1988 p 36 Jet 1985 p 64 Jet 1987 pp 17 18 Guralnick 1999 p 381 a b Jet 1967 p 58 Jet 1967 pp 61 62 a b Talevski 2006 p 540 Leo s Casino The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History Case Western Reserve University May 23 2001 Retrieved January 1 2010 Singer 6 others missing after crash Spokesman Review Spokane Washington December 11 1967 p 1 Knutsen Kristian October 12 2007 Otis Redding at The Factory One night only in Madison The Daily Page Isthmus Publishing Company Inc Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved October 15 2011 a b c Singer Otis Redding seven others killed Eugene Register Guard Oregon UPI December 11 1967 p 3A According to the historical marker as seen here Fraser had had a mechanic check the plane for possible issues Brown 2001 p 137 CHI68A0053 National Transportation Safety Board Retrieved July 11 2016 Jet 1967 p 52 63 Body of Singer Recovered from Crashed Plane Bridgeport Telegram Associated Press December 12 1967 Archived from the original on December 21 2017 Retrieved August 20 2011 Sime John H June 12 2007 Otis Redding Funeral Sime Funeral Home Retrieved November 24 2011 a b Gilliland 1969 Show 51 Jet 1967 p 60 Foley Ryan J December 3 2007 Otis Redding remembered Cincinnati com Retrieved May 14 2012 Lichter Marck Rose March 25 2011 The undying soul of Otis The Daily Holdings Inc Retrieved May 13 2011 a b Otfinoski 2003 p 194 a b c Honors Otis Redding Official Website Archived from the original on January 11 2011 Retrieved October 13 2011 1968 Top 40 Official UK Albums Archive 22nd June 1968 London Official Charts Company 2010 Retrieved October 19 2011 a b c Bowman 1997 pp 138 142 the jimi hendrix encyclopedia jimihendrix com September 26 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ISBN 978 0 87972 821 2 OCLC 44573365 Buckley Peter November 20 2003 The Rough Guide Rock The Definitive Guide to More than 1200 Artists and Bands Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84353 105 0 OCLC 41389620 Campbell Michael Brody James 2007 Rock and Roll An Introduction Schirmer ISBN 978 0 534 64295 2 OCLC 40861912 Echols Alice 2000 Scars of Sweet Paradise The Life and Times of Janis Joplin H Holt ISBN 978 0 8050 5394 4 OCLC 43510359 Everitt Rich 2004 Falling Stars Air Crashes That Filled Rock and Roll Heaven Harbor House ISBN 978 1 891799 04 4 OCLC 55846282 Freeman Scott 2002 Otis The Otis Redding Story St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 30297 9 OCLC 47443887 Gilliland John 1969 The Soul Reformation Phase Three Soul Music at the Summit audio Pop Chronicles University of North Texas Libraries Graham Bill Greenfield Robert 2004 Bill Graham Presents My Life Inside Rock and Out Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81349 8 OCLC 474578246 Gulla Bob 2007 Icons of R amp B and Soul An Encyclopedia of the Artists Who Revolutionized Rhythm Volume 1 Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 34044 4 OCLC 220310006 Guralnick Peter 1999 Sweet Soul Music Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom Back Bay Books ISBN 978 0 316 33273 6 OCLC 41950519 Inglis Ian 2006 Performance and Popular Music History Place and Time Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 4057 8 OCLC 57893942 MacDonald Ian 2005 Revolution in the Head The Beatles Records and the Sixties Second Revised ed Pimlico Rand ISBN 978 0 8050 2780 8 Higgins Chester December 28 1967 Eyewitness Tells of Otis Redding s Violent Death Jet Vol 33 no 12 ISSN 0021 5996 Johnson John J ed June 10 1985 Otis Redding s Sons Nephew Chart Own Musical Course Jet Vol 68 no 13 ISSN 0021 5996 Johnson John J ed July 27 1987 20 Years Later Otis Redding Still Buried in Tomb on Family s Ga Farm Jet Vol 72 no 18 ISSN 0021 5996 Labrie Peter April 1968 The Flame That Died Black World Negro Digest Vol 17 no 6 Otfinoski Steven 2003 African Americans in the Performing Arts A to Z of African Americans Facts on File ISBN 978 0 8160 4807 6 OCLC 49558659 Palmer Robert DeCurtis Anthony 2009 Blues amp Chaos The Music Writing of Robert Palmer Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 9974 6 Phelps Shirelle November 21 1997 Contemporary Black Biography Vol 16 Gale Research Inc ISBN 978 0 7876 1225 2 OCLC 38062510 Ribowsky Mark 2015 Dreams to Remember Otis Redding Stax Records and the Transformation of Southern Soul Liveright Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 0 87140 873 0 Ripani Richard J 2006 The New Blue Music Changes in Rhythm amp Blues 1950 1999 University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 57806 862 3 OCLC 69732900 Rolling Stone Magazine Staff 1967 The Rolling Stone Record Review Vol 1 Pocket Books ISBN 978 0 671 78531 4 Stanton Scott September 2 2003 The Tombstone Tourist Musicians Pocket Books ISBN 978 0 7434 6330 0 OCLC 38752235 Talevski Nick 2006 Knocking on Heaven s Door Omnibus Press ISBN 978 1 84609 091 2 OCLC 64555765 Unterberger Richie 1999 The Rough Guide to Music USA Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 85828 421 7 Retrieved November 8 2011 White Charles 2003 The Life and Times of Little Richard The Authorized Biography 3 ed Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 9761 5 OCLC 52947711 Further reading EditSchiesel Jane 1973 The Otis Redding Story 1st ed Garden City New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 02335 1 Delehant Jim 2004 The Blues Changes from Day to Day Otis Redding Interview In David Brackett ed The Pop Rock and Soul Reader Histories and Debates New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195125702 OCLC 628872571 External links EditOtis Redding at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Official website Otis Redding at IMDb Otis Redding discography at Discogs Otis Redding at Find a Grave Karla Redding Andrews Interview NAMM Oral History Library 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Otis Redding amp oldid 1150844000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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