Isaac Hayes: Seventies soul superstar who won an
Oscar for 'Theme from Shaft'
When the singer and musician Isaac Hayes met MGM
executives in 1970, the conversation turned to the Ernest Tidyman
novel Shaft, to which the studio had just acquired the film rights.
Hayes thought he might be up for the lead role as the black private
detective John Shaft, as the studio seemed keen to cash in on the
emerging blaxploitation genre.
After years as a session player and songwriter at
Stax Records, Hayes had broken through as a solo artist with the
album Hot Buttered Soul the previous year. His extended,
orchestrated versions of "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" and "Walk On
By", delivered in his deep voice and relaxed style, had crossed over
from the R&B to the pop charts and he repeated the trick in 1970
with covers of "I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself",
"Something" and "I Stand Accused" on The Isaac Hayes Movement and
"The Look of Love" and "You've Lost That Loving Feeling" on To Be
Continued. With both albums nestling in the US Top Ten, Hayes felt
pretty confident.
A few weeks later, the studio called to say
Richard Roundtree had been cast as the lead. Hayes had to be content
with a cameo as a bartender, but the soundtrack he composed and
recorded for the film became a signature sound of the Seventies. In
particular, the "Theme from Shaft" – driven by Charles "Skip" Pitts'
wah-wah guitar, with the lyrics "who's the black private dick that's
a sex machine to all the chicks?" and "They say this cat Shaft is a
bad mother. . . Shut your mouth!" – captured the mood of the movie's
dark yet resilient character beautifully and topped the charts
around the world in 1971. The following year, Hayes won two Grammys
and the Academy Award for Best Song, the first black composer to
receive an Oscar.
"I dedicated my Oscar to my grandmother," he said
later. "This was the height of my career. I grew up poor in Memphis.
My mother passed when I was a year and a half and my father split,
so she [my grandmother] was like a mama to me. When I was young, I
prayed to let her live long enough to see me do something big."
The self-styled "Black Moses" – the title Hayes
gave to a 1972 concept album inspired by the break-up of his first
marriage – became a Seventies soul superstar, driving a gold-plated
cadillac provided by his record label. Even if it subsequently
became the butt of a thousand jokes, the striking look – shaven
head, sunglasses, gold chains, chain vest even – he sported on the
cover of Hot Buttered Soul proved as iconic as his music was
groundbreaking.
Hayes showed the album format was a viable medium
for African-American musicians to explore and paved the way for
ambitious releases by Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder. He also greatly
influenced Barry White who picked up the symphonic soul baton with
aplomb. In 1991, the singers duetted on the 10-minute long "Dark and
Lovely (You Over There)".
But Hayes's career took in lows as well as highs.
Despite scoring a run of 10 consecutive albums on the R&B and pop
charts in the US between 1969 and 1976, he had to file for
bankruptcy after the collapse of the Stax label. He successfully
moved into acting and remained a musical presence throughout the
disco and rap eras he had inaugurated. Much in demand for
voice-overs, he also presented radio shows in New York and Memphis.
A new generation of fans discovered Hayes when he
lent his rich baritone voice to Chef, the school cook and ladies man
in the cult animated series South Park. As Chef, Hayes scored an
unlikely UK No 1 in December 1998 with the innuendo-laden novelty
single "Chocolate Salty Balls" – a knowing reference to Chocolate
Chip, his 1975 album.
However, he fell out with the South Park creators
Matt Stone and Trey Parker after they made fun of Scientology and he
left the show in 2006, though that decision may have had just as
much to do with Hayes having suffered a stroke earlier in the year.
He signed to the revived Stax label and returned to performing but
was a shadow of his former self when he appeared at Womad and other
European festivals in 2007.
Hayes grew up in abject poverty in Covington, and
then Memphis, Tennessee. He would sing gospel and doo-wop while
picking cotton with his friends and in his mid-teens won a talent
contest in Memphis. "I was a raggedy kid with holes in his shoes up
on stage singing the Nat King Cole song 'Looking Back'," he
recalled. "All of a sudden, I win this contest and I'm signing
autographs and the pretty girls are noticing me."
Hayes taught himself to play the piano, organ and
saxophone and was offered several music scholarships when he
graduated from high school. Instead, he got a job slaughtering pigs
and cows with a meat packing company in Memphis. In parallel, he
played with various small bands, including the Teen Tones, Sir
Calvin and his Swinging Cats, and also backed Jeb Stuart with the
Doo-Dads.
In 1962, he cut his first single, "Laura, We're On
Our Last Go-Round" with the producer Chips Moman, who had a brief
association with Stax Records. The Memphis label had turned Hayes
down several times when he had auditioned with his groups but, when
the keyboard player Booker T. Jones left to attend college in 1963,
the label's president Jim Stewart recruited him as staff musician in
his stead.
"My first session was an Otis Redding album,"
recalled Hayes. "I was scared to death." He muddled through and
became an integral part of the Stax set-up, arranging classics like
Redding's "Try a Little Tenderness". He also co-wrote singles for
Floyd Newman and the Mad Lads. By 1965, he had formed a songwriting
partnership with the insurance salesman turned lyricist David
Porter. Hayes remembered: "He said: 'Let's be a team like
Holland-Dozier-Holland [the Motown songwriters] or Bacharach-David'.
The first thing we wrote was 'How Do You Quit Someone You Love' for
Carla Thomas."
Then they began a fruitful association with Sam
and Dave, who had been sent to record in Memphis by their bosses at
Atlantic Records, Stax's distributors at the time. Their first Sam
and Dave single was "I Take What I Want", followed by "You Don't
Know Like I Know", "Hold On, I'm Comin'", "When Something's Wrong
With My Baby" and "Soul Man". "We had no idea how good we were,"
said Hayes. "We were just doing something we felt, and the stuff was
catching on."
Still, Hayes was itching to record something of
his own, altough Stewart kept telling him his voice was "too
pretty". Eventually, in January 1968, Hayes and Al Bell, the head of
promotion, drank two bottles of champagne and wound up in the
studio:
Al says: "Let's cut a record right now." So we get
a few of the guys together – Al Jackson on drums, Booker T played a
little organ, me on piano – and we do an album. Well, we do "Misty",
"Stormy Monday Blues", "Goin' to Chicago", "Rock Me Baby". We finish
it, play it back and we go our separate ways.
Three weeks later, the musician was amazed to find
himself having his photo taken wearing a tuxedo and holding a top
hat for the cover of Introducing Isaac Hayes, his début album.
Having formed his own group, the Isaac Hayes Movement, he worked on
Shaft, his first soundtrack assignment, while touring. The composer
aimed to reflect "a lot of what happened in the Sixties, the civil
rights struggle, the Vietnam issues and so forth. Society was more
liberal and having more fun at that time." He'd only been given a
16mm copy of three scenes but once he locked the funky wah-wah
groove he had been toying with for months over the opening credits
everything fell into place.
Hayes' use of dynamics reflected the movie's
shifting moods and was nothing short of breathtaking. "There was a
lot of freedom," he said.
You were disciplined because you had to match a
lot of dramatic cues on the film. But you had creative freedom to
interpret how you felt that should be played against the scene.
Since I did not have formal training, I was not restricted in what I
could hear, what I could imagine. That's why the sound is so unique.
Almost everything that followed for almost a decade had that same
kind of sound like Shaft.
For a while, he seemed unstoppable. Black Moses
followed the Shaft soundtrack up the charts and Hayes took part in
the Wattstax music festival – the "Black Woodstock" – at the Los
Angeles Coliseum in 1972. Yet, he was now the only major selling
artist on Stax and, in 1974, had to resort to suing the label to
collect royalties. Within a couple of years, the whole Stax
operation collapsed. Hayes lost millions of dollars in past and
future publishing income, as well as his home, and had to declare
bankruptcy.
He picked himself up and signed to ABC and then
Polydor, and scored a Top 10 hit in the UK with "Disco Connection"
in 1976. He also issued duets albums with both Dionne Warwick (A Man
and a Woman, 1977) and Millie Jackson (Royal Rappin', 1979) but his
recordings increasingly relied on a well-worn formula. He had
already appeared in Three Tough Guys and Truck Turner in 1974, and
recorded soundtrack albums for both films, and he combined acting
with music-making for the rest of his life. He appeared in various
episodes of television series including The Rockford Files, Starsky
and Hutch, The A-Team and Miami Vice, as well as John Carpenter's
Escape From New York (1981).
Hayes attempted several comebacks and cut a
wonderful version of the Sting composition "Fragile" on Branded, one
of two albums he released in 1995. Four years later, he launched the
Isaac Hayes Foundation in order to assist literacy and health
programmes in the United States and Ghana.
In 2002 Hayes was inducted into the Rock'n'Roll
Hall of Fame. He was comfortable with his status as soul legend and
elder statesman of black music and often stressed the part luck had
played in his success. "The rappers have gone in and created a lot
of hit music based upon my influence," he said. "And they'll tell
you if you ask. I knew nothing about the business, or trends and
things like that. I think it was a matter of timing. I didn't know
what was unfolding." He recently finished filming Soul Men, loosely
based on the story of Sam and Dave, and featuring Samuel L. Jackson
– who played John Shaft in the 2000 film remake – and Bernie Mac,
who died on Saturday.
Pierre Perrone
Isaac Hayes, singer, songwriter, producer and
instrumentalist: born Covington, Tennessee 20 August 1942; four
times married (12 children); died Memphis, Tennessee 10 August 2008
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