Classic hits from the Memphis soul legend
Steve Cropper was never a household name the way Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton are, but he was the guitar hero’s guitar hero. With an instantly identifiable tone, his guitar could sing (the “Play it, Steve!” intro and breakdowns of Sam and Dave’s “Soul Man”), groove (Booker T. and the MGs’ “Green Onions”), and build intricate, soulful architecture around the right voice (Otis Redding’s “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long”). “I don’t care about being center stage,” he once said. “I’m a band member, always been a band member.” No matter what the right song was, he knew what to play. Here are Cropper’s essential recordings.
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Booker T & the M.G.’s, ‘Green Onions’ (1962)

Image Credit: CA/Redferns/Getty Images Booker T.’s organ may take up a lot of space in this immortal instrumental, co-written by Cropper, but the loping rhythm part and spiky leads are the track’s backbone. The track, originally intended as a throwaway B-side, ended up as proof that Booker T and the MGs didn’t need a singer to record a hit. – B.H.
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Wison Pickett, ‘In the Midnight Hour’ (1965)


Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images The famous intro to Pickett’s signature song came from Cropper noodling around on his guitar before a session in Memphis. “It seemed like every time that he sang lead on something, when he got down to the fadeout, he would go, oh, ‘wait till the midnight hour,’” Cropper told NPR. “I just took that right there and presented it to him with a little idea.”–J.B.
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Eddie Floyd, ‘Knock on Wood’ (1966)


Image Credit: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Cropper both played on and co-write this worried-about-love strut with Alabama soul singer Floyd. Cropper’s tight, economical playing again provides the bedrock. “Knock on Wood” also displays the muscular brawn of Cropper’s playing; he bares down on the chords of the song as if he’s chopping wood. -D.B.
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Wilson Pickett, ”634-5789′ (1966)


Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images In addition to playing guitar, Cropper co-wrote this iconic Pickett hit, which soon become an unofficial Stax anthem, at the Lorraine Motel with Eddie Floyd. The song was inspired by the Marvelettes’ “Beechwood 4-5789,” a recent hit. “How would it if we was to write a song that were all numbers?” Floyd remembered asking Cropper. The result would end up becoming a signature anthem of Memphis soul. —J.B.
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Sam & Dave, ‘Soul Man’ (1967)


Image Credit: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images “Play it, Steve!” From its ringing opening riff to the tight rhythm figure that glides under the verses to the lead counterpoint to the choruses, Cropper’s playing on “Soul Man” is an absolute masterclass in the art of R&B guitar.–B.H.
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Otis Redding, ‘(Sittin’ on) the Dock of the Bay’ (1968)


Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Right before his death, Redding was primed to musically branch out, and Cropper would again prove to be the perfect collaborator on Redding’s final work before the plane crash that took his life. The two not only co-wrote Redding’s folk-soul standard but Cropper also played the subtle, comforting lead behind Redding’s strums. As he discussed in a recent Stax doc, Cropper was also given the daunting task of finishing and prepping the song for release days after Redding’s death.–-D.B.
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Booker T & the M.G.’s, ‘Time Is Tight’ (1968)


Image Credit: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images On one of the MGs’ later singles, Cropper’s tightly wound playing opens one of the MG’s’ biggest hits, and even when he switches to chords, Cropper never lets up. The extended version of the song also lets Cropper stretch out on a prickly, sprightly solo, which he wasn’t always afforded, and which also showcased the dynamics between Cropper’s guitar and Jones’ organ.–D.B.
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Johnnie Taylor, ‘Who’s Making Love’ (1968)


Image Credit: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Booker T and the MGs backed Taylor on the 1968 single that Taylor a star, and Cropper’s bedrock playing and high-pitched leads in the choruses show how much he brought to every major act on the Stax roster. Cropper would later revive the song during his stint with the Blues Brothers.–D.B.
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William Bell, ‘I Forgot to Be Your Lover’ (1968)


Image Credit: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images This moving apology, written by Bell and Booker T. Jones, is a slow building tribute to a woman Bell clearly doesn’t deserve. Cropper’s understated playing highlights the tentativeness of Bell’s vocal, never taking center stage, but playing more wingman to Bell as he begs his way back into his liver’s good graces.–K.G.
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Rod Stewart, ‘Tonight’s the Night (Gonna Be Alright)’ (1976)


Image Credit: Mirrorpix/Getty Images Recorded by a Londoner in Muscle Shoals, “Tonight’s the Night” benefits greatly from Memphis man Steve Cropper’s swelling guitar textures (alongside Joe Walsh among others), giving cred to Rod’s seductive spiel. It was so seductive, in fact, it became Rod’s second Number One hit in the U.S.–K.G.
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Big Star, ‘Femme Fatale’ (1978)


Image Credit: Charlie Gillett/Redferns/Getty Images Big Star’s brooding cover of the Velvet Underground classic appears on their landmark album Third. The Memphis band asked local legend Cropper to play on the song and he delivered a stunning performance. Where Lou Reed played ahead of the beat on the original, Big Star lag back, allowing Cropper to find exquisite bluesy pentatonic textures in and around Reed’s sexual pathos.–K.G.
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Etta James, ‘Damn Your Eyes’ (1988)


Image Credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images Nobody could command a minor key like Etta James, and with Steve Cropper’s moody playing on James’ rendition of “Damn Your Eyes,” she was in her element. The song is a powerhouse with each instrument playing off James’ soulful growl — the horns, the piano, and especially Cropper’s bluesy guitar — making the song a searing classic.–K.G.

