Promoting skepticism and reason without boundaries or sacred cows.
Published on January 20, 2006 By Ionolast In Misc
The great soul singer died of a heart attack at age 64.

Hits such as In the Midnight Hour & Land of 1,000 Dances.

With so many great musicians and singers dying, who's going to prevent crap like rap from taking over?

Comments
on Jan 20, 2006
Hopefully common sense and maturity will stop rap from taking over.  I like Wilson.  He had soul!
on Jan 20, 2006
I got to see Wilson Picket about five years ago. He had a bad cold but still managed to put on a decent show.
on Jan 20, 2006
Hopefully common sense and maturity will stop rap from taking over.


Let's keep our fingers crossed.
on Jan 20, 2006
Wilson Picket was a "soul" musician and soul music has been dead for a good 25 years, so nothing is "taking over." The music industry is all about money these days and that's why it's almost all crap.
on Jan 20, 2006
Wilson Picket was a "soul" musician and soul music has been dead for a good 25 years, so nothing is "taking over."


No, Soul music is not dead! It still thrives in so many fans. And I doubt that Aretha Franklin would say she has been dead for 25 years. Al greene?

Soul music will never die. It is the base of R&R. and it speaks to all on a level that rap never will.
on Jan 20, 2006
if only there was a heaven, getting to spend some time with the wicked pickett would be all the motivation i'd need to earn my ticket. junior wells, sam cooke, otis redding, erma franklin, dorothy love coates, magic sam, robert johnson and all the rest would be gravy (from a purely legalistic standpoint, it don't make a lotta sense to get my hopes too high about robert johnson but...).

yesterday i hadda coordinate transfer of components essential to the launch of a very promising new venture, a process which hung me up for nearly 4 hours longer than anticipated so i didn't learn about losing wilson til about 10pm--and then only after being told 'curtis mayfield died today'. after a lil more probing, my source--upon being informed curtis had passed some time ago--said something like 'well i know it was someone you really liked' and finally provided enuff clues that i was able to figure it out.

'really liked' is gross understatement. i've been in awe of pickett for decades. altho i realize the impossibility of assembling a list of my top ten recordings, artists or both, if i was forced to do so, he'd be represented on all three of em (the tune would be 'danger zone' a b-side release he co-wrote with steve cropper).

life wasn't easy for or on pickett. his incredible talent was both gift and curse, i guess. i can't imagine a world without 'midnight hour', '634-5789', 'mustang sally' or 'land of 1000 dances' among others, nor do i want to try.

while not all of his work was of that calibre (a consequence of someone making dubious choices when selecting material), his least is better than many others' best.

during the early to mid 80s, wilson had several encounters with the law, all of which were--i believe--alcohol related. at the time, i had a close friend (also a big fan) who lived within reasonable proximity to pickett. after learning about one of his arrests, we seriously discussed trying to arrange a meeting with wilson to see if there was anything we could do to help him retake the stage.

altho we didn't get that far, someone must have. in 1999, documentary filmmaker d.a. pennebaker ('don't look back') and director chris hegedes captured performances by pickett and a number of other legendary stax-atlantic artists (carla & rufus thomas, isaac hayes, sam moore--the sam of sam n dave fame--jerry 'iceman' butler, to name a few) on film. the finished product 'only the strong survive' was released by miramx in 2002.

it's not the film i woulda made (nothing else is either ) but then i have impossible standards. well worth the price of admission, if for nothing else, seeing and hearing pickett back in superstar mode (in the airport, his dressing room and on stage).

if i don't seem terribly bummed by wilson pickett's passing at this moment, it could be cuz it hasn't really hit me yet and/or my sorrow is offset by all the joy he brought me when he was here.
on Jan 21, 2006
There’s a great soul concert DVD out called “Back to Stax: Memphis Soul.” The “Wicked Picket” wasn’t part of it, but it has some of the big names in soul music: Booker T and the MGs, Phil Upchurch, Carla Thomas, Eddie Floyd, Sam Moore, and the Memphis Horns. It was filmed in France around 1990. Booker T and the MGs and Phil Upchurch provide some of the highlights with their instrumentals. The audio quality is top notch but the video has kind of a blue haze throughout, as if they used a filter. Still, it captures some of the greats from the golden age of soul music in fine form.
on Jan 21, 2006
(from a purely legalistic standpoint, it don't make a lotta sense to get my hopes too high about robert johnson but...).


Yeah, the same could be said of ol' Leadbelly, who I wouldn't mind sharing some time with.
on Jan 21, 2006
from a purely legalistic standpoint, it don't make a lotta sense to get my hopes too high about robert johnson

Just go down to the crossroads and sign on the dotted line.
on Jan 21, 2006
my sorrow is offset by all the joy he brought me when he was here.


That's the best way to remember him.
on Jan 22, 2006

my sorrow is offset by all the joy he brought me when he was here.


That's the best way to remember him.

That is a great epitath!