Booker T. Jones was so taken with
the Beatles'
Abbey Road, he claims he had to respond, just to say "thanks." He convened
the MG's -- drummer
Al Jackson Jr., bassist
Donald "Duck" Dunn, and guitarist
Steve Cropper, and recorded
McLemore Avenue, a cover version of the entire
Abbey Road album in three long medleys (that approximated the structure of
the Beatles' album -- particularly its second side) with a cover of
George Harrison's
"Something" set aside as a single.
The MG's even aped
the Beatles' cover photo, with one of them strolling down McLemore Avenue, the home of
Stax Records.
Booker T. & the MG's turned an already hip record into one that was funky as hell, and one that kept listeners guessing by rearranging the order of the tunes to suit
the MG's as a band. The set begins with a medley of
"Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End/Here Comes the Sun/Come Together." The juxtaposition of the first two cuts is jarring but seamless. The quartet nails
"The End," with fine soloing from
Cropper and heated work from
Jones on organ and electric piano, before a crescendo and a Moog intros
"Here Comes the Sun," done as a summery
Jimmy Smith-styled jazz number before turning all sinister on
"Come Together." "Something" may have seemed a curious choice for a single, but with
Cropper's greasy, bluesy guitar break and
Jones playing his organ rhythmically more than melodically, it works beautifully.
"Because," wedded to
"You Never Give Me Your Money," is a spacious blend of melody and psychedelic groove, setting up the final medley. It is the set's tour de force, commencing with a shimmering
"Sun King," before
Jackson's drums announce a sprightly, funky
"Mean Mr. Mustard" that careens into the guitar overdrive of
"Polythene Pam" and the breezy
"She Came in Through the Bathroom Window," which morphs into a dramatic, blues-drenched,
"I Want You (She's So Heavy)" to close it out. Not only is
McLemore Avenue a stellar interpretation of
Abbey Road, it's one of the finest
Booker T. & the MG's albums to boot. ~ Thom Jurek