Otis Redding These Arms Of Mine «Recent – 2026»
That single take changed everything. It didn't just launch Otis Redding’s career; it defined the "Stax sound"—music that didn't care about being pretty as long as it was true.
As the session fizzled out, Otis stepped forward. He didn’t have the flashy suit of a frontman, just a desperate kind of hope. "I got a song," he muttered. The house band, including the legendary , was tired and ready to head home, but they gave him three minutes. Otis Redding These Arms Of Mine
Standing in the corner, leaning against a car he’d driven all the way from Macon, Georgia, was the group’s driver—a big, soft-spoken kid named . That single take changed everything
Cropper sat at the piano and hit a slow, steady 6/8 time—a heartbeat rhythm. Otis stepped to the mic, closed his eyes, and let out a plea that sounded like it had been bottled up for a lifetime: "These arms of mine... they are lonely..." He didn’t have the flashy suit of a
The air in the Memphis studio was thick, not just with the humid Tennessee night, but with the frustration of a session going nowhere. It was 1962, and was busy trying to find a hit for a guitar player named Johnny Jenkins.