Carson Whitsett

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Carson Whitsett (b. May 1, 1945, Jackson, Mississippi, d. May 8, 2007 of a brain tumor) was a keyboardist, songwriter, and producer.


Carson Whitsett joined his older brother Tim Whitsett's band, Tim Whitsett & The Imperials (later known as The Imperial Show Band) on the B-3 organ. Following the break up of the band, Whitsett spent time in Canada playing with Eric Mercury before an invitation to Stax Records where Tim Whitsett was now in charge of the label's East Memphis publishing arm. Carson's playing inspired bassist Donald "Duck" Dunn and drummer Al Jackson to reemerge, along with Stax session guitarist Bobby Manuel in place of Steve Cropper, as The MG's, releasing an album in 1973.

Whitsett moved to Malaco Records, where he played in the house band, appearing on Paul Simon's There Goes Rhymin' Simon album, Anita Ward's Ring My Bell, Dorothy Moore's Misty Blue, albums by fellow Mississippian Paul Davis, one of the highest selling Blues albums of all time in Z. Z. Hill's Down Home Blues, and numerous albums by such legends as Bobby "Blue" Bland, Little Milton, and former Stax sensation Johnnie Taylor. Several Malaco acts, including Taylor and Moore, recorded songs written by Whitsett, and he produced Fern Kinney's #1 UK hit "Together We Are Beautiful" in 1980.

Whitsett's first major success as a songwriter also came in 1980 with Fred Knobloch's "Why Not Me". Lorrie Morgan requested on her debut album to record Whitsett's "Dear Me", which became her breakthrough hit. Another Country hit followed with John Anderson's "Mississippi Moon", co-written with Tony Joe White. With long time collaborator and friend Dan Penn and Hoy Lindsey, Whitsett penned the title track to Solomon Burke's Grammy winning "comeback" album Don't Give Up On Me, later covered by Joe Cocker and by actor Peter Gallagher on the hit TV show The O.C..

Other artists who recorded songs written or co-written by Carson Whitsett include Soul icons Etta James, Eddie Floyd, Johnny Adams, James Carr, Ruth Brown, and Wilson Pickett, as well as Country superstars Conway Twitty and Barbara Mandrell and Gospel greats Albertina Walker and The Staple Singers. He also played and wrote material for B.B. King, Jerry Butler, Suzy Bogguss, and Irma Thomas, among others. At least two Carson Whitsett collaborations are considered modern day Blues standards in Joe Louis Walker's "Blues of the Month Club" and the W.C. Handy Award winning "One Foot in the Blues" recorded by Johnny Adams.

In 2002, Whitsett served as arranger for the highest selling female Pop artist of the 1950s, Patti Page, on her Sweet Sounds of Christmas CD. He then teamed again with producer Dan Penn and Hoy Lindsey, writing a dozen songs, arranging, and playing on the critically acclaimed Better to Have It CD by Bobby Purify in 2005. He played on several Tony Joe White albums including The Heroines in 2004 with singers Lucinda Williams, Shelby Lynne, Jessi Colter, and Emmylou Harris and 2006's Uncovered, which featured guest appearances by Eric Clapton, J. J. Cale, Michael McDonald, Mark Knopfler, and also Waylon Jennings in one of his last performances.

For several years he served as keyboardist for country music star Kathy Mattea and became very close with Mattea's husband, lyricist Jon Vezner. Vezner's skills inspired Whitsett to new heights as an arranger, composer, and musician. During this time, Whitsett also recorded three solo piano projects. In November of 2005, he was interviewed along with fellow famed Southern Soul keyboardist Spooner Oldham in Keyboard Player Magazine.

Carson Whitsett passed away May 8, 2007, after a sixteen month bout with brain cancer. Southern Soul legend Dan Penn said of his collaborator of the past three decades that, "...he played with the most authentic R&B feel of anybody I ever worked with".

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[edit] References

  • Soulsville USA: The Story of Stax Records By Rob Bowman
  • The Last Soul Company: Malaco, A Thirty Year Retrospective By Rob Bowman
  • Heeey Baby Days of Beach Music By Greg Haynes
  • All Shook Up By Christine Wilson