It's difficult to imagine what Hayes couldn't do as Black Moses, since he managed to play those torrid scenes with starlets and to wear leopard-skin capes and fur boots as well as chains. His assertion that he didn't originate the Moses role is beside the point; he played it to the hilt. But ultimately Hayes can get away with this kind of self-absorption and make it pay. There's a humorous catch to his voice that suggests he's always chuckling at the outrageousness of his postures.
He's been able to carry these roles because he's a gifted and highly original musician. His second album for the Enterprise label (a division of Stax Records), Hot Buttered Soul, introduced the extra-long R&B cut, initiated the vogue for smooth, sultry direct address later exploited by Barry White and, in effect, created an entirely new musical genre, called easy-listening soul or, less charitably, black muzak. Later, his Shaft theme, with its chunky, cleverly orchestrated rhythm pattern and lush sweetening, set the stage for disco instrumentals by White and Van McCoy.
Isaac had gone to work for Stax during the mid-Sixties with childhood memories of rural blues, black fife-and-drum and sanctified church singing still vivid in his mind, and with experiences as an R&B saxophonist, pianist and part-time jazz singer recently behind him. He was on organ and piano on many of the biggest Southern soul records during the next few years, including most of Otis Redding's output and Wilson Pickett's "In the Midnight Hour." As half the Hayes/David Porter songwriting and production team he was behind some of the best Stax records by Sam and Dave, Carla Thomas and Johnnie Taylor.
Shaft and other film scores came Hayes's way as a result of Hot Buttered Soul's success, and the first phase of his career peaked with his dramatic, Moses-like appearance in the film Wattstax. Acting roles followed, but meanwhile his relationship with Stax was deteriorating into what he calls a "cold war." He didn't feel they were doing as well with his records as his burgeoning film career suggested they should be. In fact, Stax was grinding to a standstill due to problems with its distributor, CBS. Finally, legal skirmishing ensued, a settlement was reached and Hayes formed Hot Buttered Soul Records in affiliation with ABC. "We're off and running now," he says. "The reason I wanted to have my own company was so that I could do all the different kinds of music I like — funk, jazz, blues, gospel or even country."
Chocolate Chip continues in the innovative but commercial vein established by Hayes's early albums. There are brilliant arranger's touches, including the use of an acoustic 12-string guitar solo over a ponderous, heavily amplified track on Tony Joe White's "That Loving Feeling." There's the brassy title tune, along with several intimate ballads. "Actually," he says, "I don't know how we cut it. By the time I was loose from Stax, I was under a tremendous financial strain. The studio had been closed, I didn't have an engineer, my musicians hadn't played together in God knows when, the equipment hadn't been serviced, I hadn't written any tunes. But Roosevelt Green, my road engineer, got in here and learned the board while I rehearsed the band, I started writing and cutting rhythm tracks, I took a week off to write the lyrics and inside of six weeks we had an album.
"And it's a winner for me. I'm also in a new film, a British-style comedy with Anthony Newley and Yvonne DeCarlo called It Seemed like a Good Idea at the Time. The soul brothers might not go for it so much but I felt like getting into other areas so I wouldn't get typed. I'll be doing some television too. Everywhere you look, you're gonna see Isaac Hayes."
[From Issue 197 — October 9, 1975]
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.