Steve Cropper

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
With A Little Help From My Friends 05:36 Tools
Thirty Second Lover 00:00 Tools
Green Onions 00:00 Tools
Crop Dustin' 00:00 Tools
Land Of 1000 Dances 00:00 Tools
In The Midnight Hour 00:00 Tools
Dedicated To The One I Love 03:15 Tools
What'd I Say 00:00 Tools
Funky Broadway 00:00 Tools
Help Me Somebody 00:00 Tools
Oh, Pretty Woman 00:00 Tools
Come On & Save Me 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Ashamed 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It 00:00 Tools
Think 00:00 Tools
Tupelo 00:00 Tools
Right Around The Corner 00:00 Tools
99 1/2 00:00 Tools
I Do 00:00 Tools
Don't Turn Your Heater Down 00:00 Tools
Boo-Ga-Loo Down Broadway 00:00 Tools
Messin Up 00:00 Tools
My Sugar Sugar 00:00 Tools
Opus De Soul 00:00 Tools
When I Get Like This 00:00 Tools
Say It 00:00 Tools
The Slummer The Slum 00:00 Tools
Someone Made You For Me 00:00 Tools
I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water 00:00 Tools
Big Bird 00:00 Tools
Water 00:00 Tools
Rattlesnake 00:00 Tools
The Way I Feel Tonight 00:00 Tools
Baby, What You Want Me To Do 00:00 Tools
Trashy Dog 00:00 Tools
Homer's Theme 00:00 Tools
Knock On Wood 00:00 Tools
You Give Me All I Need 00:00 Tools
Midnight Flyer 00:00 Tools
Now 00:00 Tools
I Can't Stand It 00:00 Tools
When You're With Me 00:00 Tools
Dedicated to the One I Love (feat. Lucinda Williams & Steve Winwood) 00:00 Tools
One Of Those Days 00:00 Tools
Chance With Me 00:00 Tools
(Sittin' on)The Dock of The Bay 00:00 Tools
Move The House 00:00 Tools
I Can't Stand The Rain 00:00 Tools
Early Morning Riser 00:00 Tools
Sexy Lady 00:00 Tools
All Night Long 00:00 Tools
Thirty Second Lover (with Steve Winwood) 00:00 Tools
Thirty Second Lover (feat. Steve Winwood) 00:00 Tools
Do It Like This 00:00 Tools
Tupelo (Pt. 1) - Single Version 00:00 Tools
The Slummer The Slum (with Buddy Miller) 00:00 Tools
Crop Dustin' (Sampled For 'So Ghetto') 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Ashamed (With Bettye Lavette & Willie Jones) 00:00 Tools
Fly 00:00 Tools
Playin' My Thang 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It (feat. B.B. King & Shemekia Copeland) 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Ashamed (feat. Bettye LaVette & Willie Jones) 00:00 Tools
I Do (feat. Brian May) 00:00 Tools
Give 'Em What They Want 00:00 Tools
I Do (with Brian May) 00:00 Tools
Right Around The Corner (with Delbert McClinton) 00:00 Tools
My Sugar Sugar (with John Popper) 00:00 Tools
Let's Make Christmas Merry, Baby 00:00 Tools
Dedicated To The One I Love (With Lucinda Williams & Dan Penn) 00:00 Tools
When I Get Like This (feat. Lucinda Williams) 00:00 Tools
When I Get Like This (with Lucinda Williams) 00:00 Tools
Someone Made You For Me (with Dan Penn) 00:00 Tools
Let The Good Times Roll 00:00 Tools
Messin' Up (with Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
Full Moon Tonight 00:00 Tools
Night after night 00:00 Tools
Help Me Somebody (Steve Cropper Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Come On & Save Me (With Dylan LeBlanc & Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
Think (Steve Cropper Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Someone Made You For Me (feat. Dan Penn) 00:00 Tools
Right Around the Corner (feat. Delbert McClinton) 00:00 Tools
Make you feel love again 00:00 Tools
Sandy beaches 00:00 Tools
Soul Man 00:00 Tools
Ya Da Ya Da 00:00 Tools
634-5789 00:00 Tools
My Sugar Sugar (feat. John Popper) 00:00 Tools
Feet 00:00 Tools
Hold Your Fire 00:00 Tools
Messin Up (feat. Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
With You 00:00 Tools
The Slummer the Slum (feat. Buddy Miller) 00:00 Tools
There goes my baby 00:00 Tools
Why Do You Say You Love Me 00:00 Tools
Water - Single Version 00:00 Tools
Sad eyes 00:00 Tools
Come On & Save Me (feat. Dylan LeBlanc & Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
Love Appetite 00:00 Tools
Say It (feat. Bettye LaVette) 00:00 Tools
Can't Break The Habit 00:00 Tools
Say It (with Bettye LaVette) 00:00 Tools
(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay 00:00 Tools
What’d I Say 00:00 Tools
Messin' Up 00:00 Tools
Just As I Am (Bonus Track) [feat. Dylan LeBlanc] 00:00 Tools
HeartBeat 00:00 Tools
If It Wasn't For Loving You 00:00 Tools
Imperfect World 00:00 Tools
Without You 00:00 Tools
Impossible 00:00 Tools
The Dock of The Bay 00:00 Tools
Say It (With Betty Lavette) 00:00 Tools
Still Be Loving You 00:00 Tools
To Make It Right 00:00 Tools
Love's Sweet Sinsation 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Ashamed featuring Bettye LaVette, Willie Jones 00:00 Tools
Dedicated To The One I Love featuring Steve Winwood, Lucinda Williams 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It featuring Shemekia Copeland, B.B. King 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It (With B.b. King & Shemekia Copeland) 00:00 Tools
Thirty Second Lover featuring Steve Winwood 00:00 Tools
Crop Dustin' (Sampled For So Ghetto) 00:00 Tools
Jamaica Delight 00:00 Tools
Messin Up featuring Sharon Jones 00:00 Tools
Come On & Save Me featuring Sharon Jones, Dylan LeBlanc 00:00 Tools
Right Around The Corner featuring Delbert McClinton 00:00 Tools
My Sugar Sugar featuring John Popper 00:00 Tools
I Do featuring Brian May 00:00 Tools
When I Get Like This featuring Lucinda Williams 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It (with BB King & Shemekia Copeland) 00:00 Tools
Cuttin' It Close 00:00 Tools
The Slummer The Slum featuring Buddy Miller 00:00 Tools
Hold On! I'm Comin' 00:00 Tools
Someone Made You For Me featuring Dan Penn 00:00 Tools
Say It featuring Bettye LaVette 00:00 Tools
Crop Dustin' ['So Ghetto'] 00:00 Tools
Come On And Save Me 00:00 Tools
Baby What You Want Me to Do 00:00 Tools
Make The Time Go Faster 00:00 Tools
Water [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It (Steve Cropper with B.B. King & Shemekia Copeland) 00:00 Tools
Tupelo (Pt. 1) [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Messin Up (Steve Cropper with Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
When I Get Like This (Steve Cropper with Lucinda Williams) 00:00 Tools
Think (Steve Cropper) 00:00 Tools
99-1/2 00:00 Tools
Boogaloo Down Broadway 00:00 Tools
Sam & Dave - Soul Man 00:00 Tools
Come On & Save Me (Steve Cropper with Dylan LeBlanc & Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't Do It (with B.B. King & Shemekia Copleland) 00:00 Tools
Funky Broadway - Steve Cropper 00:00 Tools
Sitting On The Dock Of The Bay 00:00 Tools
Dedicated To The One I Love (with Lucinda Williams & Steve Winwood) 00:00 Tools
I'm So Proud 00:00 Tools
Right Around The Corner (Steve Cropper with Delbert McClinton) 00:00 Tools
Thirty Second Lover (Steve Cropper with Steve Winwood) 00:00 Tools
I Do (Steve Cropper with Brian May) 00:00 Tools
Dedicated To The One I Love (Steve Cropper with Lucinda Williams & Steve Winwood) 00:00 Tools
Someone Made You For Me (Steve Cropper with Dan Penn) 00:00 Tools
My Sugar Sugar (Steve Cropper with John Popper) 00:00 Tools
Messin' Up (feat. Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
01 - Crop Dustin 00:00 Tools
Messin' Up (ft. Sharon Jones) (The 5 Royales cover) 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Ashamed (Steve Cropper with Bettye LaVette & Willie Jones) 00:00 Tools
Help Me Somebody (Steve Cropper) 00:00 Tools
Riders On The Storm 00:00 Tools
Messin Up (w/ Sharon Jones) 00:00 Tools
crop dustin (so ghetto) 00:00 Tools
  • 63,369
    plays
  • 11,534
    listners
  • 63369
    top track count

Steven Lee "Steve" Cropper (October 21, 1941) is an American guitarist, songwriter and record producer. He is best known as the guitarist of the Stax house band, Booker T. & the M.G.'s, and has backed artists such as Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, Carla Thomas, Rufus Thomas and Johnnie Taylor, also acting as producer on many of these records. He later gained fame as a member of the Blues Brothers band. Rolling Stone lists him 36th on their list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time. Mojo ranks Cropper as the second-best guitarist ever. His nickname is "The Colonel". Cropper was born Stephen Lee Cropper on a farm outside Dora, Missouri. In 1950, his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee. At age ten, he strummed a guitar for the first time, his brother-in-law's Gibson. Cropper received his first guitar at age 14, and started playing with local musicians. His hero at the time was Lowman Pauling of the Winston-Salem, NC band, The Five Royales. The Stax years (1961-1970) Cropper and guitarist Charlie Freeman formed (as a tip of the hat to Pauling's band) The Royal Spades, who eventually became The Mar-Keys. The Mar-Keys was a play on the word "marquee"; referring to the marquee outside of Stax studios (at the time called Satellite Records). The band's inexperienced sax player Charles "Packy" Axton's mother Estelle Axton and uncle Jim Stewart owned Satellite, and eventually The Mar-Keys began playing on sessions and had a hit single of their own with 1961's "Last Night". Also in the band were producer/songwriter Don Nix and future legends, bassist Donald "Duck" Dunn and trumpeter Wayne Jackson. Besides being impressed with the young guitarist's playing, the then Stax Records president Jim Stewart saw a business sense, professionalism, and maturity in Cropper beyond his years. When American Records founder Chips Moman left Stax, the young Cropper was given the keys to the studio, which he opened every day; he became the company's A & R man, and shared engineering duties with Stewart. A founding member of Booker T. & the M.G.'s, Stax's house band, Cropper, along with Booker T. Jones on organ and piano, bassist Dunn, and drummer Al Jackson, Jr., went on to record several hits. As a house guitarist, he played on hundreds of records, from "(Sittin' on) the Dock of the Bay", cowritten with Otis Redding, to Sam and Dave's "Soul Man" (earning the famous shout of "Play it, Steve!") Cropper's fame was not limited to the United States. The Beatles favored Cropper's playing and his production on Otis Redding records. In fact, John Lennon and Paul McCartney made tentative plans to record in Memphis to work with the guitarist. Brian Epstein canceled the session, citing security problems. The MGs, as instrumental artists, worked because they "wrote sounds". Rob Bowman, music professor and author of the book Soulsville U.S.A.: The Story Of Stax Records, quotes Booker T. Jones as saying, "We were writing sounds too, especially Steve. He's very sound-conscious, and he gets a lot of sounds out of a Telecaster without changing any settings — just by using his fingers, his picks, and his amps". Together, with Jones on a B-3 organ, they could get so many sounds going that they sounded like a much larger group. Besides his influential work with the MGs, Cropper co-wrote "Knock On Wood" with Eddie Floyd, "In the Midnight Hour" with Wilson Pickett, and "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" with Otis Redding. His partnership with Redding was particularly fruitful; "(Sittin' On) The Dock Of the Bay" alone has been played over six million times, making it the sixth most-played song of all time (and the ASCAP catalog's second most). In 1969, Cropper released his first solo album, With a Little Help From My Friends. After Stax (1970-present) Cropper left Stax in the fall of 1970. The company had already lost Otis Redding in a plane crash, stars Sam & Dave (through Stax's distribution deal breakup with Atlantic Records), and also disgruntled Booker T. Jones. When Cropper left, Stax lost their most successful producer, along with his partners David Porter and Isaac Hayes. He formed TMI (Trans-Maximus) with Jerry Williams and former Mar-Key Ronnie Stoots. There he lent his guitar and producing skills to Jeff Beck, Tower Of Power, John Prine, and Jose Feliciano (on his 3 RCA albums; 1972 Memphis Menu, 1973 Compartments, 1974 For My Love). Also during this time, he played on Ringo Starr's 1973 album Ringo and the following year's Goodnight Vienna, and John Lennon asked him to play on his Rock 'n' Roll album. By 1975, Cropper had moved to Los Angeles, where Booker T. Jones was also living. They called up Al Jackson and Duck Dunn, still at Stax, and decided to reform the MGs. Jackson, however, was murdered in his Memphis home before he could rejoin the group. In tribute Cropper called him, "the greatest drummer to ever walk the earth". In the late seventies, Cropper and Dunn became members of (The Band's drummer) Levon Helm's RCO All-Stars, and then they went on to lead The Blues Brothers Band with Al Jackson's protegé drummer, Willie Hall. This led to several albums and two movie soundtracks. Cropper also re-recorded "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" for a Sammy Hagar single release in 1979. Cropper lived in L.A. for the next thirteen years before moving to Nashville. Cropper remains in the The Blues Brothers Band, reunited in 1988. He and Dunn have circled the globe many times with various front men, including Larry Thurston and Stax Soul men Sam Moore and Eddie Floyd. Other notable and influential members of the Blues Brothers band include saxophonist Lou Marini (aka "Blue Lou"), trumpeter Alan Rubin (aka "Mr. Fabulous") and trombonist Tom Malone (aka "Bones" Malone). In February 1998, he released Play It, Steve! where he described the inspirations behind his creation of some of Soul music's most enduring songs. It was released on Play It, Steve! Records. The phrase is exclaimed by Moore on Sam & Dave's "Soul Man" and later by John Belushi (a.k.a. "Joliet" Jake Blues) with The Blues Brothers. Cropper is also a part of many charities and lends his name to benefits every year. Cropper is generally regarded as the most well known and influential Soul guitarist and because of his ability to adapt to many different styles, in 1996, he was named the greatest living guitar player (second all-time behind Jimi Hendrix) by Britain's Mojo Magazine. When asked what he thought of Cropper, the guitarist at number four, The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards, said "Perfect, man". To recognize his contributions to popular music, on June 9, 2005, Cropper was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame alongside Bill Withers, Robert B. Sherman, Richard M. Sherman, John Fogerty, David Porter and Isaac Hayes. As a group, Booker T. & The M.G.s had already been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. Cropper worked with Australian Soul singer Guy Sebastian on his 4th record The Memphis Album, a tribute album of soul classics recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis, TN with Cropper, Donald 'Duck' Dunn, and Steve Potts (a.k.a. The MGs), with Lester Snell on keyboards. Cropper also co-produced the album with Sebastian, with Steve Greenwell mixing. Cropper and the MGs travelled to Australia in February 2008 to back Sebastian on the National 18 date concert tour of "The Memphis Album". Cropper wrote and played on this classic tune to the vocals of Guy Sebastian In the Midnight Hour. Steve played at the August 2008 Rhythm Festival alongside The Animals On July 29, 2008, Cropper and Felix Cavaliere released, Nudge It Up A Notch on Stax Records. On November 12, 2009, EMP/SFM presented Cropper with their "Founders Award." On October 17, 2010, Cropper was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. On August 9, 2011, Cropper released the album Dedicated which was his tribute to the "5" Royales. In 2013 he was a special guest at selected concerts as part of Peter Frampton's Guitar Circus Tour, including the first performance which featured Frampton, Robert Cray and Vince Gill. Cropper married his second wife, Angel, in the late 1980s. They have two children, Andrea and Cameron. The Croppers currently live in Nashville, Tennessee. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.