It's fitting that a talent as outsized and legendary as soul giant Isaac Hayes would prompt similarly big tributes from some of his associate icons.
Hayes, 65, who died Sunday of yet-undetermined causes, is best known to younger audiences for his work as the voice of Chef on "South Park," just over the course of his 40-year career as a vocaliser, songwriter, manufacturer and player, Hayes left a substantial mark on the casimir Funk and soulfulness music of that era.
Before he sour into the chrome-domed, baritone-voiced icon associated with his Oscar-winning soundtrack to the blaxploitation click "Shaft," Hayes was persona of a songwriting duo with David Porter that cranked out career-defining hits for soul duo Sam & Dave, including their signature tunes "Soul Man" and "Hold On, I'm Comin'." Asked by MTV News to comment around his old friend on Monday (August 11), living member Sam Moore laughed and aforementioned, "Ah, you're talking about my bubba!"
Moore said it used to bother him that Hayes didn't appear to set about the proper respect he deserved for his work out as a writer and producer. "Not like the writers and producers at Motown or Quincy Jones � but he was [on that level], in my judgement," Moore aforementioned. "He gave me my voice. He taught me, showed me and nurtured my part. He didn't teach me how to sing, he taught me how to be a better isaac Bashevis Singer. That was Isaac."
Once Hayes went on to suit a performer in his own right, Moore said he apprehensive that his old friend didn't translate what it took to command a stage. "He didn't make a choreographer, he didn't have a show," Moore recalled. But he needn't have upset. "Isaac would just get up there and sit down and become one with the song he was doing ... and you would bet out and [the women] would be hanging on every intelligence. It made me wish my voice was that deep!"
Bootsy Collins, the former P-Funk and James Brown bassist � whose outfits were often even more outrageous than Hayes' � told MTV News that Hayes' death was like "another pillar out of the building" removed in order to build a new structure he called the "air lane of love."
Collins said he'd spoken with Hayes just last workweek about a project the pair were working on for BET, and he was finding it hard to believe his friend was at peace. "I met Isaac Hayes when I was on the road with James Brown in the '70s," he recalled, "We played a few festivals together. In my later age, I got to know the homo behind the music. He was the first official black man to be known as a substantial rapper, [and he] had nothing only praise for his queens and women of the world."
Another legendary musician wHO praised Hayes' spirit and song was fellow Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Aretha Franklin, world Health Organization said in a statement, "[Hayes was] so musically advanced and timeless in his compositions. He was loved and appreciated by so many. He was an long-suffering symbol of the struggle of the African-American homo and was a shiny example of soul at its best." R&B prima donna Patti LaBelle reminisced about the terminal time she saw Hayes, at a concert they both played in Washington, D.C. "Although he was under the weather, he was still performing," she said. "He was the man � he had 'the show must go on' spirit. In his absence, he will be remembered through his great music. He will always be in our black Maria and souls."
A tribute also came in from the Reverend Al Sharpton, president of the National Action Network and longtime civil-rights leader. "I am deeply saddened by the loss of Isaac Hayes, a true historic world music figure," aforementioned Sharpton aforementioned in a statement. "Isaac Hayes was the first African-American to win an Oscar for a music score simply never lost sight of his committal to his community and the betterment of humanity. He was more than an artist � he was a trailblazer, he was an innovator." Sharpton was slated to dedicate his evening show on New York's KISS-FM register to Hayes, who was a dawn DJ at the station in the late 1990s.
Over the years, MTV News spoke with Hayes on a phone number of occasions, and each time the man with the legendarily deep and booming voice came off as a music fan first and foremost. Talking about the re-recording of his most famous sung for the 2000 "Shaft" remake, Hayes said somewhere "back in my history I did the correct thing," oral presentation of the success he had with the birdcall the beginning time around.
"I tried to be as real as I possibly could," he said. "And I keyed in on the character, Shaft, the character himself. That was through the suggestion of Gordon Parks, the original director. He said, 'You got to depict the personality of this guy. You got to stick with him.' "
And for a man wHO Sam Moore said had untouchable skills when it came to wooing the opposite sex, in 1998 Hayes complained that some of today's soul singers were laying it on way excessively thick in their musical come-ons.
"I recall the songs out on that point today, when the kids talk about romance, I think they're too conspicuous, they don't leave enough for the imagination," said Hayes. "I like to use metaphors � that's right � and shoot it tedious and easy and then build. ... It's kind of like foreplay. You don't want to get on that point too before long, else it's all over. It's wish eating confect, just gobbling it downward and then, 'I want some more,' and it's deceased. You get to savour it."
He then offered some advice that could make come straight from Chef, the character he soft on "South Park."
"When you're talking to a woman, you got to take it selfsame slowly and build," he said. "Anticipation. And by the time you experience to the payoff, it's all good."
More info