Aug 19, 2016
William Bell never became a household name. His debut
single, the one he wrote and recorded the year that Satellite
Records changed their name to Stax, barely cracked the Top 100
chart. That song, "You Don't Miss Your Water," worked out a bit
better for Bell's friend Otis Redding, and for a band called The
Byrds. That's more or less the same story as "Born Under a Bad
Sign," the song he cowrote with Booker T. Jones, which got covered
by Cream and pretty much every blues rock band since 1968. Bell
might have had a better chance at stardom if he hadn't got drafted
to serve in the U.S. Army in the middle of the sixties, right when
Stax was taking off.Â
After Stax dissolved in 1975, Bell tried to reinvent himself. He
had a top forty hit for Mercury, an easy-listening number with a
funk beat called "Trying to Love Two." He moved to Atlanta, put out
a few self-released albums, ran a business, and did well with
songwriting royalties. He didn't lose himself in God or women or
indulgence after the peak of his career, like some of the other
stories we've heard before. He kept his voice and lived a
comfortable life. You might say he was hiding in plain sight.
This summer, Stax released Bell's first album for the label in forty
years, in what may be the best album of his life. For the Organist,
the writer Wyatt Williams drove around Georgia
with Bell to bring us this story.
Produced by Wyatt Williams and Jenny AmentÂ