Author of the blues classic "Going Down,"
Don Nix is one of the more obscure figures in Southern soul and rock. As a producer he has worked with
Freddie King,
Jeff Beck, and
Furry Lewis, among others; as an artist, he has released solo albums on Shelter and Elektra, as well as smaller labels like Icehouse.
Born in Memphis,
Nix attended Messick High School with
Donald "Duck" Dunn and
Steve Cropper of the famed Stax house band
Booker T. & the MG's. After graduation,
Nix spent a short stint in the Army before returning to Memphis, where he joined
Dunn and
Cropper, along with
Wayne Jackson,
Packy Axton,
Terry Johnson, and Smoochy Smith, as a saxophonist in the
Mar-Keys.
The group scored a smash hit with the instrumental "Last Night" on the
Satellite label (later Stax/Volt), and
Nix went on the road with the group, while a house band from Memphis attempted to recorded follow-up hits under the
Mar-Keys' name.
After the success of "Last Night" fizzled,
Nix returned to Memphis and spent the next several years as a horn for hire, occasionally playing gigs with a re-formed version of
the Mar-Keys or backing Stax stars such as
William Bell and
Carla Thomas.
In the mid-'60s,
Nix began making trips to L.A. to visit
Leon Russell and
Carle Radle, friends he'd met through touring. The friendship with
Russell, a big producer at the time, landed
Nix a position in Dick Clark's Caravan of Stars backing one of
Russell's acts,
Gary Lewis & the Playboys. Their friendship also provided
Nix the opportunity to see how a session was put together, and he began engineering and producing at studios around Memphis such as Stax and Ardent.
Nix spent the next several years writing and producing for artists such as
Freddie King,
Albert King,
Sid Selvidge, and
Charlie Musselwhite. In 1970, he signed a recording deal with Shelter Records (co-owned by his old friend
Leon Russell) and released a solo album, In God We Trust and followed it a year later with
Living by the Days. Neither album sold very well, and after a few more attempts,
Nix returned to recording other artists, producing records for
John Mayall and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section.
After having been absent from record industry throughout most of the '80s,
Nix relocated to Nashville and began writing and producing again. He published a book about his experiences titled Road Stories & Recipes, and re-recorded many of his classic tracks with musicians such as
Brian May and
Steve Cropper for 2002's nostalgic Going Down. He followed this with
I Don't Want No Trouble in 2006, and
Passing Through -- both on his Section Eight Productions label -- and in 2009, he released
Hobos, Heroes and Street Corner Clowns for Concord's revitalized Stax imprint. In 2013, Real Gone Music reissued
Living by the Days. ~ Steve Kurutz