Turner was born in
Detroit, Michigan, the son of Horace Turner Sr., who died when Archie was a young child. He acquired the nickname "Hubbie" (sometimes spelled "Hubby" or "Hubie") in childhood, and moved with his brother Horace to Memphis, where they lived with their grandmother. Archie began taking piano lessons, and then lived with his mother, her second husband – musician
Willie Mitchell – and their daughters. He attended a Catholic high school in Memphis, and met brothers
Teenie and
Leroy Hodges. They soon formed a band, the Impalas, with Archie on keyboards, Horace on drums, and the Hodges brothers on guitar and bass, and played in local clubs and at parties, occasionally substituting for their stepfather Willie Mitchell's own band. After graduating from high school in 1964, Archie studied at
Memphis State College while continuing to play with the Impalas, and occasionally made recordings as a
session musician. He dropped out of college, and in 1968 was drafted into the
US Army, initially forming a band at
Fort Polk, Louisiana with his cousin, Donny Mitchell. He was transported to
Vietnam as a member of an infantry unit, eventually forming a band there. He was recognized in
Stars and Stripes magazine as 1969 Entertainer of the Year in Vietnam. Returning to Memphis in 1970, he restarted his degree but changed his
major to Psychology. He also formed a new rock band, Blackrock, with Cornell McFadden (drums – previously a member of
The Insect Trust), Curke Dudley (bass), and Willie Pettis (guitar). They recorded one single, "Blackrock, Yeah, Yeah", for the local Select-O-Hits label, and – with Pettis replaced by
Larry Lee – traveled to California where they auditioned for
Bill Graham, though nothing came of the session and the band split up in 1971. Turner then joined the Hodges brothers in the
Hi Rhythm Section, recording over the next few years with
Al Green,
Syl Johnson,
Ann Peebles,
Otis Clay and others. He also wrote two tracks on
Paul Butterfield's 1981 album
North-South, and formed a new band, Quo Jr., with Roland Robinson and Brad Webb. During the 1980s he played in the bands of
Little Milton;
Bobby 'Blue' Bland, with whom he toured in Europe; and
Albert King, where he played with guitarist Emmanuel Gales, later known as
Little Jimmy King. Turner and Little Jimmy King then formed the Memphis Soul Survivors, who became the house band at
B. B. King's Blues Club on
Beale Street and recorded several albums for
Rounder Records. In 2008, Turner joined
The Bo-Keys in Memphis. Between 2010 and 2012 he toured internationally as a member of
Cyndi Lauper's band, and in 2014 toured as a member of the Hi Rhythm Section backing singer
Paul Rodgers. In 2010 he gained a
W. C. Handy Heritage Award. He has continued to perform as a member of both the Hi Rhythm Section and the Bo-Keys, as well as with other musicians including
Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Earl “The Pearl” Banks and the 'Peoples of the Blues' band. ==References==