the history of the Record Label Motown AARP magazine / December 2018-January 2019

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "the history of the Record Label Motown AARP magazine / December 2018-January 2019"

Transcription

1 archived as (also Motown_01.pdf) => doc pdf URL-doc URL-pdf the history of the Record Label Motown AARP magazine / December 2018-January 2019 By Touré In the beginning, there was Berry Gordy, the founder of Motown records. A writer and producer of popular music that he hoped would one day reach all of young America. He was a man known for his impeccable ear and relentless drive. So it's not surprising that the second act that Gordy signed to his label was teenage composer William "Smokey" Robinson and his singing group the Miracles

2 Like Gordy, Robinson was a prolific creator. He's now credited with over 4,000 songs and dozens of top-40 hits including "My Girl" for the Temptations, "My Guy" for Mary Wells, and "Ain't That Peculiar" for Marvin Gaye. But Robinson went on to sing many of the timeless hits which he created (for example, "The Tracks of My Tears", "I Second That Emotion", and "The Tears of a Clown"). He also became a Motown vice-president, producer, and talent scout. The image of Motown to this day is tied up with image of Smokey Robinson. Both are associated with class and taste and the ability to cross over to white audiences without ever losing the love and admiration of black fans. Robinson earned his place in the Rock&Roll Hall-of-Fame and the Songwriters Hall-of-Fame and has been honored by the Kennedy center. 2 years ago he received the Library of Congress' Gershwin Prize for Popular Song. These days his voice remains sweet and strong. He's still recording and performing. In February and March he'll be playing 4 shows at the Wynn resort in Las Vegas. At 78, he says that he's healthy and happy. When he's not singing, he's doing yoga, eating vegan, or playing golf

3 In October we invited music journalist Touré to interview the Motown legend. Robinson was eager to talk about his role in the label's history. But he was still mourning the August death of his friend Queen-of-Soul Aretha Franklin. They had known each other since she was 7 years old and he was 8. So we'll start there

4 How are you feeling now about the loss of Aretha? I'm still in recovery mode because I love her and I'm going to miss our conversations and our getting together. But I know that spiritually she's in a better place. She was suffering at the end and I don't ever want to see her suffer. So now she's cool. And I'm cool 'cause she's cool. You and Aretha grew up in Detroit along with lots of stars like Jackie Wilson, Martha Reeves, Diana Ross, and Mary Wells. The Detroit you grew up in was so musically fertile. There were thousands-upon-thousands of talented people there. We used to have group battles on the street corners. There were groups that would out-sing me and the Miracles. But other cities are loaded with good musicians. What was different about Detroit and your era? Berry Gordy. I believe there are talented people in every city, every town, every township, every nook in the World. But Berry Gordy gave us an outlet. What was unique about Berry? He was a music man. When I met him, he was writing songs for Jackie Wilson and other people like that. And he was also a record producer. Back in those days -- especially if you were black -- nobody was paying you what you should be paid if they paid you at all. So Berry decided to start his own record company and gave us that outlet. Some record execs succeed because they have the ears. And some because they can make the business work. Most record companies back then were run by lawyers or guys who just wanted to go into the record business for a hobby or something else. But we had a music man at the helm. Somebody whose first love was music and producing records and writing songs. So that was a real asset for us. Did he help you become a better songwriter? Absolutely. What did he teach you? How to make my song be one idea. When I met Berry, the Miracles had gone to an audition with Jackie Wilson's managers. Berry was there that day to hand in some new songs. We sang 5 songs that I had written. Jackie Wilson's mangers didn't like us at all. But after they had rejected us, Berry came out and said "I liked a couple your songs, man. Where did you get them from?" I had 100 songs in a loose-leaf notebook. But most of them were haphazard because my first verse had nothing to do with my second verse. So he showed you how to make them more cohesive? Absolutely

5 Do you have a normal method of writing like "I want to start with the rhythm and then get to the melody"? No. There's none of that, babe. Not for a real songwriter, there's none of that. There's no "Let me start with this first every time" because you're then handicapping yourself. When did you first think that "I'm a good singer"? I never thought that. I'm not one of those people. I'm not an ego singer. I've never thought what you just said. You've never thought that you were a good singer? "No. I think that I feel songs. Whitney Houston was a great singer. Celine Dion is a great singer. Aretha Franklin was a great singer. I'm not in that category. I won't fool myself. But I feel what I sing. And I think that people can feel what I feel when I do. When did you first think that you could be a professional singer? When I was a professional singer. You didn't realize that you were good enough until then? I grew up with some guys who could sing me under the table. All I know is that we were fortunate and blessed enough to meet a man who gave us a chance to make records. Okay. I want to talk about some of those records. "I Second That Emotion" is just an incredible performance. What's the feeling that "I Second That Emotion" is working with? When you're musical, that stuff happens automatically. I do concerts every night and it's never the same. I've sung "Ooo Baby Baby" 500,000 times. But every night, it's brand-new because I don't know how I'm going to deliver it. Whatever comes out of me that night is what it is

6 What about "The Tears of a Clown"? I love that song. Thank you. You can thank Stevie Wonder for that. He wrote that? I wrote the words. Stevie and Hank Cosby wrote the music. Stevie had recorded that tract. He couldn't think of a song to go with it so he gave it to me. I wanted to write something about the circus that would be touching to people. When I was a child, I heard a story about the Italian clown Pagliacci. Everybody loved him and they cheered him. But when he went back to his dressing room, he cried because he didn't have that kind of love from a woman. So that's what "The Tears of a Clown" is about. It's a version of Pagliacci's life. When you put it like that, the song could be a ballad. The best version that I've ever heard of "The Tears of a Clown" is by a jazz singer who did it as a ballad. Her name is Nnenna Freelon. She had a violin crying in the background. It was beautiful because it's a sad song. My version is upbeat only because of the musical track that Stevie gave me. But in essence, it's a sad song. You do make me want to cry "The Tracks of My Tears". Well, thank you. Tell me about that song. "The Tracks of My Tears" originated with my guitarist Marv Tarplin and was cowritten with Pete Moore. Marv put his guitar riffs on tape and gave them to me to write lyrics. The first thing I came up with was "Take a good look at my face; See my smiling side of the place; Be the closest thing to trace; "that you're gone and I'm no." And I said "No, that's not it." Then "It's easy to trace that I miss you so much." And I said "No, that's not it." Then one day I was at my mirror shaving and I said "What if a person cried until their tears had actually left tracks in there face?" Then I was able to finish the song. So it took you a while to find that part to finish the song? Yeah, yeah. But I did that in a couple months. "Cruisin' " took 5 years. Marv had given me the music and I loved it. I used to go to sleep it by it, I loved it so much. So I kept working on it. Then one day I was driving down Sunset Boulevard and I had my car top down. I said "I'm just cruisin' down Sunset." And then I said "Cruisin! That's it! I turned my car around, man. I want that gold! Tell me about young Michel Jackson. What was it like having him around? - 6 -

7 Young Michael Jackson was a man. He didn't have a childhood. From the time he was 8, they had him singing in the nightclubs. So when he got grown, he became a child because he could do it. He could finally play. He could do all those things that he didn't do as a child. What was it like to work with Stevie Wonder? His music covers every genre that you can thing of from gospel to jazz and everything in between. He's just an extremely talented person. And he's my brother. We always have a great time. We'd be working together and Stevie would come up to me and whisper in me ear. "Hey, Smoke. Man, I'ma whoop your ass." I mean, that's how we are with each other. What about Marvin Gaye? Marvin Gaye was my brother brother. We were together all the time. He recorded my favorite album of all time ("What's Going On"). He was one of the greatest singers ever. I used to tell him all the time "You Marvin-ized my song, man." Because he would do stuff vocally that I had never even dared to dream could be a part of the song. You were a central figure in the most important label of the Century in terms of music and in terms of social impact. That does that mean to you? That means everything to me, man. That's beyond out wildest dreams. Berry and I talk about it all the time. We never dared to dream that Motown would become what it has become. The very first day of Motown, there were 5 people there. Berry Gordy sat us down and said "I'm going to start my own record company. We are not just going to make black music. We're going to make music for the World." That was our plan. And we did it

8 by Gerri Hirshey How could they ever have imagined what astonishments lay ahead for them. It was all so very unlikely. No. Make that impossible. On a cold October day in 1962, 45 Motown Records singers, musicians, and chaperones stood shivering with excitement and nerves. They crowded together inside Studio A, the converted garage of a bungalow-style house that 32-year-old Motown Berry Gordy had bought at 2648 West Grand Boulevard in Detroit. His neighbors were respectable strivers Sykes Hernia Control Service and Phelps Funeral Parlor

9 The great-grandson of a Georgia slave, Gordy had started his label in early The same year that Mattel's plastic dream girl Barbie minced onto the scene. Gordy's troupe had mustered for the kickoff of the Motown Revue, the company's first extensive tour. A snapshot of the moment still hangs in the house on West Grand which now serves as the Motown Museum. They stand clutching bulging purses and boxy cameras; tucked into tight chicken slacks and mohair sweaters; freshly barbered, manicured, and beehived. The Supremes (Mary Wilson, Florence Ballard, and Diane [later Diana] Ross) had just graduated from high school. The trio were thrilled to be going but worried that they hadn't truly earned their seats on the bus. "Understand, we were favorites of Berry's. Little special girls," recalls Wilson who is now 74 and living in Los Angeles. "But unless you had a hit record, you were a nobody at Motown. Nearly everyone else on the bus already had a hit." Those hit makers included Marvin Gaye, the Marvelettes, the Miracles, the Contours, and Martha Reeves and the Vandellas. They were joined by newly signed 12-year-old phenom Stevland Hardaway Judkins (rechristened a more showbiz-sounding Little Stevie Wonder). Also aboard was 19-year-old Mary Wells who had been crowned the Queen-of-Motown. She was regal with her Cleopatra eyeliner yet sweetly vulnerable on vinyl. Wells had been a working girl since age 12 when she had helped her single mother scrub frigid stairwells to support them both. "Until Motown, there were 3 big careers for a black girl in Detroit," Wells told me years later. "Babies, the factories, or day work. Period." Gordy's artists (all African-American) were the sons and daughters of former sharecroppers, autoworkers, clerks, housekeepers, and church deacons. At the time, Detroit had the 4 th largest black population in the Nation and it produced 50 percent of the World's automobiles. The odds of escaping the factories or minimum wage work for any young person of color were dismal. But soon after Motown's first hits blared from radios in the city's schoolyards and housing projects, legions of young hopefuls besieged the hip alluring enterprise on West Grand. Those who made the cut were ambitious, pliant, and eager to please. They'd do anything. Sing background on demos at 3:00 AM; hand clap; sweep floors; file session notes. Temptations' lead singer David Ruffin helped Gordy's father build the studio. In the Artists and Repertoire department, Martha Reeves was secretary and muse to 17 staff songwriters and producers. Gordy's hit factory ran 24/7. Overall he paid poorly. But he plumped staff morale with bowling nights, picnics, poker, and touch football games. A pot of chili bubbled in near perpetuity in the kitchen. The Hitsville troupe were a family of sorts. Boisterous, competitive, and tight. Most of those dragging their luggage to the leased Motortown bus and 5 cars that chilly day had never even left the stare. In a phone interview from her home in Detroit, Reeves (now 77) laughed at their utter naivete as they climbed aboard

10 "The bus was a broken-down Trailways with no toilet," she remembers. "We had to lean on the window or on each other to try and sleep." During the tour which lasted from October though December, Reeves says that the performers slept in hotels only 2 nights per week at the most. That grueling tour and the many that followed were part of Gordy's audacious plan for integration (and domination) of the Top-100 pop chart. He announced his ambition on the building's façade -- Hitsville U.S.A. The lettering was painted in bold "Motown blue". The same saturated hue on their now-iconic record labels. But how could his crew break through the stubborn segregation of a music industry that confined black 45s to "rhythm & blues" charts? In 1960, only 4 singles by African-American artists reached the higher altitudes of the pop (i.e., white) Top-100. "Crossover at that time meant that white people would buy your records," recalls Smokey Robinson who was present at the label's inception. "Berry's concept in starting Motown was to make music with a funky beat and great stories that would cross over."

11 Gordy's hybrid product was a mélange of pop, R&B, and even a touch of Vegas shot with gospel harmonies and rhythms. In short, polygot American. He began releasing records on 3 company labels: Tamla, Gordy, and Motown. Some striking demographics helped underwrite buyers of gamble. Teenagers -- those imp8ulsive hormonal buyers of 99-cent singles -- were fast becoming the largest population group in the U.S. They controlled billions of dollars a year in disposable cash. Would white kids spend their money on records by black artists? Gordy got his answer in 1961 when the Marvelettes' "Please Mr. Postman" hit No. 1 on the pop chart. It appeared that kids didn't c are who was making the music if it was compelling and danceable enough. Given the almost limitless potential of the teen fan base, a tour introducing Motowners to live audiences on the East coast and in the Deep South would be Berry Gordy's moon shot. And what a ride it turned out to be. What colossal long-playing reverb. It's still hard to cruise a supermarket aisle or settle into brewpub trivia night without hearing the Motown sound pumping out of speakers. "I've got sunshine, On a cloudy day......" "Ain't no mountain high, Ain't no valley low......" Within a year of that first tour, Gordy's company (which began with an $800 loan from his family's credit fund) would post $4.5 million in revenue and launch a galaxy of singles into the Top-100 pop chart. Motown's appeal quickly spanned the Atlantic as the Supremes and The Beetles traded spots at No. 1. During its most successful years from 1962 to 1971, Motown and its subsidiary labels racked up a stunning 180 No. 1 hits worldwide. Gordy liked to boast that 70 percent of his record sales were to white buyers. Motown's impact on popular culture is not simply calculated. The Supremes did advertisements for those American staples Coke and white bread. The cuddly Jackson Five became a Saturday cartoon. Spotify still lists the Temptations' "My Girl" as a top wedding song. Motown has lit up television and movie screens from the ominous chords of Marvin Gaye's "I Heard it Through The Grapevine" opening The Big Chill to Broadway-musical and movie productions of Dreamgirls (the hit retooling of a Supremes-like saga). Over a third of Americans tuned in to the 1983 TV anniversary special Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, and Forever. Yearly, 80,000 visitors pass through the museum on West Grand. And the museum is planning to expand. Ford Motor Co. and its UAW-Ford union have donated $6 million for a proposed $50 million expansion on adjacent land donated by Berry Gordy. As for the label itself, Gordy sold it to MCA and Boston Ventures in 1988 for $61 million. He fretted that he had set his price too low. And that proved true. Polygram bought it for near 5 times that ($301 million) in Today, the label is modest in size, part of the giant Universal Music Group. Reimagined as "The New Definition of Soul", its artists include the protean Grammy-winning Erkyah Badu and a rowdy posse of hip-hop acts Lil Yachty, Lil Baby, and social media star-turned-rapper Cuban Doll

12 How did Gordy achieve his audacious crossover dream? He declined to be interviewed for this story. But he has often credited his business model to his short tenure as an $86.40-a-week worker on a Lincoln-Mercury assembly line. He hated the work. But the plant's precision and efficiency left a lasting impression. "Every day I'd watch how a bare metal frame rolling down the line would become a spanking brand-new car," he has said. "What a great idea! Maybe I could do the same with my music. Create a place where a kid off the street could walk in one door an unknown... go through a process... and come out a star." At Motown he built himself a Ford-t9ough quality control process that scrutinized every release. The music was heavy on studio-stamped style and far lighter inspirit than the unvarnished soul of Aretha Franklin (who recorded her biggest hits on Atlantic records) and the Memphis vamps of Otis Redding and other Stax/Volt stars. Motown's repetitive hooks burrowed into teen brains. And its thumping backbeat was something even the most rhythm-challenged kids could dance to. A stable of staff songwriters kept the hits coming. Motown's equipment and facilities were basic and often improvised. Studio A (also known as the Snakepit) had walls so flimsy that a sentinel was stationed outside the nearby bathroom lest the roar of a flush ruin a take. Gordy confessed: "We would try anything to get a unique percussion sound. 2 blocks of wood slapped together. Anything. I might see a producer dragging in bike chains or getting a whole group of people stomping on the floor." That make-it-do attitude extended to the performers. Gordy did sign a few polished established groups including Gladys Knight & the Pips. But mostly he mined and refined a lot of raw talent. Many of his singers were gospel-trained in Detroit's African-American churches. The masterful studio musicians known as the Funk Brothers were assembled by Artists and Repertoire director Mickey Stevenson who combed the seediest bars and clubs in town for the best session men. Just as essential to the Motown sound were the Andantes, a sublime trio of back singers (read their unsung story below). Motown's public face (i.e., its artists) got dance and voice training as well as mandatory style and comportment lessons in Motown's fabled Artist Development department run by Miss Maxine Powell. Wardrobe, grooming, diction -- Miss Powell had it all covered. Her coaching did help prepare the Supremes who grew up in Detroit's Brewster-Douglass projects to meet England's "queen mum" and navigate the format etiquette of Japan. On tour in American, the Motown artists faced a different sort of culture clash. One hot day in New Orleans, Mary Wells drew stares as she leaned into a drinking fountain and giddily assumed she had been recognized. Until she looked up and saw the 'Whites Only' sign. "In Detroit, we didn't encounter a lot of segregation," Mary Wilson says. "As we started touring, we started understanding what out parents had been telling us about the South. We found out that there were places that we couldn't go." She recalled the day when their bus pulled into the "Heart of the South" motel in South Carolina. It had a pool! Hot, dusty, and weary, the travelers dove in. "And all these other people in the pool started jumping out," Wilson says. "All of them were white."

13 Local deejays had been spinning Motown records all week and at that tense moment one of the songs was playing on a poolside radio. "When the white motel guests realized that the black swimmers were the ones that they had been listening to, "they came back in the pool," Wilson says. "The rest of the day we partied." There were other incremental victories. Police stopped trying to enforce the rope lines that divided black and white audience members. Everyone danced together. But after their tour bus was shot at in Birmingham, Alabama, Martha Reeves understood the fear and fury caused by a busload of African-American youths. "We were mistaken a lot for Freedom Riders trying to make a movement." In July 1967, Reeves was onstage in Detroit singing the smash "Dancing in the Street" when she was called to the wings and asked to send the audience home to check on their families. The Motor City was burning. A police raid had triggered one of the bloodiest race riots in American history. It killed 43 and damaged over 2,000 buildings. Hitsville escaped the flames. But almost immediately, Reeves recalls, Motowners felt some misplaced blame. During a subsequent British tour, a reporter accused Reeves of being a militant lead. "They said that my song 'Dancing in the Street' was a call to riot. My Lord! It was a party song!" More-and-more, old racial tensions and the churn of the growing civil rights movement were impossible to dance past. Motown artists who had sung their share of lovestruck pop tunes would turn their attention to real biting commentary on social justice with releases like Edwin Starr's "War', Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On", and Stevie Wonder's "Living for the City". Meanwhile as Detroit was trying to recover, Gordy moved his main operation to a larger safer building downtown. His artists hated it. Worse, some were close to hitless without the magic of the Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting team who had departed the label in 1968 amid a flurry of lawsuits and countersuits over royalties. "From 1970 on, Berry wasn't really interested in the record business" observed his long longtime marketing man and consigliere Barney Ales. In 1972, Gordy moved the company to Hollywood setting up shop on Sunset Boulevard. He moved some of his blended family (he's been married and divorced 3 times and has 8 children) into a home in the Hollywood Hills. Down the street, there was a smaller rental home for Diana Ross. Their long affair (the stuff of Dreamgirls) was an open secret. Gordy was also candid about his desire to become a television and movie mogul with his protégé draped in furs and acclaim. Miss Ross would star in Lady Sings the Blues and the (regrettable) Gordy-directed melodrama Mahogany. Back in Detroit, between 200-and-300 Motown employees had lost their jobs. Some like the Contours' Joe Billingslea went back to the factory floors. Others like the Four Tops found new recording deals. But something precious had been lost

14 Now 82 and the sole surviving original member of the Tops, Duke Fakir said those still in Detroit were bereft. "Motown was more than a brick & mortar. It was a huge part of our social life. We spent as much time there as we did at home." In Los Angeles, those adorable Jacksons helped carry the torch and the bottom line. In 1970, "I'll Be There' sold over 3 million copies. As disco, funk, and "adult contemporary" took hold, Motown signed that platformed-booted superfreak Rick James and the Commodore (a former student band fronted by Lionel Richie). But there was a steady stream of artist defections. Even Diana Ross left the label in "I always knew I'd have to leave," Michael Jackson told me in 1982 as he was about to release his monster hit Thriller (his second solo album on the Epic label). He explained that even as a child, he knew that the Motown studio system was too confining for his singular vision. Nonetheless, MJ said he was grateful for the home-schooling in Studio A. He studied the producers with a silent obsession. "I was like a hawk preying in the night," he said. "I'd watch everything."

15 Like many showbiz dynasties, Motown has also seen its share of tragic deaths. Temptation Paul Williams fatally shot himself 2 blocks from Hitsville. The Supremes' Florence Ballard endured a heartrending spiral into depression and alcoholism and died of a heart attack at 32. Mary Wells lost her voice and her life to throat cancer at 49. A grieving Marvin Gaye could not perform for 4 years after his duet partner (the stunning Tammi Turrell) collapsed in his arms onstage and died following brain surgery in Beset with drug problems, Gaye was shot to death by his father in Complications from substance abuse killed Temptation David Ruffin and Michael Jackson. They were all mourned like family by their labelmates. Among the survivors of Motown's first generation, the road still beckons for some. Martha Reeves performs with two of her sisters acting as latter-day Vandellas. Duke Fakir and his Tops tour 35 weeks-a-year. Otis Williams (the last original Temptation) is still on the road with "my guys". There have been 22 replacements... so far. Yes, audiences still insist on the Tempts' razor-sharp choreography. But sorry, folks. No more spins and splits. Williams is 77 and admits that some nights he's bone-tired. "And yet here I stay. All we ever wanted to was just sing and make the girls happy." It did start out simple as did Mr. Ford's basic Model T. In America, the product that Gordy and his artists delivered was revolutionary in terms of black entrepreneurship and crossover clout. That loud insistent backbeat was also heard worldwide. It prefigured today's "global music" while delivering lifelong memories to millions. Gordy's stark-making machinery was primitive compared with today's algorithm-driven merchandising. But in Motown's frenzied boom years, Hitsville stamped out some remarkably durable goods. Solid state, still danceable and alluring, those blue-labeled 45s can claim the same honorific conferred on those other Detroit dream machines of yore: American classics

16 By Touré What? Who? Can she sing? Marlene Barrow and Jackie Hicks sounded downright skeptical. It was the summer of The young women (then 19 and 21 years old, respectively) were at the Motown recording studio on West Grand Boulevard in Detroit. Tall and slender Barrow and bubbly and full-figured Hicks had grown up singing in the choir of the Hartford Baptist Church. They had been to the Motown studio before and had laid down some backup vocals at the fledgling label as two-thirds of a trio. But then the high soprano in their group had quit suddenly and Barrow and Hicks weren't too interested in working without her. Thinking of a young soprano in the studio's choral ensemble, a studio staffer made a suggestion. "We've got a girl in here who can sing." Barrow and Hicks had the same question. "Can she sing?" "Oh yeah," came the reply. "She can sing." More than 50 years later, no one remembers which song that the three worked on that day. But the new girl -- Louvain Demps, a reserved catholic woman of still remembers how it went

17 "We just seemed to click right away," she says. "First time," Hicks adds. "First song, perfect blend." That's how Louvain Demps joined the Andantes which would become perhaps the most important singing group you've probably never heard of. The trio sang background on more than 20,000 Motown songs and upward of 90 percent of the company's output before its 1972 move to Los Angeles. Theirs are the voices you can hear responding to Mary Wells in her 1964 hit "My Guy" ("What you say? Tell me more..."). They testified on Marvin Gaye's "I Heard It Through The Grapevine". And significantly, they provided the oohs and ahs and baby-babies, the depth and sweetness on countless tracks where their separate voices can't even be picked out except maybe by the women themselves. To this day, Hicks says that she hears herself on the radio every single day. The Andantes' perfect blend was critical to the Motown sound. It was part of the secret seasoning that listeners could hear only on that label. These women (unsung in so many ways) were a key reason that so many people loved Motown music. And yet most Motown fans still don't know the Andantes' story. Today, Hicks (79) and Demps (80) have returned to their old workplace walking around the popular museum built on the site of the famed Hitsville U.S.A. building. They remind me that their friend Marlene Barrow (the beloved peacemaker in the trio whose married name was Barrow-Tate) died in 2015 at age 733. So the group is now incomplete. The Andantes' alto Hicks is wearing a green pantsuit with matching socks set off by pink sneakers. On first meeting, she seems serious. But that's only because she hasn't yet revealed the side of herself that marked her as the group's prankster. It is an identity that she still seems to take pride in. Demps recalls that during one recording session long ago, she was having a minor issue with her part and Hicks was holding what she thought was an empty water cup. "I told her 'I'm going to throw this water in your face if you don't get the song right'," says Hicks picking up the story. "She just looked at me. So I said 'Boop!' ", she says as she pantomimes thrusting a cup forward. "There was water in the cup. It was running down her face. I was shocked!" Demps laughs, adding: "And I was wet." "Yeah, you were," Hicks responds. "Hey, one of these days I hope you forget that story." "That's not likely. Demps is the historian of the group. The one who remembers who said what to him and most everything that happened to them in Studio A. She speaks in a high breathy voice (Demps is the first soprano, after all) and has a sweet delicate manner. She seems to end every sentence with a big smile no matter what she's saying. That's true even when she's talking about the loss of their lifelong friend the second soprano Barrow-Tate

18 "Marlene was a jewel," Demps says. "Jackie was funn7y and I was real quiet. Marlene was the one who would always patch things up. The one that would say 'Don't worry about it. It's going to be okay.' I really loved her." When Motown stars and songwriters try to describe the musical debt that they owe to the Andantes, they get downright religious. "They could sing together like angels," says Martha Reeves, lead singer of Marth & the Vandellas. Ivy Jo Hunter wrote songs for Marvin Gaye, the Spinners, and Gladys Knight & the Pips. She says "It was a heavenly gift that they had. It's something that you really can't manufacture." Motown's first A&R man Mickey Stevenson describes their talent as a "gift that's given by God". Their reference to Divinity is no coincidence. In the classic sound of the African-American church, the interplay between a lead singer and the rest of the choir (i.e., the call and response) creates a powerful structure that has tremendous emotional resonance. Motown's arrangers built on that structure which originated in West Africa and is found in many genres of African-American music. Unlike in the white pop recordings of the same era, background vocalists at Motown didn't just harmonize on a song's choruses. They created a back-and-forth with the whole melody that deepened the listening experience. Berry Gordy may have sought to present a safe apolitical version of his performers to appeal to a crossover audience. But he couldn't take the Church out of their voices. The Andantes sand on "Baby, I Need Your Loving" by the Four Tops; "Love Child" by Diana Ross and the Supremes; "For Once In My Life" by Stevie Wonder; and countless other classics. "They were on every song," Stevenson says. "All the ones that were hits."

19 In fact, the group was so critical to Motown's sound that if they weren't available, Stevenson would stop the session. "If one of them wasn't feeling well, we would hold that tune until she felt better. I couldn't have done it without them." Like the label's house band known as the Funk Brothers -- whose distinctive grooves were always heard but never credited on early Motown records), the Andantes provided anonymous support for the label's biggest stars. For years, the 3 young women practically lived at the studio. They were called up to record something new almost every day. "They gave us a cozy office upstairs where we would stay overnight if we had to," recalls Demps. Eventually they were paid upward of $10-hour. It was considered good money. "We were family," Smokey Robinson says. "We were kids growing up there together. And the Andantes were part of that family. Robinson used the women on many on the thousands of songs he wrote and produced including "My Guy" for Mary Wells and "My Girl" for the Temptations. "The Andantes were three of the greatest singers ever in Life," he emphasizes. "Any one of them could have been a lead singer or solo artist." The writer-producer Lamont Dozier used their voices to "fill in the lead singer's parts and give the harmony more substance. If I had some very intricate background parts and the harmonies didn't have the sound that I wanted, I would tell the famous singers 'It's okay. We'll fix it in the mix.' " "They would take a break and I'd have the Andantes come in the back door," he notes, laughing. "We liked to call them the cleanup girls. They could always come in and fix whatever we couldn't fix with the big acts." Both Hicks and Demps say that despite the hard work and lack of public recognition, Motown was a loving atmosphere where almost everyone treated them with great respect. Did they sense any resentment from stars such as Diana Ross about being added to their tracks? "Sometimes there were a little ill feelings," Hicks allows. "But hey, it was what it was. It wasn't our choice." Producers loved the Andantes because they created their own arrangements on the spot. No easy thing. "They could walk in that studio and lay that stuff down in 5-or-10 minutes," Stevenson says. "If you had anybody else, it would take you a few hours." Demps wanted the Andantes to have their shot as featured recording artists. But it never seemed to come. Whenever the young women asked Motown staff about it, Barrow once recalled, they would be told to have patience

20 Maybe due to their persistence, the Andantes did record one single at Motown under their own name. The 1964 jump tune "(Like A) Nightmare". But they were never sent through Motown's storied artist-development program to craft a stage presence. And then the single received no promotion, it quickly vanished from view. Why didn't Motown founder Berry Gordy ever try to make stars of the Andantes? Was it because as young mothers by then, both Barrow and Demps would have had difficulty going out on tour? Perhaps. But according to journalist Adam White (author of Motown: The Sound of Young America), there was also a business case to be made for keeping the Andantes under wraps. "Berry Gordy was very protective of what he had," White says. "He didn't want the names of the musicians to be out there so that they could get offers that might tempt them to leave." Jacqueline Hicks hadn't planned to be a professional singer. Neither had Marlene Barrow. In fact, as teens they avoided working with a bandleader who wanted to record with them. They even hid in the closet when he came to Hicks' home. "He asked my mother 'Where are Jacqueline and Marlene?" Hicks remembers. "She said 'In the closet hiding from you.' He took it as a joke. So we opened the door and started laughing and came out. As wee were going to the car, I said 'Mama, why would you tell on us?' She said 'How much money are you making in that closet?' " By contrast, Demps had always aspired to perform professionally. Raised in the Catholic church, she was familiar with formal liturgical music. Her parents had always thought that she should sing opera. Instead, Demps pursued pop. And though she proud to be part of the Andantes, she wanted to perform under her own name also. "I'm not saying that I wanted to be a star," Demps explains. "But I wanted more. I just wanted more." Early in19072, rumors were flying that the label was planning a move to Los Angeles. "We had heard in the air," Barrow recounted in the 2007 book Motown from the Background. "We would ask them repeatedly if it were true. They would always deny it." But when she and Hicks went to pick up their mid-january paychecks, there weren't any checks there for them. The two called Demps in the middle of the night in a panic. The following day, Demps went down to Motown to find out whether the label was indeed leaving. When she was told that it was, she was outraged. She demanded that checks be cut for all three Andantes. She had the head of the label's quality control department drive her to the bank to make sure that hers cashed. "That's how we found out," Demps says. "I guess if they hadn't owed us money, they might not have said a word. Barrow and Hicks took the loss in stride. "They were trying to go into the movie thing," Hicks says of Berry Gordy's motivation. "They were going in a different direction

21 Hicks eventually landed a job at the Detroit Water and Sewage Department. Barrow found employment with the Michigan Department of Labor. But Demps took it much harder. She was a divorced mother of 2 young boys. And she feared (rightfully) that her dreams of stardom were ending. For me, it was devastating," she says. "I just couldn't adjust. Our songs would come on the radio and I'd cry." She left her hometown, moved to Atlanta, and found work at a Georgia state center for children with intellectual disabilities. "I loved working with the children," she points out. She was able to identify some nondisabled children at the center who had been caught up in the system and helped to get them out. "That softened my heart and kind of pulled me out of the dumps. There's a little passage in the Bible that says '...and when he came to himself...' You know, when I came to myself, that's when I realized that I've wasted time being depressed when I should have been happy" Eventually, Demps began to sing again doing commercial jobs as well as performing in church. In the early 1990s, the Andantes reunited in Detroit to sing for Motorcity Records. It was an effort by a British producer to market the city's Motown-era acts. The company quickly failed. But not before the Andantes (who turned into a 4-person group with the addition of their fellow Motown alumna Pat Lewis) recorded an album's worth of songs under their own names. Those sessions were the group's final foray into the studio together. In recent years, the Andantes have begun to receive the notice that many feel they ought to have had all along. Reissued Motown records now bear the Andantes name if the women sang on them. After being paid a flat hourly fee during their recording years, the women are now receiving some residuals for their work. And in 2013 while Barrow-Tate was still living, all 3 Andantes were able to visit an exhibit at the Motown Museum that celebrated the Supremes, the Vandellas, the Marvelettes, and (right alongside them) the Andantes. While she appreciates the belated recognition, Hicks says she would have been just as happy remaining in the background. "I've always been proud of myself and thankful to the Lord to have allowed me to do that," she notes. "I don't care how high anybody goes. It does not lower me any lower. Because I know what I did."

22 if on the Internet, Press <BACK> on your browser to return to the previous page (or go to else if accessing these files from the CD in a MS-Word session, simply <CLOSE> this file's window-session; the previous window-session should still remain 'active'

THE HISTORY OF MOTOWN PAGE 1

THE HISTORY OF MOTOWN PAGE 1 THE HISTORY OF MOTOWN PAGE 1 What do you know about the music company Motown? Circle the options which you think are correct in these statements: 1 Berry Gordy Junior started Motown 50 / 60 / 70 years

More information

History of Motown (High School)

History of Motown (High School) History of Motown (High School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson is intended to familiarize students with the unique history of Detroit s Motown Records by highlighting the origins of Motown and its founders.

More information

The Impact of Motown (Middle School)

The Impact of Motown (Middle School) The Impact of Motown (Middle School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson is intended to help students identify the impact that Motown music and its artists had on the 20 th century as well as today s popular

More information

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did Motown Records in Detroit operate during the 1960s? OVERVIEW The Motown Record Corporation was one of the most successful record labels of the 1960s and one of the most

More information

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did Motown Records in Detroit operate during the 1960s? OVERVIEW The Motown Record Corporation was one of the most successful record labels of the 1960s and one of the most

More information

The Impact of Motown (High School)

The Impact of Motown (High School) The Impact of Motown (High School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson is intended to help students identify the impact that Motown music and its artists had on the 20 th century as well as today s popular

More information

Regional Centers for R&B/Soul

Regional Centers for R&B/Soul Regional Centers for R&B/Soul Stax in Memphis, and Memphis sound generally Motown in Detroit: pop crossover Chicago sound: Curtis Mayfield Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama Atlantic Records, NYC:

More information

MOTOWN THE MUSICAL: BERRY GORDY IN HIS OWN WORDS

MOTOWN THE MUSICAL: BERRY GORDY IN HIS OWN WORDS MOTOWN THE MUSICAL: BERRY GORDY IN HIS OWN WORDS The history of Motown and its contributions to the cultural landscape of the United States is a compelling story. What Berry Gordy and Motown accomplished

More information

Beloved musical icon Aretha Franklin dies at 76

Beloved musical icon Aretha Franklin dies at 76 Beloved musical icon Aretha Franklin dies at 76 By The Guardian, adapted by Newsela staff on 08.20.18 Word Count 890 Level 1060L Aretha Franklin performs at President Barack Obama's swearing-in ceremony

More information

Coming Here To Tempt You - Temptations main man OTIS WILLIAMS speaks to SJF ahead of the group's

Coming Here To Tempt You - Temptations main man OTIS WILLIAMS speaks to SJF ahead of the group's Coming Here To Tempt You - Temptations main man OTIS WILLIAMS speaks to SJF ahead of the group's "We were always competitive," laughs OTIS WILLIAMS, contemplating the healthy sense of rivalry that has

More information

On the eve of the Neil Young and Crazy Horse Australian tour, he spoke with Undercover's Paul Cashmere.

On the eve of the Neil Young and Crazy Horse Australian tour, he spoke with Undercover's Paul Cashmere. Undercover Greendale (interview with poncho) Sometime in the 90's Neil Young was christened the Godfather of Grunge but the title really belonged to his band Crazy Horse. While Young has jumped through

More information

THE SOCIOLOGY OF AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC (SOAP) UNIT 5 NOTES. Soul, Motown, & Funk

THE SOCIOLOGY OF AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC (SOAP) UNIT 5 NOTES. Soul, Motown, & Funk THE SOCIOLOGY OF AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC (SOAP) UNIT 5 NOTES Soul, Motown, & Funk SOUL, MOTOWN, AND FUNK Soul Music was created by and for African Americans through the merging of black Gospel with rhythm

More information

WITH A FULL SUPPORTING COMPANY OF SINGERS, DANCERS AND THE DANCING IN THE STREETS BAND

WITH A FULL SUPPORTING COMPANY OF SINGERS, DANCERS AND THE DANCING IN THE STREETS BAND WITH A FULL SUPPORTING COMPANY OF SINGERS, DANCERS AND THE DANCING IN THE STREETS BAND After wowing audiences all over the UK and spending three years in London s West End, Dancing in the Streets is back!

More information

Section I. Quotations

Section I. Quotations Hour 8: The Thing Explainer! Those of you who are fans of xkcd s Randall Munroe may be aware of his book Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words, in which he describes a variety of things using

More information

English as a Second Language Podcast ENGLISH CAFÉ 70

English as a Second Language Podcast   ENGLISH CAFÉ 70 TOPICS Current Movies: Stomp the Yard and Dreamgirls, vibe, sick vs. ill. vs. cold, to hold someone s hand vs. to hold onto someone GLOSSARY to stomp to dance with heavy and noisy steps; to walk with loud,

More information

"I was very nervous at first," reveals softly-spoken, Aaron Livingston, who's better known by his stage name,

I was very nervous at first, reveals softly-spoken, Aaron Livingston, who's better known by his stage name, "I was very nervous at first," reveals softly-spoken, Aaron Livingston, who's better known by his stage name, SON LITTLE. A rising singer/songwriter and award-winning producer originally from Philadelphia,

More information

Written by Bill B Wednesday, 27 February :59 - Last Updated Wednesday, 27 February :12

Written by Bill B Wednesday, 27 February :59 - Last Updated Wednesday, 27 February :12 Chris Jasper is the soul fans' soul man. In the 70s and 80s he was an integral part of the Isley Brothers and of course went on to become one third of Isley-Jasper-Isley. Now running his own label Gold

More information

The Music of Motown (High School)

The Music of Motown (High School) The Music of Motown (High School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson will explore the music of 1960s Motown Records through a series of activities in which students will examine several musical examples

More information

Aretha Franklin, musical and political influencer, dies at 76

Aretha Franklin, musical and political influencer, dies at 76 Aretha Franklin, musical and political influencer, dies at 76 By The Guardian, adapted by Newsela staff on 08.19.18 Word Count 821 Level 950L Aretha Franklin performs at President Barack Obama's swearing-in

More information

W6 - Motown Pop and Southern Soul ( )

W6 - Motown Pop and Southern Soul ( ) W6 - Motown Pop and Southern Soul (1960-69) Week 6 Preamble Black pop history Race issues sensitive issues new rise of black pop Motown, Detroit Berry Gordy Jnr crossover black pop to white audiences sold

More information

Candice Bergen Transcript 7/18/06

Candice Bergen Transcript 7/18/06 Candice Bergen Transcript 7/18/06 Candice, thank you for coming here. A pleasure. And I'm gonna start at the end, 'cause I'm gonna tell you I'm gonna start at the end. And I may even look tired. And the

More information

BOOGIE BROWN PRODUCTIONS

BOOGIE BROWN PRODUCTIONS All songs written and composed by Clinton Fearon Published by Jamin International Music - BMI Produced by Clinton Fearon. and 2006 Boogie Brown Productions All rights reserved. No duplication without authorization.

More information

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold. The New Vocabulary Levels Test This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold. Example question see: They saw it. a. cut b. waited for

More information

THE STORY OF TRACY BEAKER EPISODE 1 Based on the book by Jacqueline Wilson Sändningsdatum: 23 januari 2003

THE STORY OF TRACY BEAKER EPISODE 1 Based on the book by Jacqueline Wilson Sändningsdatum: 23 januari 2003 THE STORY OF TRACY BEAKER EPISODE 1 Based on the book by Jacqueline Wilson Sändningsdatum: 23 januari 2003...and you never let me eat sweets, you were wimps about watching horror videos and your kitchen

More information

THAT revisited. 3. This book says that you need to convert everything into Eurodollars

THAT revisited. 3. This book says that you need to convert everything into Eurodollars THAT revisited 1. I have this book that gives all the conversion charts. 2. I have the book that I need for the conversions. 3. This book says that you need to convert everything into Eurodollars 4. Some

More information

Motown Legend Honored by Links, Inc. in Beverly Hills

Motown Legend Honored by Links, Inc. in Beverly Hills www..com Motown Legend Honored by Links, Inc. in Beverly Hills First Lady of Motown Claudette Robinson Recognized for Career and Community Service at Gala www..com www..com Los Angeles, Oct 11, 2018 (.com)

More information

UNIT 4 MODERN IRISH MUSIC - PART 3 IRISH SONGS

UNIT 4 MODERN IRISH MUSIC - PART 3 IRISH SONGS UNIT 4 MODERN IRISH MUSIC: Song Lyrics ONE - U2 Is it getting Or do you feel the Will it make it on you now You got someone to You say One love, One life When it's one In the night One love, We get to

More information

Song: I Want To Hold Your Hand

Song: I Want To Hold Your Hand BEATLES LISTENING Today you are going to be listening to some music by the Beatles. These are songs that we haven t listened to already in music class. Maybe you ve heard them before, maybe you haven t.

More information

Carl Wiser (Songfacts): We got an with some great pictures from the '70s of the Bella Vista.

Carl Wiser (Songfacts): We got an  with some great pictures from the '70s of the Bella Vista. http://www.songfacts.com/blog/interviews/pegi_young/ Pegi Young has been married to Neil Young since 1978. Their son Ben has cerebral palsy, and Pegi spent many years helping to establish the Bridge School,

More information

Marriner thought for a minute. 'Very well, Mr Hewson, let's say this. If your story comes out in The Morning Times, there's five pounds waiting for

Marriner thought for a minute. 'Very well, Mr Hewson, let's say this. If your story comes out in The Morning Times, there's five pounds waiting for The Waxwork It was closing time at Marriner's Waxworks. The last few visitors came out in twos and threes through the big glass doors. But Mr Marriner, the boss, sat in his office, talking to a caller,

More information

YEAR 9. Music. Neston High School

YEAR 9. Music. Neston High School YEAR 9 Music Neston High School Name Class Strand pg. 1 MUSIC LEARNING PROGRESSION YEAR 9 Component 1: Listening to and Understanding Music Component 2: Performing Music Component 3: Composing Music Higher

More information

High Frequency Word Sheets Words 1-10 Words Words Words Words 41-50

High Frequency Word Sheets Words 1-10 Words Words Words Words 41-50 Words 1-10 Words 11-20 Words 21-30 Words 31-40 Words 41-50 and that was said from a with but an go to at word what there in be we do my is this he one your it she all as their for not are by how I the

More information

The Twist was originally on the B side of which artist s record? Instead of The Twist, which song was promoted on the same record?

The Twist was originally on the B side of which artist s record? Instead of The Twist, which song was promoted on the same record? The Twist The Twist was originally on the B side of which artist s record? A: Hank Ballard What musical form did The Twist follow? A: 12 bar blues Instead of The Twist, which song was promoted on the same

More information

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Book Video Chapter 10. Yellow Bird and Me. By Joyce Hansen. Chapter 10 YELLOW BIRD DOES IT AGAIN

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Book Video Chapter 10. Yellow Bird and Me. By Joyce Hansen. Chapter 10 YELLOW BIRD DOES IT AGAIN Yellow Bird and Me By Joyce Hansen Chapter 10 YELLOW BIRD DOES IT AGAIN I pulled my coat tight as I walked to school. It'd soon be time for heavy winter boots. I passed the Beauty Hive as I crossed the

More information

Lexie World (The Three Lost Kids, #1) Chapter 1- Where My Socks Disappear

Lexie World (The Three Lost Kids, #1) Chapter 1- Where My Socks Disappear Lexie World (The Three Lost Kids, #1) by Kimberly Kinrade Illustrated by Josh Evans Chapter 1- Where My Socks Disappear I slammed open the glass door and raced into my kitchen. The smells of dinner cooking

More information

Author's Purpose WS 2 Practice Exercises. Practice 1: Ripples of Energy. Read the selection, and then answer the questions that follow.

Author's Purpose WS 2 Practice Exercises. Practice 1: Ripples of Energy. Read the selection, and then answer the questions that follow. Author's Purpose WS 2 Practice Exercises Practice 1: Ripples of Energy (1) A wave is any movement that carries energy. Some waves carry energy through water. Others carry energy through gases, like air,

More information

Syllabus for Sweet Soul Music: The Golden Age of Soul in the 1960s and 1970s

Syllabus for Sweet Soul Music: The Golden Age of Soul in the 1960s and 1970s Syllabus for Sweet Soul Music: The Golden Age of Soul in the 1960s and 1970s Fromm Institute 7 Wednesdays, 1-3pm September 12-November 7 (no class September 19 and October 10) Instructor: Richie Unterberger,

More information

Sounds of June 7: June 14: June 21:

Sounds of June 7: June 14: June 21: Sounds of 2013 Come and experience Colorado s best live music in our Town Square Every Friday, 6:00 8:00pm, June 7 through August 30, 2013 Note the new, added show on September 6 th! June 7: Nacho Men

More information

Fats Domino. Group Three: Jennifer Day, Tyler Kallevig, Adam Vandenhouten, Duke McGhee, Shelby Stehn, and Alexander Jamow

Fats Domino. Group Three: Jennifer Day, Tyler Kallevig, Adam Vandenhouten, Duke McGhee, Shelby Stehn, and Alexander Jamow Fats Domino Group Three: Jennifer Day, Tyler Kallevig, Adam Vandenhouten, Duke McGhee, Shelby Stehn, and Alexander Jamow Domino s Childhood -Born Antoine Domino February 26, 1928 as the youngest of eight

More information

Most of us listen to music every day, starting from the time when we first snuggled down to a lullaby. Music is part of

Most of us listen to music every day, starting from the time when we first snuggled down to a lullaby. Music is part of Activity One Rules! rey ey Most of us listen to music every day, starting from the time when we first snuggled down to a lullaby. is part of our lives. And the more we listen, the more important music

More information

ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S

ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did Aretha Franklin represent a new female voice in 1960s popular music? OVERVIEW OVERVIEW When Aretha Franklin belted

More information

OK, so when did you change your mind and decide to make a career from music?

OK, so when did you change your mind and decide to make a career from music? Last year the soul community got to know about Toronto-based soul singer TANIKA CHARLES via a lovely ear-worm of a tune, 'Endless Chain'. Investigation revealed that the cut came from her album 'Soul Run'

More information

How Recording Contracts Work by Marshall Brain

How Recording Contracts Work by Marshall Brain How Recording Contracts Work by Marshall Brain So you and your friends can finally call yourselves a real band. You're known at bars, clubs and coffee houses outside of the neighborhood you grew up in.

More information

THE MAGICIAN S SON THE STORY OF THROCKTON CHAPTER 7

THE MAGICIAN S SON THE STORY OF THROCKTON CHAPTER 7 THE MAGICIAN S SON THE STORY OF THROCKTON CHAPTER 7 Throckton and Lundra jumped up and continued to dig. Many times Throckton tried to use his magic, but nothing worked. Finally, he just gave up. This

More information

SimÛn MejÌa, thank you for joining me on Intersections Radio. SARIKA MEHTA: Tell us first a little bit about yourself, and Bomba EstÈreo.

SimÛn MejÌa, thank you for joining me on Intersections Radio. SARIKA MEHTA: Tell us first a little bit about yourself, and Bomba EstÈreo. INTERSECTIONS RADIO INTERVIEW: BOMBA EST REO TRANSCRIPT SARIKA MEHTA: You're listening to Intersections Radio, the podcast where we geek out on all things intersectionality. I'm your host, Sarika Mehta.

More information

congregation would always emote joy and sound better than the choir. SI: They sounded as good [?]

congregation would always emote joy and sound better than the choir. SI: They sounded as good [?] July 26, 1955 Mahalia Jackson interview Interviewed by unknown Swedish interviewer and recorded by William Russell at Mahalia Jackson's home in Chicago. *.' Swedish Interviewer (name unknown-hereafter

More information

LEARNING BY EAR 2012 I am still human- A story of Africa's mentally ill EPISODE 10: A new dawn

LEARNING BY EAR 2012 I am still human- A story of Africa's mentally ill EPISODE 10: A new dawn LEARNING BY EAR 2012 I am still human- A story of Africa's mentally ill EPISODE 10: A new dawn AUTHOR: Chrispin Mwakideu EDITORS: Ludger Schadomsky, Friederike Müller PROOFREADER: Sabina Casagrande List

More information

Past Simple Questions

Past Simple Questions Past Simple Questions Find your sentence: Who? What? Janet Chris Mary Paul Liz John Susan Victor wrote a letter read a book ate an apple drank some milk drew a house made a model plane took some photos

More information

Let me tell you a story

Let me tell you a story Let me tell you a story On the day my husband and I got married, one of the things at the forefront of my mind was what my dad would say during his speech. During previous weddings I'd attended, one part

More information

TAINTED LIFE: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY MARC ALMOND

TAINTED LIFE: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY MARC ALMOND TAINTED LIFE: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY MARC ALMOND DOWNLOAD EBOOK : TAINTED LIFE: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY MARC ALMOND Click link bellow and free register to download ebook: TAINTED LIFE: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY

More information

Song Lyrics. The Dover House Singers invite you to an. Wednesday 28th March pm St. Margaret s Church Hall, Putney Park Lane, SW15 5HU

Song Lyrics. The Dover House Singers invite you to an. Wednesday 28th March pm St. Margaret s Church Hall, Putney Park Lane, SW15 5HU The Dover House Singers invite you to an g n o l a g n i S Song Lyrics Wednesday 28th March 7.30-9.30pm St. Margaret s Church Hall, Putney Park Lane, SW15 5HU Visit our website: www.doverhousesingers.co.uk

More information

TIGHTEN UP YOUR WIG. From the 1968 release "The Second" Words and music by John Kay

TIGHTEN UP YOUR WIG. From the 1968 release The Second Words and music by John Kay TIGHTEN UP YOUR WIG What can you see with your ear on the ground Try to lift up your feet, girl, and take a look around Let me see your eyes girl We've got to make them big If you'd like to see the truth

More information

RSS - 1 FLUENCY ACTIVITIES

RSS - 1 FLUENCY ACTIVITIES RSS - 1 FLUENCY ACTIVITIES Directions: Included are a series of Really Silly Stories (RSS) broken into sections. 50 to 60-word sections. Students are to read one section every day. In each section, 30

More information

THE TIN MAN TALKS... THE AARON PARNELL BROWN INTERVIEW. Written by Bill B Saturday, 04 July :51 - Last Updated Saturday, 04 July :18

THE TIN MAN TALKS... THE AARON PARNELL BROWN INTERVIEW. Written by Bill B Saturday, 04 July :51 - Last Updated Saturday, 04 July :18 Without doubt one of the truest "SOUL" albums of 2015 so far has been 'The Tin Man' from AARON PARNELL BROWN. The complex but concise nine tracker has won the hearts of underground soul lovers since UK

More information

2018 English Entrance Exam for Returnees

2018 English Entrance Exam for Returnees 2018 English Entrance Exam for Returnees Do not open the test book until instructed to do so! Notes The exam is 45 minutes long. The exam has 4 sections. These are: 1. Listening 2. Vocabulary & Grammar

More information

THE 'ZERO' CONDITIONAL

THE 'ZERO' CONDITIONAL 17 THE 'ZERO' CONDITIONAL 1. Form In 'zero' conditional sentences, the tense in both parts of the sentence is the simple present: 'IF' CLAUSE (CONDITION) MAIN CLAUSE (RESULT) If + simple present If you

More information

TOM DOOLEY. Table of Contents

TOM DOOLEY. Table of Contents Table of Contents TOM DOOLEY...1 MY BONNIE LIES OVER THE OCEAN...2 HE'S GOT THE WHOLE WORLD IN HIS HAND...3 ROCK MY SOUL IN THE BOSSOM OF ABRAHAM...3 YOU ARE MY SUNSHINE...4 RED RIVER VALLEY...5 EDELWEISS...5

More information

AMERICAN POP MUSIC THE EARLY 50 S

AMERICAN POP MUSIC THE EARLY 50 S AMERICAN POP MUSIC THE EARLY 50 S OVERVIEW EARLY 1950 S In general, the 50 s were prosperous times in America Stable economy No active war Emphasis on going to college, getting married, and raising a family

More information

And all that glitters is gold Only shooting stars break the mold. Gonna Be

And all that glitters is gold Only shooting stars break the mold. Gonna Be Allstar Somebody once told me the world is gonna roll me I ain't the sharpest tool in the shed She was looking kind of dumb with her finger and her thumb In the shape of an "L" on her forehead Well the

More information

Amanda Cater - poems -

Amanda Cater - poems - Poetry Series - poems - Publication Date: 2006 Publisher: Poemhunter.com - The World's Poetry Archive (5-5-89) I love writing poems and i love reading poems. I love making new friends and i love listening

More information

Written by Charles Waring Tuesday, 08 October :04 - Last Updated Thursday, 14 November :36

Written by Charles Waring Tuesday, 08 October :04 - Last Updated Thursday, 14 November :36 It's sixty years this year since the Four Tops, without doubt one of the greatest vocal groups that the world has ever heard, were formed in Detroit, Michigan. Founder members Levi Stubbs, Abdul 'Duke'

More information

...so you don't just sit! POB Ames, IA / / fax 4

...so you don't just sit! POB Ames, IA / / fax 4 ...so you don't just sit! POB 742 4 Ames, IA 4 50010-0742 4 515/232-1247 4 515/232-3729 fax 4 al@alsmusic.com Al tackles one of the toughest questions a DJ ever has to answer: What kind of music do you

More information

The Movies Written by Annie Lewis

The Movies Written by Annie Lewis The Movies Written by Annie Lewis Copyright (c) 2015 FADE IN: INT. MOVIE THEATER - NIGHT,, and, all of them 16, stand at the very end of a moderate line to the ticket booth. As they speak, they move forward,

More information

Article at

Article at Article at http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/story/entertainment/2016/12/24/brianmcknight-celebrating-new-joy-love/95819348/ Brian McKnight is a legend of R&B whose music has helped couples around the

More information

The following is a selection of monologues we suggest you use for the 2016 Performance Lab Auditions.

The following is a selection of monologues we suggest you use for the 2016 Performance Lab Auditions. The following is a selection of monologues we suggest you use for the 2016 Performance Lab Auditions. You do not need to use these suggestions, you may choose to use a monologue from a school production

More information

Inside. February 2017 CEDAR GROVE MIDDLE SCHOOL. Welcome to Communities In Schools After School Program Newsletter!

Inside. February 2017 CEDAR GROVE MIDDLE SCHOOL. Welcome to Communities In Schools After School Program Newsletter! February 2017 CEDAR GROVE MIDDLE SCHOOL Welcome to Communities In Schools After School Program Newsletter! This month we have a lot to share! The holiday s are over and we are looking forward to all that

More information

Episode 8, 2012: Tumbling Tumbleweeds

Episode 8, 2012: Tumbling Tumbleweeds Episode 8, 2012: Tumbling Tumbleweeds Gene: I m Gene Newberry and I just love everything Western. I love everything Western so much that I ve created my own little town. I have a stage stop, the mercantile

More information

Lit Up Sky. No, Jackson, I reply through gritted teeth. I m seriously starting to regret the little promise I made

Lit Up Sky. No, Jackson, I reply through gritted teeth. I m seriously starting to regret the little promise I made 1 Lit Up Sky Scared yet, Addy? the most annoying voice in existence taunts. No, Jackson, I reply through gritted teeth. I m seriously starting to regret the little promise I made myself earlier tonight.

More information

SONG OF THE DAY LXXVIII

SONG OF THE DAY LXXVIII SONG OF THE DAY LXXVIII Today we are going to go back to a song that was never officially released on any Led Zeppelin album, yet, despite this obstacle, it was one of their most popular songs, not only

More information

from The Worship Drama Library Volume 2 By Mike and Colleen Gray

from The Worship Drama Library Volume 2 By Mike and Colleen Gray Lillenas Drama Presents HE D LAUGH AT ME! from The Worship Drama Library Volume 2 By Mike and Colleen Gray Theme: God s acceptance regardless of our past, God s complete forgiveness Characters: Two women

More information

Why have you called the new album FORWARD?

Why have you called the new album FORWARD? Brit soul perennials, THE BRAND NEW HEAVIES are all set to release a brand-new album 'FORWARD' (see our reviews archive). With it being a full six years since their last release SJF felt it was time to

More information

10-11 Small Group Musical Theatre / Character 9: Duo-Trio Lyrical 9: Duo-Trio Jazz 9:07. 5 & Under Solo Lyrical 9: Solo Jazz 9:22

10-11 Small Group Musical Theatre / Character 9: Duo-Trio Lyrical 9: Duo-Trio Jazz 9:07. 5 & Under Solo Lyrical 9: Solo Jazz 9:22 SESSION I Start Time: 2/17/2018 9:00:00 AM 10-11 Small Group Musical Theatre / Character 9:00 1 B Do You Love Me 6-7 Duo-Trio Lyrical 9:04 2 C Do You Want to Build a Snowman 6-7 Duo-Trio Jazz 9:07 3 C

More information

CALVIN RICHARDSON AMERICA S MOST WANTED SOUL MAN. Calvin Richardson is one of the most talented artists in the business.

CALVIN RICHARDSON AMERICA S MOST WANTED SOUL MAN. Calvin Richardson is one of the most talented artists in the business. CALVIN RICHARDSON AMERICA S MOST WANTED SOUL MAN Calvin Richardson is one of the most talented artists in the business. Charlie Wilson Whether categorized as retro-soul, neo-soul or simply soul, the decade-plus

More information

The loss of Johnny J is not only a loss for hip hop and R&B but to the many who knew him on a personal level also.

The loss of Johnny J is not only a loss for hip hop and R&B but to the many who knew him on a personal level also. The loss of legendary hip hop and R&B producer Johnny J on Oct.3 rd has touch many in the hip hop and R&B community. Johnny J was well known and respected and his work, not only with Tupac (2Pac) but for

More information

P.O. Box 1420, LaVergne, TN (p) (f) (e)

P.O. Box 1420, LaVergne, TN (p) (f) (e) Russ Taff was born the fourth of five sons to a fire-breathing Pentecostal preacher father and a gospel musicloving mother. He learned early on that when he sang, people sat up and responded with feeling.

More information

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11 Child s name (first & last) after* about along a lot accept a* all* above* also across against am also* across* always afraid American and* an add another afternoon although as are* after* anything almost

More information

SURVIVAL TIPS FOR FAMILY GATHERINGS

SURVIVAL TIPS FOR FAMILY GATHERINGS SURVIVAL TIPS FOR FAMILY GATHERINGS Beth Wilson We all have this idea that every time the family gets together, it is going to be like a Normal Rockwell painting. Everyone will be happy and enjoy each

More information

JOHNNY 'J' DOCUMENTARY PROPOSAL THE MAN BEHIND THE MUSIC

JOHNNY 'J' DOCUMENTARY PROPOSAL THE MAN BEHIND THE MUSIC JOHNNY 'J' DOCUMENTARY PROPOSAL THE MAN BEHIND THE MUSIC KLOCK WORK Entertainment Presents JOHNNY J Legend: The Man Behind the Music A Documentary Proposal CONTENTS Synopsis----------------------------------------

More information

TEXT 6 Dear Mama Tupac Shakur

TEXT 6 Dear Mama Tupac Shakur TEXT 6 Dear Mama Tupac Shakur 1 You are appreciated When I was young, me and my mama had beef 17 years old, kicked out on the streets Though back at the time I never thought I'd see her face 5 Ain't a

More information

Event Lighting Entertainment - Stage &Set - Conference AV - Dance floors - Team Building Activities

Event Lighting Entertainment - Stage &Set - Conference AV - Dance floors - Team Building Activities Harris & Day Harris and Day are a Fantastically funny double act that present a wow factor packed evening of Entertainment at every event, function or venue. Their show is full of stunning harmonic vocal

More information

Little Jack receives his Call to Adventure

Little Jack receives his Call to Adventure 1 7 Male Actors: Little Jack Tom Will Ancient One Steven Chad Kevin 2 or more Narrators: Guys or Girls Narrator : We are now going to hear another story about sixth-grader Jack. Narrator : Watch how his

More information

Written by Sally Rosen - OFC Contributor - Last Updated Monday, 26 September :44

Written by Sally Rosen - OFC Contributor - Last Updated Monday, 26 September :44 Memphis Crawl September 25, 2011. OFC recently did a Q&A with Matty O'Brien, front man for rock n roll's best kept secret - Memphis Crawl! Based out of NYC, these fellas are bringing southern rock n roll

More information

HAPPINESS TO BURN by Jenny Van West Music / bmi. All rights reserved

HAPPINESS TO BURN by Jenny Van West Music / bmi. All rights reserved HAPPINESS TO BURN I got my old sweetheart back in my arms again, and That good Mr. Bluebird he s working his charms again And Lady Luck, she s taking her sweet old turn And I got happiness, happiness to

More information

5 Royales. Power Point For Language Arts/Social Studies Unit. This PowerPoint goes with the school show

5 Royales. Power Point For Language Arts/Social Studies Unit. This PowerPoint goes with the school show 5 Royales Power Point For Language Arts/Social Studies Unit This PowerPoint goes with the school show For more information, visit www.carolinamusicways.org. Carolina Music Ways 2018 Credit requested when

More information

I HAD TO STAY IN BED. PRINT PAGE 161. Chapter 11

I HAD TO STAY IN BED. PRINT PAGE 161. Chapter 11 PRINT PAGE 161. Chapter 11 I HAD TO STAY IN BED a whole week after that. That bugged me; I'm not the kind that can lie around looking at the ceiling all the time. I read most of the time, and drew pictures.

More information

Transcript of Keith Urban interview with CircaNow radio, recorded June 24, 2011

Transcript of Keith Urban interview with CircaNow radio, recorded June 24, 2011 Transcript of Keith Urban interview with CircaNow radio, recorded June 24, 2011 Q: Your new album came out last year, and the song Without You seems to be particularly interesting to you because of the

More information

Can Rock and Roll Save America?

Can Rock and Roll Save America? Can Rock and Roll Save America? Five Environmental Songs: To Trigger Political and Social-Change Discussions Our first mini-guide presents five environmental songs for exploration. These are from the 1960s

More information

rey If you think about it, you ve probably listened to music every day of your life, starting from the time when you first snuggled Music Rules!

rey If you think about it, you ve probably listened to music every day of your life, starting from the time when you first snuggled Music Rules! Activity One If you think about it, you ve probably listened to music every day of your life, starting from the time when you first snuggled down to a lullaby. That s thousands and thousands of songs,

More information

Pre-Advanced 2 Unit 3. Activity 4 Activity 5 Activity 6

Pre-Advanced 2 Unit 3. Activity 4 Activity 5 Activity 6 Pre-Advanced 2 Unit 3 Activity 1 Activity 2 Activity 3 Activity 4 Activity 5 Activity 6 Activity 7 Go to online version of the activity. Go back to this menu. Activity 1 You re a what? Part A: Find 12

More information

PEOPLE WHO LIE. written by. Xavier Gonzalez

PEOPLE WHO LIE. written by. Xavier Gonzalez PEOPLE WHO LIE written by Xavier Gonzalez REVISION 10 xgonzalez93@yahoo.com January 15, 2009 Copyright 2009 All Rights Reserved FADE IN: INT. THERAPIST'S OFFICE- DAY (Tall, okay looking, well groomed,

More information

On August 24 Lucie Silvas will release E.G.O., her fourth album and her follow up to her critically-acclaimed and roots-infused Ghosts

On August 24 Lucie Silvas will release E.G.O., her fourth album and her follow up to her critically-acclaimed and roots-infused Ghosts On August 24 Lucie Silvas will release E.G.O., her fourth album and her follow up to her critically-acclaimed and roots-infused Letters to Ghosts. E.G.O. is an exquisite blend of soul and funk and blues,

More information

RICHARD SMALLWOOD & VISION

RICHARD SMALLWOOD & VISION RICHARD SMALLWOOD & VISION Richard Smallwood Richard Smallwood is a legend in his own time! After four decades as one of the most popular inspirational artists in the music business, with classic tunes

More information

STUCK. written by. Steve Meredith

STUCK. written by. Steve Meredith STUCK written by Steve Meredith StevenEMeredith@gmail.com Scripped scripped.com January 22, 2011 Copyright (c) 2011 Steve Meredith All Rights Reserved INT-OFFICE BUILDING-DAY A man and a woman wait for

More information

LEVEL B Week 10-Weekend Homework

LEVEL B Week 10-Weekend Homework LEVEL B Use of Language 1) USES: Advice (A), Making plans and thinking about the future (P) Decide on the use for each sentence, A or P and then fill the gap using the verb in brackets. Three sentences

More information

Thinking Involving Very Large and Very Small Quantities

Thinking Involving Very Large and Very Small Quantities Thinking Involving Very Large and Very Small Quantities For most of human existence, we lived in small groups and were unaware of things that happened outside of our own villages and a few nearby ones.

More information

UNIT 3 Past simple OJ Circle the right words in each sentence.

UNIT 3 Past simple OJ Circle the right words in each sentence. UNIT 1 Present simple and present continuous OJ Cross out the wrong words in bold. Write the 1 We are always making our homework together because we are in the same class. 2 You can walk around your town

More information

MIT Alumni Books Podcast Somewhere There Is Still a Sun

MIT Alumni Books Podcast Somewhere There Is Still a Sun MIT Alumni Books Podcast Somewhere There Is Still a Sun [SLICE OF MIT THEME MUSIC] ANNOUNCER: You're listening to the Slice of MIT Podcast, a production of the MIT Alumni Association. JOE This is the MIT

More information

Wymondham Ukulele Group Elvis & Buddy Holly Songbook

Wymondham Ukulele Group Elvis & Buddy Holly Songbook Wymondham Ukulele roup Elvis & Buddy Holly Songbook 2018 All Shook Up 2 Maybe Baby 16 Return To Sender 4 Teddy Bear 17 Peggy Sue 6 The Wonder Of You 18 Don t Be ruel 7 Wooden Heart 19 Rave On 9 Peggy Sue

More information

Big Life. Paul Calandrino Characters. Brad - 30s Angelina - 30s

Big Life. Paul Calandrino Characters. Brad - 30s Angelina - 30s Big Life Paul Calandrino calandrino@comcast.net Characters Brad - 30s Angelina - 30s The actors should be plain looking, nothing like Brad Pitt or Angelina Jolie. Time and Place Present A parked car 1

More information

The original and the best celebration of Motown s Greatest Hits is coming to a town near you!

The original and the best celebration of Motown s Greatest Hits is coming to a town near you! The original and the best celebration of Motown s Greatest Hits is coming to a town near you! Join the original and the best celebration of Motown s Greatest Hits with the spectacular, critically acclaimed

More information