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Motown Greatest Hits

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Mary Wells was, in the words of her biographer, “Motown’s first superstar”. Discovered and brought to the company by Robert Bateman of the Satintones in 1960, her first two singles made the R&B Top 10 R&B and she had the honour of launching the series of albums on the Motown label that continues to this day. Then there came a glitch: her third single failed to chart at all. A change of direction was called for, and Berry Gordy handed studio control over to Smokey Robinson, then untested as a writer and producer apart from work with his own group, the Miracles. The resulting single, ‘The One Who Really Loves You’, not only reached #2 on the R&B charts, it also made the Top 10 Pop. Motown had a crossover artist. The Ace CD “Love & Desire” puts together all of Patrice’s Capitol singles, plus her VIP single, with 14 Motown recordings unreleased at the time, 10 appearing for the first time here. The essay by Dennis Garvey contains tributes and reminiscences from a galaxy of West Coast stars who worked with her, led by sister Brenda. In the mid-60s, Barrett Strong became the lyrical lynchpin for the symphonic songs of Norman Whitfield, but before that he was quite something as a singer-songwriter, delivering this massive monetary smash in 1961, as covered by The Beatles on their With The Beatles album. 28: Please Mr. Postman (The Marvelettes) Marvin’s third vocal partner, Tammi Terrell, gave him something dazzling to bounce off, and both singers shine on this glorious affirmation of love gone good, laid in 1968. Some emotions remain eternal. 32: I Was Made To Love Her (Stevie Wonder)

Selected items are only available for delivery via the Royal Mail 48® service and other items are available for delivery using this service for a charge.An early marker of success for up and coming super-producer Norman Whitfield, this irresistible single was one of just two US Hot 100 entries for a girl group signed to a record company awash with them. Perhaps The Velvelettes needed more attention, or to shout louder – but they surely had talent to spare. 47: There’s A Ghost In My House (R Dean Taylor)

The Isley Brothers only recorded songs for Motown for a short time, but they made a mighty impact with this pleading Holland–Dozier–Holland gem. It would go on to be covered countless times in the following decades. 52: Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology) (Marvin Gaye) Shorty Long, like the Spinners, was acquired by Motown when Harvey Fuqua’s Tri-Phi company folded in 1963. He’d had three unsuccessful singles during his 18-month stint with the label. His first single on the Soul label, the sly ‘Devil With The Blue Dress’, bubbled under the Billboard Hot 100 but his second failed completely, although ‘Function At The Junction’ got into the Top 50, as did ‘Night Fo’ Last’ at the beginning of 1968. The breakthrough came with his next disc. Berry Gordy thought Motown should have a record based on the Pigmeat Markham catchphrase, “Here comes the judge”, used every week in the hugely popular Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In TV show. Shorty and his frequent collaborator Sylvia Moy came up with a song, and despite Markham’s bringing his own song out a couple of weeks later, Shorty beat him hands down, taking his version into the Top 10 on the Pop and R&B charts. He was duly rewarded with an LP which demonstrated his skills as a writer, singer, instrumentalist and moreover producer, the last a rare distinction among Motown artists: even Marvin Gaye was not to get a producer credit until “What’s Going On”. How Shorty’s career might have developed after this there is no telling: he was drowned in a boating accident on 29 June 1969.

51: I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch) (The Four Tops)

was not only the year in which Berry Gordy acquired the Fuqua stable of artists, it was the year in which he opened the first Motown office outside Detroit. Motown L.A. was staffed by Hal Davis and Marc Gordon, and their first signings were sisters Brenda and Patrice Holloway. The younger sister had already tasted local chart success with her dance-craze single, ‘Do The Del Viking’, billed as by Little 12 Year Old Patrice Holloway. Her name was linked, perhaps romantically and perhaps for publicity reasons, with that of another 12 year-old star, Little Stevie Wonder, then visiting the coast to appear in a beach movie and cut an album; that led to Patrice launching Motown’s VIP imprint with ‘Stevie’ / ‘(He Is) The Boy Of My Dreams’. The disc was abruptly withdrawn for reasons now forgotten, but Patrice carried on recording for Motown for another 15 months without seeing another release. By 1966 she was signed to Capitol, where she had five singles over the next six years, none of them making the charts. Then the illness that was to plague her for the rest of her life descended, and she never recorded again. She died in 2006. The legendary Motown label was founded on January 12, 1959 and incorporated as Motown Recording Corporation on April 14, 1960 by Berry Gordy, Jr., who merged his two successful imprints, Tamla (whose first release was Marv Johnson's "Come to Me" on January 21, 1959) and Motown (first release was the Miracles' "Bad Girl" on September 6, 1959). It was one of the most successful independent record companies in history. Its stable of hit-making artists such as The Miracles, The Supremes, The Temptations and many, many others, along with a talented staff of musicians and songwriters, collectively created the "Motown Sound," a world famous hybrid of soul, doo-wop, rhythm & blues and pop. Its motto was "The Sound of Young America". Smokey Robinson’s group had a nice line in hand-me-down advice songs before he became the king of emotional metaphors, as this miraculous sliver of 1960 R&B testifies. Mama knows best: don’t fall for the first lover you meet. 29: Money (That’s What I Want) (Barrett Strong)

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