Motown Turns 50
For years, the recording industry excluded black artists. Along came Motown, and suddenly everyone was singing its tunes
- By Marian Smith Holmes
- Smithsonian.com, September 29, 2009, Subscribe
Editor’s note: It’s been 50 years since Berry Gordy founded Motown, a record company that launched scores of careers, created a signature sound in popular music and even helped bridge the racial divide. This article first appeared in the October 1994 issue of Smithsonian; it has been edited and updated in honor of the anniversary.
It was nearly 3 A.M. but Berry Gordy couldn’t sleep. That recording kept echoing in his head, and every time he heard it he winced. The tempo dragged, the vocals weren’t perky enough, it just didn’t have the edge. Finally, he got out of bed and went downstairs to the homemade studio of his struggling record company. He grabbed the phone and rang his protégé Smokey Robinson, who had written the lyrics and sang lead with a little-known group called the Miracles: “Look, man, we’ve got to do this song again . . . now . . . tonight!” Robinson protested, reminding Gordy that the record had been distributed to stores and was being played on the radio. Gordy persisted, and soon he had rounded up the singers and the band, all except the pianist. Determined to go ahead with the session, he played the piano himself.
Under Gordy’s direction, the musicians picked up the tempo, and Robinson pepped up his delivery of the lyrics, which recounted a mother’s advice to her son on finding a loving bride: “Try to get yourself a bargain son, don’t be sold on the very first one . . . . ” The improved version of “Shop Around” was what Gordy wanted—bouncy and irresistibly danceable. Released in December 1960, it soared to No. 2 on Billboard’s pop chart and sold more than a million copies to become the company’s first gold record. “Shop Around” was the opening salvo in a barrage of smash hits in the 1960s that turned Gordy’s humble studio into a multimillion-dollar corporation and added a dynamic new word to the lexicon of American music: “Motown.”
Gordy, a Detroit native, started the company in 1959, deriving its name from the familiar moniker “Motor City.” Motown combined elements of blues, gospel, swing, and pop with a thumping backbeat for a new dance music that was instantly recognizable. Competing for teen attention primarily against records by the Beatles, who were at the height of their popularity, Motown radically altered the public’s perception of black music, which for years had been kept out of the mainstream.
White youths as well as black were captivated by the rhythmic new sound, though the musicians who produced it were black and many of the performers were teenagers from Detroit’s housing projects and rundown neighborhoods. Prodding and grooming those raw talents, Gordy transformed them into a roster of dazzling artists who stunned the pop music world. The Supremes, Mary Wells, the Temptations, the Miracles, the Contours, Stevie Wonder, the Marvelettes, Diana Ross, Marvin Gaye, Martha and the Vandellas, the Four Tops, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Michael Jackson—those were just some of the performers who had people singing and dancing all over the world.
In 1963, when I was in junior high school and completely infatuated with Motown music, I persuaded my dad to drive me past Hitsville U.S.A., which is what Gordy called the little house where he did his recording. We had just moved to Detroit from the East Coast, and the possibility of seeing some of the music makers was the only thing that soothed the pain of relocation. I was disappointed to find not one star lolling about the yard, as was rumored to happen, but a few months later my dream came true at the Motown Christmas show in downtown Detroit. A girlfriend and I queued up at the Fox Theater for an hour one chilly morning and paid $2.50 to see the revue. We rocked our shoulders, snapped our fingers, danced in our seats and sang along as act after act lit up the stage. I grew hoarse from screaming for the fancy footwork of the Temptations and the romantic crooning of Smokey Robinson. Today I still burst into song whenever I hear a Motown tune.
No longer star-struck but still awed by the company’s unparalleled success, I recently visited Gordy at his hilltop mansion in Bel-Air, an opulent enclave of Los Angles. We settled into a stately sitting room furnished with a plump damask sofa and large armchairs. An array of black-and-white photographs of family, Motown celebrities and other stars adorned the walls. Gordy was dressed casually in an olive-green sweatsuit. His 1950s processed pompadour has given way to a graying, thinning close-cut, but he remains exuberant and passionate about his music.
Twice during our conversation he steered me to the photographs, once to point out a youthful Berry with singer Billie Holiday at a Detroit nightclub, and again to show himself with Doris Day. Brash and irrepressible, he had sent Day a copy of the very first song he had written, almost 50 years ago, certain she would record it. She did not, but Gordy still remembers the lyrics, and, without any prodding from me, rendered the ballad in his trilling tenor voice. His bearded face erupted into an impish grin as he finished. “With me you might get anything,” he chuckled. “You never know.”
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Comments (6)
To this day Motown is the best music to dance,sing, and be happy to. I do karaoke and feel I am part of history doing Motown tunes on stage.This music will never die. God bless Barry Gordy for making the world a better place to live.
Posted by al avallone on February 1,2010 | 12:02 AM
I still listen to Motown, Smokey is the greatest song writer, my favorite is I'll Try Something New.
Posted by Robyn Clanton on February 1,2010 | 07:01 PM
My parents grew up listening to Motown, I grew up listening to Motown. The music is contagious, you can't help but sing along, snap your fingers or just move to the infectious beats. Hitsville U.S.A. is properly honored in this article. It amazes me that all it took was music to assist our country in racial equality. Great article!
Posted by Kristin on November 13,2009 | 09:42 AM
As a music fiend and lover of r&b and soul music, I grew up listening to Motown’s greatest. I am forever grateful for the quality entertainers that it allowed to make it the music industry, from the Temptations and the Supremes to Michael Jackson. Motown allowed for many talented artists/groups to shine through their trade. Thanks Motown for making real music.
Posted by Smoove on November 11,2009 | 12:21 AM
MOTOWN HAS PROVIDED SO MANY OPPORTUNITIES TO ARTISTS PAST AND PRESENT.ALL PEOPLE HAVE BEEN BLESSED WITH THEIR BEAUTIFUL MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT.IT ALWAYS ATTRACTED AN INTERNATIONAL APPEAL AND IN 1998 I WENT TO A MOTOWN REVIEW IN ADDIS ABABA,ETHIOPIA.
THEY SANG MANY OF THE SONGS OF THE ARTISTS MALE AND FEMALE.THEY ENJOYED SINGING,DRESSING AND DANCING LIKE THE TEMPTATIONS, ARETHA FRANKIN,SUPREMES AND ESPECIALLY MICHAEL JACKSON.RECENTLY I VISITED THE COTTON CLUB AND APOLLO THEATRE IN HARLEM,NEW YORK CITY.THE TOUR,DINNER AND GOSPEL CONCERT WAS ORGANIZED BY (BIG)BLACKS IN GOVERNMENT LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CHAPTER PRESIDENT DARLENE FLOWERS.THE GROUP OF A HUNDRED PEOPLE FELT THAT IT WAS ALL GOOD.AWESOME!!!
MOTOWN ARTISTS DOMINATE THE PHOTO COLLAGE.IT IS EVIDENT THEY WERE THE DRIVING FORCE OF SOUL POWER AND PRIDE OF ALL THE WORLDS MUSIC LOVERS.OUR D.C.HOMEBOY MARVIN GAYE WAS AN AMAZING GRACE. - THANKS TO MOTOWN.
Posted by VOLUNTEER on October 30,2009 | 05:36 PM
I was always curious about the allegation surround Florence Ballard leaving Supremes and eventually dying behind what has transpired behind her been removed from.
However despite the bad publicity I believe on the great music studio this would ever see or hear about despite all the issue that surrounding the Temptations and Supremes just to name a few. Will do down in history as on the great producers that ever lives. Berry afforded so many under privileged “BLACK” children a chance of a life time.
I thank God for imparting that gift into Berry Gordy.
Posted by Cassianna Williams on October 26,2009 | 07:05 PM