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
(Page 2 of 5)
He talked about his life and the music and the people of Motown, his reminiscences burbling forth—stories animated with humor, snatches of songs and imitations of instruments. He told how he shirked piano practice as a child, preferring instead to compose boogie-woogie riffs by ear, and consequently never learned to read music. He recalled how 18-year-old Mary Wells badgered him at a nightclub one evening about a song she had written. After hearing her husky voice, Gordy persuaded her to record it herself, launching Wells on a course that made her Motown’s first female star.
A music lover since his tender years, Gordy didn’t set out to build a record company. He dropped out of high school when he was a junior and spent a decade finding his niche. Born in 1929, the seventh of eight children, he inherited an entrepreneurial instinct from his father. Gordy senior ran a plastering and carpentry business and owned the Booker T. Washington Grocery Store. The family lived above the store, and as soon as the kids could see over the counter, they went to work serving customers. Young Berry hawked watermelons from his father’s truck in the summer and shined shoes on downtown streets after school. On Christmas Eve, he and his brothers would huddle around an oil-can fire selling trees until late in the evening.
After quitting school, Gordy stepped into the boxing ring, hoping to pummel his way to fame and fortune like Detroit’s Joe Louis, every black boy’s hero in the 1940s. Short and scrappy, Gordy put in a tenacious but ultimately unrewarding few years before being drafted. When he returned from the Army, where he earned his high school equivalency diploma, he opened a record store specializing in jazz. Set on attracting an urbane audience, he eschewed the earthy, foot-stomping music of singers like John Lee Hooker and Fats Domino. Ironically, it was just what his customers wanted, but Gordy was slow to catch on, and his store failed.
He found work on the Ford Motor Company assembly line, earning about $85 a week attaching chrome strips to Lincolns and Mercurys. To relieve the tedium of the job, he made up songs and melodies as the cars rolled by. In the late ’50s Gordy frequented Detroit’s black nightclubs, establishing his presence, peddling his songs and mentoring other songwriters. His big break came when he met Jackie Wilson, a flamboyant singer with matinee-idol looks who had just launched a solo career. Gordy wrote several hit songs for Wilson, including “Reet Petite,” “Lonely Teardrops” and “That is Why.” It was during this time that he also met William (Smokey) Robinson, a handsome, green-eyed teenager with a mellow falsetto voice and a notebook full of songs.
Gordy helped Robinson’s group, the Miracles, and other local wannabes find gigs and studios to cut records, which they sold or leased to big companies for distribution. There wasn’t much money in it, however, because the industry regularly exploited struggling musicians and songwriters. It was Robinson who persuaded Gordy to set up his own company.
Such a venture was a major step. Ever since the dawn of the recording industry at the turn of the century, small companies, and especially black-owned companies, had found it almost impossible to compete in a business dominated by a few giants who could afford better promotion and distribution. Another frustration was the industry’s policy of designating everything recorded by blacks as “race” music and marketing it only to black communities.
By the mid-50s the phrase “rhythm and blues” was being used to refer to black music, and “covers” of R&B music began flooding the mainstream. Essentially a remake of an original recording, the cover version was sung, in this instance, by a white performer. Marketed to a large white audience as popular, or “pop,” music, the cover often outsold the original, which had been distributed only to blacks. Elvis Presley rose to prominence on such covers as “Hound Dog” and “Shake, Rattle and Roll;” Pat Boone “covered” several R&B artists, including Fats Domino. Covers and skewed marketing for R&B music posed formidable challenges for black recording artists. To make big money, Gordy’s records would have to attract white buyers; he had to break out of the R&B market and cross over to the more lucrative pop charts.
Gordy founded Motown with $800 that he borrowed from his family’s savings club. He bought a two-story house on West Grand Boulevard, then an integrated street of middle-class residences and a sprinkling of small businesses. He lived upstairs and worked downstairs, moving in some used recording equipment and giving the house a new coat of white paint. Remembering his days on the assembly line, he envisioned a “hit factory.” “I wanted an artist to go in one door as an unknown and come out another a star,” he told me. He christened the house “Hitsville U.S.A,” spelled out in large blue letters across the front.
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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