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 3 of 5)
Gordy didn’t start out with a magic formula for hit records, but early on a distinct sound did evolve. Influenced by many types of African-American music—jazz, gospel, blues, R&B, doo-wop harmonies—Motown musicians cultivated a pounding backbeat, an infectious rhythm that kept teenagers gyrating on the dance floor. To pianist Joe Hunter, the music had “a beat you could feel and could hum in the shower. You couldn’t hum Charlie Parker, but you could hum Berry Gordy.”
Hunter was one of many Detroit jazzmen Gordy lured to Motown. Typically, the untrained Gordy would play a few chords on the piano to give the musicians a hint of what was in his head; then they would flesh it out. Eventually, a group of those jazz players became Motown’s in-house band, the Funk Brothers. It was their innovative fingerwork on bass, piano, drums and saxophone, backed up by handclaps and the steady jangling of tambourines that became the core of the “Motown Sound.”
Adding words to the mix fell to the company’s stable of producers and writers, who were adroit at penning squeaky-clean lyrics about young love—yearning for it, celebrating it, losing it, getting it back. Smokey Robinson and the team of Lamont Dozier and brothers Eddie and Brian Holland, known as HDH, were especially prolific, churning out hit after hit chock-full of rhyme and hyperbole. The Temptations sang about “sunshine on a cloudy day” and a girl’s “smile so bright” she “could’ve been a candle.” The Supremes would watch a lover “walk down the street, knowing another love you’d meet.”
Spontaneity and creative wackiness were standard at Motown. The Hitsville house, open round the clock, became a hangout. If one group needed more backup voices or more tambourines during a recording session, someone was always available. Before the Supremes ever scored a hit, they were often summoned to provide the insistent handclapping heard on many Motown records. No gimmick was off limits. The loud thumping at the beginning of the Supremes’ “Where Did Our Love Go” is literally the footwork of Motown extras stomping on wooden planks. The tinkling lead notes on one Temptations record came from a toy piano. Little bells, heavy chains, maracas and just about anything that would shake or rattle were employed to boost the rhythm.
An echo chamber was rigged up in an upstairs room, but occasionally the microphone picked up an unintended sound effect: noisy plumbing from the adjacent bathroom. In her memoirs, Diana Ross recalls “singing my heart out beside the toilet bowl” when her microphone was put in it to achieve an echo effect. “It looked like chaos, but the music came out wonderful,” Motown saxophonist Thomas (Beans) Bowles mused recently.
Integrating symphonic strings with the rhythm band was another technique that helped Motown cross over from R&B to pop. When Gordy first hired string players, members of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, they balked at requests to play odd or dissonant arrangements. “This is wrong, this is never done,” they’d say. “But that’s what I like, I want to hear that,” Gordy insisted. “I don’t care about the rules because I don’t know what they are.” Some musicians stalked out. “But when we started getting hits with strings, they loved it.”
The people who built Motown recall Hitsville in the early years as a “home away from home,” in the words of the Supremes’ Mary Wilson. It was “more like being adopted by a big loving family than being hired by a company,” the Temptations’ Otis Williams wrote. Gordy, a decade or so older than many of the performers, was the patriarch of the whole rambunctious bunch. When the music makers weren’t working they loafed on the front porch or played Ping-Pong, poker or a game of catch. They cooked lunch at the house—chili or spaghetti or anything that could be stretched. Meetings ended with a rousing chorus of the company song, written by Smokey Robinson: “Oh, we have a very swinging company / working hard from day to day / nowhere will you find more unity / than at Hitsville U.S.A.”
Motown was not just a recording studio; it was a music publisher, a talent agency, a record manufacturer and even a finishing school. Some performers dubbed it “Motown U.” While one group recorded in the studio, another might be working with the voice coach; while a choreographer led the Temptations through some flashy steps for a drop-dead stage routine, writers and arrangers might be banging out a melody on the baby grand. When not refining their acts, the performers attended the etiquette-and-grooming class taught by Mrs. Maxine Powell, an exacting charm school mistress. A chagrined tour manager had insisted the singers polish up their show-biz manners after witnessing one of the Marvelettes chomping a wad of gum while onstage.
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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