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 4 of 5)
Most of the performers took Mrs. Powell’s class seriously; they knew it was a necessary rung on the ladder to success. They learned everything from how to sit in and rise gracefully from a chair, to what to say during an interview, to how to behave at a formal dinner. Grimacing onstage, chewing gum, slouching and wearing brassy makeup were forbidden; at one time, gloves were mandatory for the young women. Even 30 years later, Mrs. Powell’s graduates still praise her. “I was a little rough,” Martha Reeves told me recently, “a little loud and a little undone. She taught us class and how to walk with the grace and charm of queens.”
When it came time to striving for perfection, no one was tougher on the Motown crew than Gordy. He cajoled, pressured and harangued. He held contests to challenge the writers to come up with hit songs. It was nothing for him to require two dozen takes during a single recording session. He would insist on last-minute changes in stage routines; during shows, he took notes on a legal pad and went backstage with a list of complaints. Diana Ross called him “my surrogate father . . . Controller and slave driver.” He was like a tough high school teacher, Mary Wilson says today. “But you learned more from that teacher, you respected that teacher, in fact you liked that teacher.”
Gordy instituted the quality-control concept at Motown, again borrowing an idea from the auto assembly line. Once a week, new records were played, discussed and voted on by sales people, writers and producers. During the week, tension and long hours mounted as everyone hustled to create a product for the meeting. Usually, the winning tune was released, but occasionally Gordy, trusting his intuition, vetoed the staff’s choice. Sometimes when he and Robinson disagreed over a selection, they invited teenagers in to break the impasse.
In 1962, thirty-five eager music makers squeezed into a noisy old bus for Motown’s first road tour, a grueling itinerary of some 30 one-nighters up and down the East Coast. Several shows were in the South, where many of the young people had their first encounters with segregation, often being denied service at restaurants or directed to back doors. As they were boarding the bus late one night after a concert in Birmingham, Alabama, shots rang out. No one was hurt, but the bus was peppered with bullet holes. At another stop, in Florida, the group disembarked and headed for the motel pool. “When we started jumping in, everyone else started jumping out,” Mary Wilson recalls, now laughing. After discovering that the intruders were Motown singers, some of the other guests drifted back to ask for autographs. Occasionally, or when, in the frenzy of a show, black and white teenagers danced together in the aisles, the music helped bridge the racial divide.
Though Motown was a black-owned company, a few whites recorded there and several held key executive positions. Barney Ales, the white manager of Motown’s record sales and marketing, was dogged in his efforts to move the music into the mainstream—this at a time when some stores in the country would not even stock an album with African-Americans on the cover. Instead of a photograph of the Marvelettes, a rural mailbox adorns their “Please Mr. Postman” album. In 1961, the single became Motown’s first song to occupy the number-one spot on the Billboard Hot 100.
Notwithstanding Ales’ success, it was three black teenage girls from a Detroit housing project who made Motown a crossover phenomenon. Mary Wilson, Diana Ross and Florence Ballard auditioned for Gordy in 1960, but he showed them the door because they were still in school. The girls then began dropping by the studio, honoring all requests to sing background and clap on recordings. Several months later they signed a contract and started calling themselves “the Supremes.”
Over the next few years, they recorded several songs, but most withered at the bottom of the charts. Then HDH merged plaintive singsong lyrics with a chorus of “baby, baby” and a driving beat, and called it “Where Did Our Love Go.” The record catapulted the Supremes to No. 1 on the pop charts and set off a chain reaction of five No. 1 hits in 1964 and ’65, all HDH compositions.
The young women continued to live in the projects for nearly a year, but otherwise their whole world changed. A summer tour with Dick Clark and an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show were followed by other TV spots, nightclub performances, international tours, magazine and newspaper articles, even product endorsements. They soon traded their homemade stage dresses for glamorous sequined gowns, the dusty tour bus for a stretch limousine.
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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