Ten Motown Musts For Your iPod

07/27/09  Print This Post Print This Post    9 Comments   Popular   Written by Tom Gates
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Home Of The Hits: Motown. Photo: lizwade

Some of the most-loved singles of all time were recorded at Hitsville USA, a nickname given for Motown’s original office and studio, located at 2648 West Grand Blvd in Detroit. Matador offers a list of Motown songs that should make their way onto your iPod, aSap.
The Marvelettes – Please Mr. Postman

Photo (and Feature Photo): dwhartwig

This was Motown’s first #1 pop single. The Marvelettes would follow with ten more hits, becoming the girl group archetype of all time. The track features the legendary backing band The Funk Brothers (with Marvin Gaye on drums here).

“Please Mr. Postman” tells the tale of a girl waiting for a letter from her boyfriend. For those born after 1985, a letter is a physical piece of mail that is delivered directly to your house by a ‘postman’, a person who is the conduit for the delivery of this letter (sort of a human Tweet).

MP3: Please Mr. Postman

The Contours – Do You Love Me?

Originally written for The Temptations, The Contours were in the right place at the right time. As the story goes, Berry Gordy became frustrated that The Temps weren’t in the studio after he penned the track and handed it to this lucky act (they were hit-less at the time).

“Do You Love Me” took on a second life after it was featured in “Dirty Dancing” but don’t hold that against it. It’s an impossibly hooky hit.

MP3: Do You Love Me

The Supremes – You Can’t Hurry Love

That bass line. Diana Ross. The Supremes’ 7th #1 hit . It’s impossible to replicate, although Phil Collins tried in 1982 and ended up with a #1 of his own (you can still hear it on the speakers in Walmart). This single finds The Supremes at their peak, when they rivaled The Beatles in popularity.

Photo: ClevelandSGS

MP3: You Can’t Hurry Love

Martha Reeves & The Vandellas – (Love Is Like A) Heat Wave

Dress it up as a song about love but I think that it’s really a song about being horny. Martha & The Vandellas hit paydirt with this single and followed with twenty-four charting songs, including “Dancing In The Street” and “Jimmy Mack”.

MP3: Heat Wave

The Jackson 5 – I Want You Back

This song is impossible to dislike – I dare you. “I Want You Back” was the big hit from their first album, Diana Ross Presents The Jackson 5.

It’s argued that Ross didn’t discover the band at all, rather that Motown knew it had a fantastic marketing angle by putting it forward that she had. Indeed sweet and juicy, “Bubblegum Soul” became the internal term used for music that The Jackson 5 made.

MP3: I Want You Back

Stevie Wonder – For Once In My Life

The song, written by Motown staff writer Ron Miller, is a great example of just how valuable Motown’s in-house writers were to the company’s success.

This up-tempo version by Wonder proved to be the biggest chart success (#2) but it has also taken on my many other lives, having since been recorded by The Temptations, Ella Fitzgerald, Tony Bennet and Frank Sinatra.

MP3: For Once In My Life

Brenda Holloway – Every Little Bit Hurts

Photo: murkredi

One hell of a breakup song. Considered by many a “lost” Motown artist, Holloway had relatively modest success beyond this single.

Favoring songs that she had written herself and living on the West Coast did not help Holloway, who many say could have been a bigger star had she not been on the label.

Many people have re-recorded this song, including a surprising take by The Clash.

MP3: Every Little Bit Hurts

The Four Tops – Reach Out, I’ll Be There

Another classic written in-house by Holland-Dozier-Holland, the team who largely defined The Motown Sound in the 1960’s.

Singer Levi Stubbs’ sing/shouting on this track is almost punk rock, given the times in which it was recorded.

You can practically see the levels ping to the right as he brings it to the chorus.

MP3: Reach Out, I’ll Be There

The Velvelettes – He Was Really Sayin’ Somethin’

The Velvelettes never made an album, instead releasing singles and never quite getting a big break. It must have been wildly frustrating to the members, who found themselves waiting in line as other Motown artists grabbed and recorded the big hits.

“He Was Really Sayin’ Somethin’” is one of the Motown greats from an act that could have had much more success, were they just a stitch luckier.

MP3: He Was Really Sayin’ Something

Smokey Robinson & The Miracles – I Second That Emotion

The Miracles were Motown’s first breakout artist, which came in part because Smokey Robinson was vice-president of the company.

This song switches up many of the romantic notions of the time; it revolves around woman who strings men along and just likes a little bit of nookie now and then.

Robinson, theoretically, is there waiting if she should change her mind and want a committed relationship.

MP3: I Second That Emotion

NOTE: Your best bet for a collection of Motown’s best is the stellar boxed set Hitsville USA, Vol. 1: The Motown Singles Collection 1959-1971

Community Connection:

Dig music lists? Be sure to check out Ten Songs By Musicians Who Died Too Soon. Our recent article on the best music blogs will also help keep your your iPod fresh!


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About the Author

Tom Gates

Tom is a writer and a constant traveler, having spent most of the past two years wandering Earth with his Macbook. He is also pretending to be a third person right now and is obviously writing his own bio. He knows that you knew that, despite the deft maneuvering of pronouns.

9 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Simone Marie replied on July 27, 2009

    It’s great to see an out-of-the-ordinary nightlife article — I absolutely loved being reminded of all these songs. I always wished I had been around for the advent of Motown. Great blast from the past! (And yes, I agree about Heat Wave).

    (Report comment)

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  • David Miller replied on July 27, 2009

    how many of these records had the funk brothers locking down the rhythm section?

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  • Tim Patterson replied on July 27, 2009

    “For those born after 1985, a letter is a physical piece of mail that is delivered directly to your house by a ‘postman’, a person who is the conduit for the delivery of this letter (sort of a human Tweet).”

    HA!

    (Report comment)

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    • Carlo replied to Tim Patterson on July 27, 2009

      Yeah, my favourite part too…I laughed out loud (and I never do). Also loved the “aSap”.

      Awesome piece Tom! Back when music was music…ahhh…I’ll get on to downloading these tonight.

      (Report comment)

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  • Paul Sullivan replied on July 27, 2009

    dude, you nailed it. sweet piece. now i have an idea for my next mixtape ;)

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    • Carlo replied to Paul Sullivan on July 27, 2009

      My technical tips on making mix tapes:

      1. High-speed dubbing, while sounding cute and funny, degrades the quality of the dub. Dub at normal speed.

      2. Leave a big enough gap between the songs so that your cassette player can pick up the beginning of the next song when you use auto-FF.

      3. When finished recording, make sure you pop out the plastic tab on the top to protect the tape from overdubbing accidentally. (If you are recording over a previously used tape, use scotch tape over the hole enable recording again.)

      :)

      (Report comment)

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  • Michelle replied on July 27, 2009

    Nothing better than a mix with Stevie and The Jackson 5. Great stuff!

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  • Eva replied on July 28, 2009

    Great picks, Tom! I think The Marvelettes are one of the most under-rated Motown acts.

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  • Paul Sullivan replied on July 28, 2009

    Carlo – too funny ;)

    (Report comment)

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