Title: Motown pop and southern soul (1960-1970)
1Motown pop and southern soul (1960-1970)
2I. The effect of the British Invasion on Black Pop
- There is a large consensus that the British
Invasion hindered early 1960s pop music by black
artists - Some artists and styles survived
- Phil Spector, Leiber and Stoller, and others had
hit records in 1964 - Shangri-Las Leader of the Pack went to 1 for
Leiber and Stollers Red Bird label in 1964 - The Righteous Brothers song Youve Lost That
Lovin Feeling went to 1 in 1965 (a Phil
Spector production) - The Drifters with Under the Boardwalk reached
4 in 1964
3- Many artists did not remain on the charts after
the British Invasion - The Ronettes Walking in the Rain only made it
to 29 - The Brill Building approach to making records
died out with the British Invasion - There is a temptation to compare the British
Invasion to the 1950s - British musicians played music inspired or
derived from black music styles in the 1960s - White groups and artists covered a great number
of black pop songs in the 1950s
4- New black pop music arrived during the 1960s from
new artists and other parts of the country - Detroit, MI
- Memphis, TN
- Muscle Shoals, AL
- Atlanta, GA
5- Styles from these regions raise the question
about whether one style could be blacker than
others - Motown records was an independent label founded
in Detroit, MI - Had enormous commercial success that paralleled
the Beatles success timeline in the early 1960s - Built the sound of the records around styles that
appealed to a white audience - That generated accusations that Motown had sold
out for big profits - Southern soul from the Memphis area remained
truer to musical roots in black culture
6II. Motown Black music for white audiences
- Founded by Berry Gordy, Jr. in 1959
- Gordy had several jobs before starting a record
label - Professional boxer
- Worked for his fathers plastering company
- Owned a record store
- Worked on the Ford assembly line
7- Gordy was interested in jazz but knew it wasnt
commercially successful - A boxing friend, Jackie Wilson, was going into
singing and needed songs - Gordy collaborated with Billy Davis (a.k.a. Tyran
Carlo) on songs for Wilson - Reet Petite
- Lonely Teardrops
- Thats Why (I Love You So)
- Gordy formed Motown Records in 1959 and patterned
many songs after other successful records - 1st hit was in 1960, Barrett Strongs Money
(Thats What I Want) - The Marvelettes Please Mr. Postman draws from
Brill Building girl group style - By the Contours Do You Love Me resembles the
Isley Brothers style
8- Gordy knew that the best commercial potential was
in crossover records - From rhythm and blues to pop
- He used the same approach as Chuck Berry the
original version would become the crossover - That eliminated the need (or opportunity) for
other labels to cover the records - This concept brought huge financial records
- Records generally charted higher on the rhythm
and blues charts but pop was always close
9- Gordy studied the successful models and used them
in his own company - The Leiber and Stoller idea of songwriters
producing their songs had worked - That idea had been adopted by the Brill Building
successfully so Gordy employed it in Motown - The original Motown songwriter-producer team from
1960 to 1964 included - Gordy
- William Mickey Stevenson
- William Smokey Robinson
10- This team is responsible for several early hits
- The first Miracles hit Shop Around
- Written by Gordy and Robinson, produced by Gordy
11- Robinson wrote and produced several hits for
Motown singer Mary Wells form 1962-1964 - The One Who Really Loves You
- You Beat Me to the Punch
- Two Lovers
- My Guy
12- The Producers
- From 1964 to 1967 Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier,
and Eddie Holland (Holland-Dozier-Holland OR
H-D-H) created many hits for groups recording for
the label - Supremes
- Four Tops
- Martha and the Vandellas
- From 1967 to 1970 Norman Whitfield produced hits
for the Temptations - Other important late 1960s producers included
- Frank Wilson
- The team of Valerie Ashford and Nick Simpson
13- Quality ControlMotown style
- Recordings were produced in two adjoining Detroit
houses called Hitsville, USA - Gifted and experienced studio musicians helped
producers craft their arrangements - Similar to Phil Spectors wrecking crew
- Musicians were talented jazz musicians, adept at
improvising and spontaneous arranging - Holland-Dozier-Holland sessions frequently began
with only sparse musical directions - A core group of musicians were at the center of
the production process
14- They played on most of the recordings
- Pianist Earl Van Dyke
- Drummer Bennie Benjamin
- Electric bassist James Jamerson
- They were the studio band, The Funk Brothers,
responsible for the min-1960s Motown sound - In 2003 a documentary was produced about the Funk
Brothers - Standing in the Shadows of Motown
- The film featured interviews with surviving
members of the studio band - Attention was finally focused on the musicians
who were so much a part of that style - Gordy held a weekly meeting with the Motown staff
to decide which records they thought would be hits
15(No Transcript)
16- Artist development was incorporated into the
label - Purpose was to teach low-income-bred artists how
to behave in all possible social situations - Former Broadway choreographer Cholly Atkins was
hired to teach dance and stage movements - Dance movements had to be refined and graceful
- Motown artists had to project an image of class
and sophistication - Gordy hired a charm school teacher, Maxine
Powell, to teach proper manners and etiquette - Artists learned how to speak and move with charm
and grace - They were groomed to be able to appear at elegant
performance venues - They were to be prepared to perform at the White
House or Buckingham Palace
17III. The Motown Artists
- The Temptations
- The Temptations formed in 1961 and were one of
Motowns top acts from 1964-1972 - They were made up of members of two Detroit area
groups the Distants and the Primes. (Otis
Williams, Melvin Franklin, Al Bryant replaced by
David Ruffin in 1963, Eddie Kendricks, Paul
Williams, and Dennis Edwards replaced Ruffin in
1968)
18- The group had a hit in early 1964 The Way You
Do the Thing You Do - Written produced by Smokey Robinson
- Exemplifies Robinsons clever approach to lyrics
- You got a smile so bright, you couldve been a
candle, works with Robinsons cheerful music - Features Kendricks high tenor vocals
19- Robinson went on to write and produce more
Temptations hits - My Girl featuring Ruffin on lead vocals
- Get Ready
- Norman Whitfield produced several Temptations
hits in the later part of the 1960s - Aint Too Proud to Beg
- I Know Im Losing You
- Youre My Everything
- Cloud Nine displays influence of Sly and the
Family Stone
20- The Supremes
- Best example of the Motown sound from the mid to
late 1960s - The extension of the Brill Buildings girl-group
concept to highest level of commercial success - Formed in Detroit in 1959 as a sister group to
the Primes, they were called the Primettes (Diana
Ross, Mary Wilson, Florence Ballard-replaced by
Cindy Birdsong in 1967) - Unsuccessful releases until H-D-H produced 5
consecutive 1 hits
21- Where Did Our Love Go
- Baby Love
- Come See about Me
- Stop! In the Name of Love
- Back in My Arms Again
- Reflections
- H-D-H left Motown in 1967, but the Supremes had
another hit in 1968 - Love Child
- Diana Ross left in 1969 to pursue a solo career
- Their last single featuring Ross was Someday
Well be Together
22- The Supremes and H-D-H
- One of the most successful writing and production
teams in popular music - Baby Love is good example of the H-D-H/
Supremes approach during the mid 1960s - The introduction uses an arrangement idea similar
to their previous hit Where Did Our Love Go? - A sound like handclaps actually wooden 2x4s
slapping together - Introduction that features a series of pulsating
piano chords with drums - Vibraphone (or vibes) similar to the xylophone
but with a sustained sound with vibrato
23- Simple verse form
- Seven verses repeated mostly without much change
in accompaniment - Accompaniment includes electric guitar and bass
after the introduction - Other Supremes provide backup vocals
- Nice twists to the arrangement
- Third verse saxophone takes a solo for the last
eight measures - Verse 5 introduces a change of key up a ½ step
24- H-D-H were so successful because they repeated
ideas that work - In the first two Supremes songs the word Baby
is frequently used - The first three singles use simple verse form
- Contrasting verse-chorus form used in Stop! In
the Name of Love and Back in My Arms Again
25- The Four Tops
- Formed in 1954 and remained together for four
decades (Levi Stubbs, Obie Benson, Lawrence
Payton, Duke Fakir) - The male counterparts to the Supremes from
1964-1967 - A string of H-D-H hits that included
- Baby I Need Your Loving
- I Cant Help Myself
- Its the Same Old Song
- Reach Out Ill Be There
- Standing in the Shadows of Love
26- H-D-H arrangement characteristics frequently
included classical references - Orchestral strings
- Classical harmonic progressions
- I Cant Help Myself by the Four Tops
27- Martha (Reeves) and the Vandellas formed in
Detroit in 1962 - Recorded for Chess Records as members of the
Del-Phis, they became the Vandellas in 1963 - Rosalyn Ashford
- Annette Beard (replaced by Betty Kelly Beard in
1964) - Reeves and friends sang backup on Marvin Gayes
Stubborn Kind of Fellow - H-D-H produced most of the Martha and the
Vandellas hits - Heat Wave
- Quicksand
- Dancing in the Street produced by Mickey
Stevenson - Nowhere to Run
28- Jimmy Mack
- Martha and the Vandellas vocal style was drawn
from gospel music - Powerful full-throated vocal style from Reeves
- Stark contrast to the Supremes much more
reserved pop style - Foreshadowed more soulful singers who would
arrive mid-decade - Acceptance of the Martha and the Vandellas sound
opened the door for Aretha Franklin
29- Marvin Gaye
- One of three artist-producers on the Motown label
- Smokey Robinson was one
- Stevie Wonder was the other
- His first hit was in 1962 Stubborn Kind of
Fellow - Sixteen more Top 40 singles
- Ten Top 40 hits in duets with Mary Wells, Tammi
Terrel, and Kim Weston - Gaye collaborated with Motown producers on many
hit songs - Pride and Joy for Mickey Stevenson
- How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You) for H-D-H
- Aint That Peculiar for Smokey Robinson
- Aint Nothing Like the Real Thing sung with
Tammi Terrell and produced by Ashford Simpson
30- Gaye produced hits for the Originals in the late
1960s - Baby Im for Real
- The Bells
- Gayes most important production was his 1971
concept album Whats Going On - How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)
31- Stevie Wonder
- His first hit was Fingertips, part 2 at age 13
- Live recording of an impromptu performance from a
Motown revue concert - Spontaneity made this one of Motowns biggest
hits - Wonder had several hits through the late 1960s
(after his voice changed) on songs he co-wrote - Uptight (Everythings Alright)
- I Was Made to Love Her
- For Once In My Live
- My Cherie Amour
- He began producing his own records in 1970-
Signed, Sealed, Delivered, Im Yours
32- He produced his own album Where Im Coming From
in 1971 - That album contained two hit singles
- If You Really Loved Me
- We Can Work It Out a cover of the Beatles
1965 hit - Stevie Wonders writing and production skills
helped Motown evolve into the 1970s - Signed, Sealed, Delivered, Im Yours
33IV. Motowns impact on the Civil Rights movement
- Gordy truly believed Motown artists should appeal
to white middle class - The carefully controlled choreography and
charm-school training guaranteed that this would
happen - The Brill Building approach to the sound of the
music also figured in - Black Americans embraced the sound
- They knew it sounded white but the artists were
from their culture, so they supported it - Motown artists demonstrated that all blacks could
assimilate into white culture
34- Those who considered Motown to be a sell-out of
black identity and culture looked to the South - Southern soul music countered the Motown move
away from black cultural roots - Motown songs maintained a strong sense of
heritage while also promoting change - The Motown model serves as a forerunner to other
labels in the 1970s - George Clinton took black music in new directions
that appealed to all racial groups - Gamble and Huff launched the disco era using
black pop as a foundation
35- They further extended the Motown/Brill Building
approach to orchestrating songs - Their songs were also driven by up-tempo dance
rhythms
36V. Atlantic, Stax, and Southern Soul
- Atlantic began the 1960s as a highly successful
rhythm and blues oriented label - They had incorporated the Leiber and
Stoller/Brill Building approach into their song
production - Their sweet soul artists records were successful
(Drifters, Coasters, Ben E. King) - Producer Jerry Wexler wasnt getting to produce
as much as he wanted to (Leiber and Stoller had
taken over much of the production of the labels
songs) - Wexler and Bert Berns signed Solomon Burke to the
label and co-produced several hits
37- Just Out of My Reach (Of My Two Open Arms)
- If You Need Me
- Goodbye, Baby (Baby Goodbye)
- Got to Get You off My Mind
- Tonights the Night
- Wexlers renewed enthusiasm for production led
him to explore southern black music styles - Southern black music was more emotional
- It had an exuberance more commonly found in black
gospel music - This quality was not evident in sweet soul songs
by the Drifters or Ben E. King - Jerry Wexler held an important role in developing
southern soul music during the 1960s
38- Just Out of My Reach (of My Two Open Arms)
- Performed by Solomon Burke
39- The Memphis southern soul connection with New
York - Atlantic records formed a licensing agreement
with Memphis-based Stax records - Licensing agreements were common between large
labels and small labels - The large label pressed copies using either their
own label or the smaller label - These records were distributed by the larger
label that had the larger distribution network - The larger label took a percentage of the sales
(everybody wins) - The small labels songs were usually regional
hits - These songs were often in a unique style that the
large label couldnt reproduce on its own
40- Stax records formed in 1960 in Memphis by Jim
Stewart and sister Estelle Axton (StAxStax) - Original name was Satellite Records
- Wexler liked one of their records by Rufus Thomas
called Cause I Love You-sung by Thomas and his
daughter Carla - Atlantic leased the record and another, Gee
Whiz, in 1961 - Gee Whiz was a Top 10 hit in pop and rhythm and
blues charts
41- Atlantic and Stax set up leasing agreements for
many songs during the early 1960s - Last Night by the Mar-Keysan instrumental
- Green Onions by Booker T. and the MGsalso an
instrumental - Walkin the Dog!, a dance hit by Rufus Thomas
- The records were recorded in Memphis under
conditions similar to Motowns - In-house band Booker T. and the MGs
- Booker T. Jones on organ, Steve Cropper on
guitar, Donald Duck Dunn on bass, and Al
Jackson Jr. on drums - Songwriters involved in Stax songs were David
Porter, Isaac Hayes, Steve Cropperworked with
Otis Redding as co-writer and producer
42- The Stax operation was more casual than the
Motown and certainly more so than at Atlantic - Musicians took on whatever role was necessary
- There was more experimentation and spontaneity in
the performances - Whatever the tracks lacked in polish was made up
in sincerity and urgency - The music just sounded like everyone was trying
harder and enjoying the effort
43- Otis Redding
- One of the most important Stax artists who helped
bring attention to the Stax sound - These Arms of Mine
- While only a rhythm and blues chart Top 40 hit,
it brought Redding into the picture - Reddings vocal style is drawn heavily from
gospel singing style - In 1965 Redding began getting crossover hits
- Reddings gospel-influenced vocals and the
hard-driving music accompaniment defined the Stax
sound - Mr. Pitiful, Ive Been Loving You Too Long,
Respect, Try a Little Tenderness
44- Sittin on the Dock of the Bay went to 1 on
pop and rhythm and blues charts in 1968 - Redding appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival in
the summer of 1967 (his appearance helped
acquaint the hippie audience to southern soul
music) - Redding was killed in a plane crash in December
1967 he didnt live to see his influence on pop
music
45VI. Atlantic Records and the connection to Fame
Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama
- Atlantic also recorded artists at Rick Halls
Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama - Wilson Pickett
- Atlantic producer Jerry Wexler discovered Pickett
through a demo recording he sang - Wexler and Bert Berns produced the song If You
Need Me with singer Solomon Burke in 1961 - The Double L label also released the demo version
with Picketts vocalcompeting with Atlantic
46- When Pickett came to Atlantic, Wexler immediately
signed him to the label - Wexler took Pickett to Memphis to record with
Stax musicians in the Stax style - They recorded In the Midnight Hour
- The song featured a delayed backbeat that Wexler
showed the band - Became a characteristic signature sound of the
Stax records
47- When studio time was difficult to get at Stax,
Wexler moved to Fame studios in Muscle Shoals,
Alabama - Some of Picketts best-known songs were recorded
there - Land of 1000 Dances
- Mustang Sally
- Funky Broadway
- Atlantic had distributed songs from Dial Records
in Nashville that were recorded at Fame Studios - Joe Texs hit Hold What Youve Got
- Wexler had licensed Percy Sledges When A Man
Loves A Woman - Sledges hit was recorded at Quinvy Studios near
Muscle Shoals, but Fame Studios would do others
48- Sam and Dave with Porter and Hayes
- Sam and Dave were Atlantic artists who recorded
at Stax records - Stax owner Jim Stewart put them together with
songwriters David Porter and Isaac Hayes - This team functioned similarly to Motowns
pairing of writer-producers with artists - Holland-Dozier-Holland with the Supremes
- Norman Whitfield with the Temptations
- Sam and Dave had several hits as a result of this
teamwork - You Dont Know Like I Know
- Hold On, Im Comin
- The classic Sam and Dave number Soul Man is
also a result of their efforts
49- Soul Man
- Performed by Sam and Dave
- Produced by Porter and Hayes
50VII. The Stax Sound
- Wilson Picketts In the Midnight Hour
- Simple verse form with instrumental interlude
- Introduction
- 4 measure introduction featuring horns
- 2 measures of a simple two-chord pattern
- The two-chord pattern is basis for the tune
- Guitar and snare drum play together on beats 2
and 4 - They are so late that they are almost out of time
- Stax recordings dont have backup vocals
- Picketts vocal is the primary focus of the song
- Instrumental interlude uses a slightly varied
chord pattern - This interlude creates a sense of formal variety
51VIII. Southern Soul in the Big Apple
- Aretha Franklin
- Gospel-influenced singing style
- Born in Memphis
- Raised in Detroit
- Recorded most of her hits in New York
- Daughter of Reverend C.L. Franklin
- Well-known Baptist preacher in Detroit
- Regularly broadcast his sermons
- Originally signed with Columbia in New York
- Didnt do well there
- Singing in a soft-pop mainstream style
- Signed with Atlantic in 1966
52- Jerry Wexler produced her first track in Fame
Studios in Muscle Shoals - I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)
- Dispute in the studio between Arethas husband
and someone from the Fame organization - They went back to New York
- All subsequent tracks were recorded in New York
- Wexler flew in the rhythm section from Muscle
Shoals, but Rick Hall didnt know about it - Baby I Love You
- You Make Me Feel (Like A Natural Woman)
- Chain of Fools
- Think
53- Respect by Aretha Franklin
54IX. Motown, Atlantic, Stax, and issues of
blackness
- Consensus is that Motown records were less true
to black culture than Stax records - Motowns musical style is aimed at a pop market
- Both labels had sales as the main goal, so Stax
would have aimed at a pop market as well - Motown arrangements were more inspired by
successful pop arrangements - Stax arrangements appealed to a pop market
because of their contrast to Motown - Stax balanced out the polish of Motown with their
sincerity and spontaneity
55- Discrepancies do confuse the issue
- Some Motown records sound more like Stax records
- Motown was a black-owned company (producers and
songwriters were black Motown band was black) - Atlantic and Stax were white-owned (Atlantic and
Stax producers were white Stax songwriters and
musicians were black and white Everyone at
Muscle Shoals except the actual singers were
white - The obvious question Does race actually matter
in the note-to-note performance process? - Musicians involved in all of the records played
as required by the producers - Producers were ultimately responsible for the
soundthey made all the creative decisions
56X. 1968 was the year of change for black music in
America
- Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King was killed on
April 4, 1968 - King was a highly respected advocate of racial
equality - His methods of achieving that were non-violent
- Racial tensions had been escalating for
yearsthis brought on waves of violent reactions
57- Atlantic was sold to Warner Brothers Seven Arts
- That affected the distribution deal with Stax
- Stax ended up being sold to Gulf Western
- The Stax team of writers, musicians, and
producers drifted apart - Changes were occurring at Motown
- H-D-H left Motown in 1967
- Berry Gordy wanted to move Motown to Hollywood to
pursue movie possibilities - Motown writers began writing more socially
significant songs (as a reaction to Kings
assassination) - By the early 1970s, Motowns top artist-writers
began focusing on black urban life situations
58XI. James Brown
- Unquestionably the most important black performer
of the 1960s - Brown was a member of the southern Georgia based
Fabulous Flames in the 1950s - Brown was substituted for Little Richard when his
hit Tutti Frutti led him away from Georgia - Brown actually performed as Little Richard
- Moving from doo-wop to soul
- Think featured new approaches to rhythm
- Brown gained a reputation for his active stage
performance
59- His performance emphasized athletic showmanship
- A combination of singing and extremely energetic
dancing - He developed a trademark closing routine
- Would collapse on stage in exhaustion
- Would be helped offstage, but before he reached
the side he would suddenly get energized and run
back out and continue - Brown and his manager, Ben Bart, released a live
album in 1963 - Live at the Apollo reached 2 on the pop charts
- Good example of his energetic performance style
- Demonstrated his stylistic range
60- Beginning in 1964, Brown began focusing his songs
on hard driving rhythmic accompaniment - Out of Sight
- Papas Got a Brand New Bag, Pt. 1
- I Got You (I Feel Good)
- Its a Mans Mans Mans World
- Cold Sweat
61- Brown took control of all aspects of his music
and career - He wrote and produced his songs
- King Records owner Sid Nathan and manager Ben
Bart died in 1968 - After that Brown handled his own business
affairs - The musicians in his band were extremely talented
- Brown rehearsed his band relentlessly
- The band was one of the tightest performance
ensembles in the 1960s - Heavy emphasis on tightly interwoven rhythmic
grooves between horns and rhythm section
62- The hit Papas Got a Brand New Bag exemplifies
the James Brown sound - The track opens with a sustained chord
- Verses employ the 12-bar blues structure
- The rhythmic groove is created by the full
ensemble - The arrangement differs from Stax arrangements
because of the stops at the ends of the verses - No backup vocalsseparating him from Motown and
his earlier 1950s doo-wop style
63- Brown was a positive force behind the Black
Pride movement of the late 60s/ early 70s - He did not compromise his black culture in his
music - Browns turn to strong rhythmic focus in his
music foreshadowed 1970s funk - Browns contributions to funk make him one of the
most important figures in 1970s black pop
64XII. Brown in Boston
- Institutionalized racism in America had reached a
dangerous level by the 1960s - Black musicians formed a strong voice in response
to the civil rights movement - During the 1950s black performers spoke out in
the fight for equal rights for black Americans - (Harry Belafonte, Lena Horne, Louis Armstrong)
- Early 1960s black artists included clear
political ideas in their music (i.e. Sam Cookes
A Change is Gonna Come, Joe Texs The Love You
Save, Curtis Mayfields group the Impressions
People Get Ready and Keep on Pushing)
65- These and other black artists propelled the Black
Pride movement forward during the late 1960s - James Brown single-handedly calmed rioting in
several cities the night following MLKs
assassination on April 4, 1968 - Black Americans reacted violently to MLKs
assassination - The next night Brown gave a concert in Boston
that was televised across the country - He started the show by asking the viewers to be
calm and stay into not destroy their community - He reminded black viewers about Kings dedication
to peaceful change - Boston and several other cities were relatively
quiet that night
66- He went to Washington, D.C., the next night and
gave a speech on television that ended riots
there - James Brown proved that a black musician had the
power to bring peace to violent eruption - He had always maintained,
- The music wasnt a part of the revolution. The
music was the revolution.