Motown is an
American record company. It was founded by Berry Gordy, Jr. on January 12,
1959, in Detroit, Michigan, as Tamla Records, and was incorporated as
"Motown Record Corporation" on April 14, 1960. The name, a
portmanteau of motor and town, is also a nickname for Detroit. Motown played an
important role in the racial integration of popular music as an African
American-owned record label which achieved significant crossover success. In
the 1960s, Motown and its subsidiary labels were the most successful proponents
of what came to be known as the Motown Sound, a style of soul music with a
distinct pop influence. During the 1960s, Motown achieved spectacular success
for a small record company: 79 records in the Top Ten of the Billboard Hot 100
record chart between 1960 and 1969.
Gordy relocated
Motown to Los Angeles in 1972, and there it remained an independent company
until June 28, 1988, when Gordy sold the company to MCA and Boston Ventures
(which took over full ownership of Motown in 1991). Motown was then sold to
PolyGram in 1994, before being sold again to MCA Records' successor, Universal
Music Group, when it acquired PolyGram in 1999.
Motown spent much
of the 2000s as a part of the Universal Music subsidiaries Universal Motown and
Universal Motown Republic Group, and headquartered in
New York City. From 2011 to 2014, Motown was a part of The Island Def Jam Music Group division of Universal Music. On April 1, 2014, Universal Music Group announced the dissolution of Island Def Jam; subsequently Motown relocated back to Los Angeles to operate under the Capitol Music Group.
New York City. From 2011 to 2014, Motown was a part of The Island Def Jam Music Group division of Universal Music. On April 1, 2014, Universal Music Group announced the dissolution of Island Def Jam; subsequently Motown relocated back to Los Angeles to operate under the Capitol Music Group.
History
Berry Gordy got
his start as a songwriter for local Detroit acts such as Jackie Wilson and the
Matadors. Wilson's single "Lonely Teardrops", written by Gordy,
became a huge success; but Gordy did not feel he made as much money as he
deserved from this and other singles he wrote for Wilson. He realized that the
more lucrative end of the business was in producing records and owning the
publishing.
In 1959, Billy
Davis and Berry Gordy's sisters Gwen and Anna started Anna Records. Davis and
Gwen Gordy wanted Berry to be the company president, but Berry wanted to strike
out on his own. On January 12, 1959, he started Tamla Records, with an $800
loan from his family and from royalties earned writing for Jackie Wilson. Gordy
originally wanted to name the label "Tammy" Records, after the
popular song by Debbie Reynolds from the 1957 film Tammy and the Bachelor also
starring Reynolds. When he found the name was already in use, he decided on
Tamla instead. Tamla's first release, in the Detroit area, was Marv Johnson's
"Come to Me" in 1959 (released nationally on United Artists). Its
first hit was Barrett Strong's "Money (That's What I Want)" (1959),
which made it to number 2 on the Billboard R&B charts (released nationally
on Anna Records).
Gordy's first
signed act was The Matadors, who changed their name to the Miracles when Gordy
signed them. (They were not the Matadors who recorded for Sue.) Their first
release, "Got a Job," was an answer record to the Silhouettes'
"Get a Job (issued on George Goldner's End Records)." The Miracles'
first, minor hit was their fourth single, 1959's "Bad Girl", released
in Detroit as the debut record on the Motown imprint, and nationally on the
Chess label. (Most early Motown singles were released through other labels,
such as End, Fury, Gone and Chess.)
Miracles lead
singer William "Smokey" Robinson became the vice president of the
company (and later named his daughter "Tamla" and his son
"Berry"). Many of Gordy's family members, including his father Berry,
Sr., brothers Robert and George, and sister Esther, were given key roles in the
company. By the middle of the decade, Gwen and Anna Gordy had joined the label
in administrative positions as well.
Motown Sound
Motown
specialized in a type of soul music it referred to with the trademark "The
Motown Sound". Crafted with an ear towards pop appeal, the Motown Sound
typically used tambourines to accent the back beat, prominent and often melodic
electric bass-guitar lines, distinctive melodic and chord structures, and a
call-and-response singing style that originated in gospel music. Pop production
techniques such as the use of orchestral string sections, charted horn
sections, and carefully arranged background vocals were also used. Complex
arrangements and elaborate, melismatic vocal riffs were avoided. Motown
producers believed steadfastly in the "KISS principle" (keep it
simple, stupid).
The Motown
production process has been described as factory-like. The Hitsville studios
remained open and active 22 hours a day, and artists would often go on tour for
weeks, come back to Detroit to record as many songs as possible, and then promptly
go on tour again. Berry Gordy held quality control meetings every Friday
morning, and used veto power to ensure that only the very best material and
performances would be released. The test was that every new release needed to
fit into a sequence of the top five selling pop singles of the week. Several
tracks that later became critical and commercial favorites were initially
rejected by Gordy; the two most notable being the Marvin Gaye songs "I
Heard It Through the Grapevine" and "What's Going On". In
several cases, producers would re-work tracks in hopes of eventually getting
them approved at a later Friday morning meeting, as producer Norman Whitfield
did with "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" and The Temptations'
"Ain't Too Proud to Beg".
Many of Motown's
best-known songs, including all the early hits for the Supremes, were written
by the songwriting trio of Holland–Dozier–Holland (Lamont Dozier and brothers
Brian and Eddie Holland). Other important Motown producers and songwriters
included Norman Whitfield, William "Mickey" Stevenson, Smokey
Robinson, Barrett Strong, Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson, Frank Wilson,
Pamela Sawyer & Gloria Jones, James Dean & William Weatherspoon, Johnny
Bristol, Harvey Fuqua, Gil Askey, Stevie Wonder and Gordy himself.
The style created
by the Motown musicians was a major influence on several non-Motown artists of
the mid-1960s, such as Dusty Springfield and the Foundations. In the United
Kingdom, the Motown Sound became the basis of the northern soul movement.
Smokey Robinson said the Motown Sound had little to do with Detroit:
"People would
listen to it, and they'd say, 'Aha, they use more bass. Or they use more
drums.' Bullshit. When we were first successful with it, people were coming
from Germany, France, Italy, Mobile, Alabama. From New York, Chicago,
California. From everywhere. Just to record in Detroit. They figured it was in
the air, that if they came to Detroit and recorded on the freeway, they'd get
the Motown sound. Listen, the Motown sound to me is not an audible sound. It's
spiritual, and it comes from the people that make it happen. What other people
didn't realize is that we just had one studio there, but we recorded in
Chicago, Nashville, New York, L.A.—almost every big city. And we still got the
sound."
No comments:
Post a Comment