Episode 111: “Heat Wave” by Martha and the Vandellas
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Transcript
A history of folk music and 500 songs
by Andrew Hinke.
Episode 111
Heat Wave
by Martha and the Vandelas
Today we're going to take a look at the career of one of the great girl groups to come out of Motown and at the early work of the songwriting team that went on to be arguably the most important people in the definition of the Motown sound.
We're going to look at Heat Wave by Martha and the Vandelas and the beginning of the career of Holland, Dozier, and Holland.
It's just the way I'm spying.
It's like my heat wave,
burning
By the time she started recording for Motown, Martha Reeves had already spent several years in groups around Detroit, with little success.
Her singing career had started in a group called the Fascinations, which she had formed with another singer, who is variously named in different sources as Shirley Lawson and Shirley Walker.
She quickly left that group, but after she left them, the Fascinations went on to make a string of minor hit records with Curtis Mayfield.
It's just too late.
If you gotta be dying to fast,
if you love if you wanna
But it wasn't just her professional experience, such as it was, that Reeves credited for her success.
She had also been a soloist in her high school choir, and from her accounts, her real training came from her high school music teacher, Abraham Silver.
In her autobiography, she talks about hanging around in the park, singing with other people who had been taught by the same teacher.
Mary Wilson and Florence Ballard, who would go on to form the Supremes, Bobby Rogers and Claudette Robinson, who were founder members of the Miracles, and Little Joe Harris, who would later become lead singer of the minor Motown act The Undisputed Truth.
She eventually joined another group, the Delphis, with three other singers.
Gloria Williams, or Williamson.
Sources vary as to what her actual surname was.
It might be that Williamson was her birth name and Williams a stage name.
Annette Beard, and Rosalind Ashford.
The group found out early on that they didn't particularly get on with each other as people, their personalities were all too different, but their voices blended well and they worked well on stage.
Williams, or Williamson, was the leader and lead singer at this point, and the rest of the Delphi's acted as her backing group.
They started performing at the amateur nights and talent contests that were such a big part of the way that black talent got known at that time, and developed a rivalry with two other groups: the Primes, who would later go on to be the Temptations, and the Primetes, who had named themselves after the Primes, but later became the Supremes.
Those three groups more or less took it in turns to win the talent contests, and before long, the Delphi's had been signed to Checkmate Records, one of several subsidiaries of chess, where they released one single with Gloria on lead.
know, darling,
you strung me along
when you left me,
you left me all alone.
Now you want me back
for your very own again.
But I'll let you know,
I'll let you know.
The group also sang backing vocals on various other records at that time, like Mike Hanks's When True Love Comes to Be.
Girl, I say, I know, I know.
Depending on who you believe, Martha may not be on that record at all.
The Delphi's apparently had some line up fluctuations, with members coming and going, though the story of who was in the group when seems to be told more on the basis of who wants credit for what at any particular time, than on what the truth is.
No matter who was in the group, though, they never had more than local success.
While the Delphi's were trying and failing to become big stars as a group, Martha also started performing solo, as Martha Lavelle.
Only a couple of days after her first solo performance, Mickey Stevenson saw her perform and gave her his card, telling her to pop down to Hittsville for an audition, as he thought she had talent.
But when she did turn up, Stevenson was annoyed at her, over a misunderstanding that turned out to be his fault.
She had just come straight to the studio, assuming she could audition any time, and Stephenson hadn't explained to her that they had one day a month where they ran auditions.
He'd expected her to call him on the number on the card, not just come down.
Stephenson was busy that day, and left the office, telling Martha on his way out the door that he'd be back in a bit, and to answer the phone if it rang, leaving her alone in the office.
She started answering the phone, calling herself the A and R Secretary, taking messages and sorting out problems.
She was asked to come back the next day, and worked there three weeks for no pay before getting herself put on a salary as Stevenson's secretary.
Once her foot was in the door at Motown, she started helping out on sessions, as almost all the staff there did, adding backing vocals, hand claps, or foot stomps for a $5 per session bonus.
One of her jobs as Stevenson's secretary was to phone and book session musicians and singers, and for one session, the Andantes, Motown's normal female backing vocal group, were unavailable.
Martha got the idea to call the rest of the Delphis, who seemed like they might even have been split up at this point, depending on which source you read, and see if they wanted to do the job instead.
They had to audition for Berry Gordy, but Gordy was perfectly happy with them and signed them to Motown.
Their role was mostly to be backing vocalists, but the plan was that they would also cut a few singles themselves as well.
But Gordy didn't want to sign them as the Delphis.
He didn't know what the details of their contract with Checkmate were, and who actually actually owned the name.
So they needed a new name.
At first they went with the Dominettes, but that was soon changed before they ever made a record.
What happened is a matter of some dispute, because this seems to be the moment that Martha Reeves took over the group.
It may be that the fact that she was the one booking them for the sessions, and so in charge of whether they got paid or not, changed the power dynamics of the band, and so different people give different accounts depending on who they want to seem most important.
But the generally accepted story is that Martha suggested a name based on the street she lived on, Van Dyke Street, and Dela Reese, Martha's favourite singer, who had hits like Don't You Know.
I have fallen in love with you
for the rest of my whole life through
don't
you
know
I was yours from the very group became Martha and the Vandelas, although Rosalind Ashford, who says that the group name was not Martha's work,
also says that the group weren't Martha and the Vandelas to start with, but just the Vandelas.
And this might be the case, as at this point Gloria, rather than Martha, was still the lead singer.
The newly named Vandelas were quickly put to work, mostly working on records that Mickey Stevenson produced.
The first record they sang on was not credited either to the Vandellas or to Martha and the Vandelas, being instead credited to Saundra Mallet and the Vandelas.
Mallet was a minor Motown singer who they were backing for this one record.
The song was one written by Babby Gordy as an attempt at a locomotion clone, and was called Camel Walk.
Come on and walk with me and show me that you really, really
care.
More famously, there was the record that Everyone talks about as being the first one to feature the Vandelas, even though it came out after Camelwalk.
One we've already talked about before, Marvin Gaye's stubborn kind of fellow.
That became Gay's breakout hit, and as well as singing in the studio for other artists, and trying to make their own records, the Vandellers were now also Marvin Gay's backing vocalists.
And at shows like the Motor Town Review shows, as well as performing their own sets, the Vandellers would sing with Gay as well.
While they were not yet themselves stars, they had a foot on the ladder, and through working with Marvin, they got to perform with all sorts of other people.
Martha was particularly impressed by the Beach Boys, who performed on the same bill as them in Detroit, and she developed a lifelong crush on Mike Love.
But while the Vandelas were Motown's go-to backing vocalists in 1962, they still wanted to make their own records.
They did make one record with Gloria singing lead: You'll never cherish a love so true till you lose it.
Let me tell you now,
one of these days,
and it won't be long.
You're gonna look for me,
and I'll be gone.
But that was released not as by the Vandellas, but by the Vells.
Because by the time it was released, the Vandellers had more or less by accident become definitively Martha and the Vandellas.
The session that changed everything came about because Martha was still working as Mickey Stevenson's secretary.
Stevenson was producing a record for Mary Wells, and he had a problem.
Stevenson had recently instituted a new system for his recordings at Motown.
Up to this point, they'd been making records with everyone in in the studio at the same time.
All the musicians, the lead singer, the backing vocalists, and so on.
But that became increasingly difficult when the label's stars were on tour all the time.
And it also meant that if the singer flipped a note, a good bass take would also be wrecked, or vice versa.
It just wasn't efficient.
So taking advantage of the ability to multi-track, Stevenson had started doing things differently.
Now, backing tracks would be recorded by the Funk brothers in the studio, whenever a writer-producer had something for them to record, and then the singer would come in later and overdub their vocals when it was convenient to do that.
That also had other advantages.
If a singer turned out not to be right for the song, they could record another singer doing it instead, and they could reuse backing tracks, so if a song was a hit for, say, The Miracles, the Marvelettes could then use the same backing track for a cover version of it to fill out an album.
But there was a problem with this system, and that problem was the Musicians' Union.
The union had a rule that if musicians were cutting a track that was intended to have a vocal, the vocalist must be present at the session.
Like a lot of historical union rules, this seems faintly ridiculous today, but no doubt there were good reasons for it at the time.
Motown, like most labels, were perfectly happy to break the union rules on occasion, but there was always the possibility of a surprise union inspection, and one turned up while Mickey Stevenson was cutting I'll have to let him go.
Mary Wells wasn't there, and and knowing that his secretary could sing, Stevenson grabbed her and got her to go into the studio and sing the song while the musicians played.
Martha decided to give the song everything she had, and Stevenson was impressed enough that he decided to give the song to her rather than Wells.
And at the same session that the Vandellas recorded the songs with Gloria on lead, they recorded new vocals to the backing track that Stevenson had recorded that day.
free.
Even though I let him go, he's still a part of me.
That was released under the Martha and the Vandalas name, and around this point, Gloria left the group.
Some have suggested that this was because she didn't like Martha becoming the leader, while others have said that it's just that she had a good job working for the city, and didn't want to put that at risk by becoming a full-time singer.
Either way, a week after the Vandalas record came out, Motown released You'll Never Cherish a Love So True Till You Lose It, under the name The Vells.
Neither single had any chart success.
but that wouldn't be true for the next one, which wouldn't be released for another five months.
But when it was finally released, it would be regarded as the beginning of the Motown sound.
Before that record, Motown had released many extraordinary records, and we've looked at some of them.
But after it, it began a domination of the American charts that would last the rest of the decade, a domination caused in large part by the team of Holland, Dozier and Holland.
We've heard a little from the Holland brothers and the Montdozier separately in previous episodes looking at Motown, but this is the point at which they go from being minor players within the Motown organisation to being the single most important team for the label's future commercial success.
So we should take a proper look at them now.
Eddie Holland started working with Berry Gordy years before the start of Motown.
He was a singer who was known for having a similar sounding voice to that of Jackie Wilson, and Gordy had taken him on first as a soundalike demo singer, recording songs written for Wilson, so Wilson could hear how they would sound in his voice, and later trying to mold him into a Wilson clone, starting with Holland's first single, You.
Holland quickly found that he didn't enjoy performing on stage.
He loved singing, but he didn't like the actual experience of being on stage.
However, he continued doing it, in the belief that one should not just quit a job until a better opportunity comes along.
Before becoming a professional singer, Holland had sung in street corner doo-wop groups with his younger brother Brian.
Brian, unlike Eddie, didn't have a particularly great voice, but what he did have was a great musical mind.
He could instantly figure out all the harmony parts for the whole group, and had a massive talent for arrangement.
Eddie spent much of his early time working with Gordy, trying to get Gordy to take his little brother seriously.
At the time, Brian Holland was still in his early teens, and Gordy refused to believe he could be as talented as Eddie said.
Eventually, though, Gordy listened to Brian and took him under his wing, pairing him with Janie Bradford to add music to Bradford's lyrics, and also teaching him to engineer.
One of Brian Holland's first engineering jobs was for a song recorded by Eddie, written as a jingle for a wine company, but released as a single under the name Bryant Holland, meaning it has often over the years been assumed to be Brian's singing lead.
Where's the job?
I need your boy!
So fine, so fine, so fine, so fine, so fine!
Where's the job?
I need your boy!
When Motown started up, Brian had become a staffer.
Indeed, he has later claimed that he was the very first person employed by Motown as a permanent staff member.
While Eddie was out on the road performing, Brian was writing, producing, and singing backing vocals on many, many records.
We've already heard how he was the co-writer and producer on Please Mr.
Postman by the Marvelette.
That had obviously been a massive hit, and Motown's first number one.
But Brian was still definitely just one of the Motown team, and not as important a part of it as Barry Gordy, Smokey Robinson, or Mickey Stevenson.
Meanwhile, Eddie finally had a minor hit of his own, with Jamie, a song co-written by Barrett Strong and Mickey Stevenson, and originally recorded by Strong.
When Strong left the label, they took the backing track intended for him and had Holland record new vocals over it.
That made the top 30, which must have been galling at the time for Strong, who'd quit in part because he couldn't get a hit.
But the crucial thing that lifted the Holland brothers from being just parts of the Motown machine to being the most important creative forces in the company was when Brian Holland became friendly with Anne Dozier, who worked at Motown Packing Records, and whose husband Lamont was a singer.
Lamont Dozier had been around musical people all his life.
At Hutchins Junior High School, he was a couple of years below Marv Johnson, the first Motown star.
He knew Frida Payne, and one of his classmates was Otis Williams, later of The Temptations.
But it was another junior high classmate who, as he puts it, lit a fire under me to take some steps to get my own music heard by the world, when one of his friends asked him if he felt like coming along to church to hear another classmate sing.
Dozier had no idea this classmate sang, but he went along, and as it happens, we have some recordings of that classmate singing and playing piano around that time.
That's 14-year-old Aretha Franklin.
And as you can imagine, being classmates with someone who could perform like that caused the Montdozier to radically revise his ideas of what it was possible for him to do.
He'd formed a doo-wop group called The Romeos, and they released their first single, with both sides written by Lamont, by the time he was sixteen.
I don't have to guess what I know I never missed to the team
The Romeo's third single, Fine, Fine, Fine, was picked up by Atlantic for distribution, and did well enough that Atlantic decided they wanted a follow-up, and wrote to them asking them to come into the studio.
But Lamont Dozier, at 16, thought that he had some kind of negotiating power, and wrote back saying they weren't interested in just doing a single, they wanted to do an album.
Jerry Wexler wrote back saying, Fair enough, you're released from your contract, and the Romeo's brief career was over before it began.
He joined the Voicemasters, the first group signed to Anna Records, and sang on records of theirs like Hope and Pray, the very first record ever put out by a Gaudy family label.
for happiness.
I pray for love.
I know all prayers are heard
by the one above.
I have faith one day
he'll sit in her mind.
And he'd continued to sing with them, as well as working for Anna Records, doing odd jobs like cleaning the floors.
His first solo record on Anna, released under the name Lamont Anthony, featured Robert White on guitar, James Jameson on bass, Harvey Fouquet on piano, and Marvin Gaye on drums, and was based on the comic character Popeye.
He's got my girl in the palm of his hand.
Whoa, whoa, Popeye, I'm the sailor man.
He's got my girl in the palm of his hand.
And I can
understand.
I know, no magic over that I wanna make.
Unfortunately, just as that record was starting to take off, King Features Syndicate, the owners of Popeye, sent a cease and desist order.
Doja went back into the studio and recut the vocal, this time singing about Benny the Skinny Man instead of Popeye the the Sailor Man.
Benny the skinny man,
all the girls call him loving dan.
Whoa, whoa, Benny, the skinny man,
all the girls call him loving them.
But I can
understand.
I know
But without the hook of it being about Popeye, the song flopped.
Dozier joined Motown when that became the dominant part of the Gordy family operation, and signed up as a songwriter and producer.
Robert Bateman had just stopped working with Brian Holland as a production team, and when Anne Dozier suggested that Holland go and meet her husband, who was just starting at Motown, Holland walked in to find Dozier working at the piano, writing a song but stuck for a middle section.
Holland told him he had an idea, sat next to him at the piano, and came up with the bridge.
The two instantly clicked musically.
They discovered that they almost had a musical telepathy, and Holland got Freddie Gorman, his lyricist partner at the time, to finish up the lyrics for the song while he and Dozier came up with more ideas.
That song became a Marvelettes album track, Forever, which a few years later would be put out as a B-side and make the top 30 in its own right.
Holland and Dozia quickly became a strong musical team.
Dozier had a great aptitude for coming up with riffs and hooks, both lyrical and musical, and rhythmic ideas, while Brian Holland could come up with great melodies and interesting chord changes, though both could do both.
In the studio, Brian would work with the drummers, while Lamont would work with the keyboard players and discuss the bass parts with James Jameson.
Their only shortfall was lyrically.
They could both write lyrics, and Lamont would often come up with a good title or hook phrase, but they were slow at doing it.
For the lyrics, they mostly worked with Freddie Gorman, and sometimes got Janie Bradford in.
These teams came up with some great records, like Contract on Love, which sounds very like a four seasons pastiche, but also points the way to Holland and Dozier's later sound.
go, here's what you've got to do.
Find it in your heart that you'll never do anything to have a single
Both Little Stevie Wonder and the backing vocalists on that, The Temptations, would do better things later, but that's still a solid record.
Meanwhile, Eddie Holland had had a realisation that would change the course of Motown.
Jamie had been a hit, but he received no royalties.
He'd had a run of flop singles, so he hadn't yet earned out the production costs on his records.
His first royalty statement after his hit showed him still owing Motown money.
He asked his brother, who got a royalty statement at the same time, if he was in the same boat, and Brian showed him the statement for several thousand dollars that he'd made from the songs he'd written.
Eddie decided that he was in the wrong job.
He didn't like performing anyway, and his brother was making serious money while he was working away earning nothing.
He took nine months off from doing anything other than the bare contractual minimum, where before he would spend every moment at Hittsville, now he only turned up for his own sessions, and spent the time teaching himself songwriting.
He studied Smokey Robinson's writing, and he developed his own ideas about what needed to be in a lyric.
He didn't want any meaningless filler words, he wanted every word to matter.
He also wanted to make sure that even if people misheard a line or two, they would be able to get the idea of the song from the other lines, so he came up with a technique he referred to as repeat formation, where he would give the same piece of information two or three times, paraphrasing it.
When the next Marvelettes album, The Marvellous Marvelettes, was being finished up by Mickey Stevenson, Motown got nervous about the album, thinking it didn't have a strong enough single on it, and so Brian Holland and Dozier were asked to come up with a new Marvelette single in a hurry.
Freddie Gorman had more or less stopped songwriting by this point, as he was spending most of his time working as a postman, and so, in need of another writing partner, they called on Eddie, who had been writing with various people.
The three of them wrote and produced Locking Up My Heart, the first single to be released with the writing credit Holland Dozier Holland.
I'm knocking up my heart.
Telling the Cupid to pass by me.
Cause all I've ever brought me was a misery.
Hello, loneliness, goodbye, love.
I'm tired of being abused and being misused.
I've had my share of romance, no more for me.
I'm locking up my heart.
That was a comparative flop for the Marvelettes, and the beginning of the downward slump we talked about for them in the episode on Please Mr.
Postman.
But the second Holland Dozier Holland single, recorded ten days later, was a very different matter.
That one was for Martha and the Vandellas, and became widely regarded as the start of Motown's true golden age.
So much so that Brian and Eddie Holland's autobiography is named after this, rather than after any of the bigger and more obvious hits they would later co-write.
The introduction to Come and Get These Memories isn't particularly auspicious.
The Vandelas singing the chorus.
Hearing all three of the Vandelas, all of whom have such strong distinctive voices, sing together is, if anything, a bit much.
The Vandelas aren't a great harmony group in the way that some of the other Motown groups are, and they work best when everyone's singing an individual line, rather than block harmonies.
but then we're instantly into the sound that Holland, Dozier, and Holland really Brian Holland and the Mont Dozier, who took charge of the musical side of things, with Eddie concentrating on the lyrics, would make their own.
There's a lightly swung rhythm, but with a strong backbeat with hand claps and tambourine emphasising the two and four, the same rhythmic combination that made so many of the very early rock and roll records we looked at in the first year of the podcast, but this time taken at a more sedate pace, a casual stroll rather than a sprint.
There's the simple, chorded piano and guitar part, both instruments often playing in unison, and again just emphasising the rhythm rather than doing anything more complex.
And there's James Jameson's wonderful loping bass part, doing the exact opposite of what the piano and guitar are doing.
I can't read them anymore.
Love are you gone from me and left behind
so many memories
In almost every record in the rock and roll, soul and RB genres up to this point.
I say almost every because as I've said many times before, there are always exceptions and there is never a first of anything.
The bass does does one of two things.
It either plods along just playing the root notes, or it plays a simple repeated ostinato figure throughout, acting as a backbone while the other instruments do more interesting things.
James Jameson is the first bass player outside the jazz and classical fields to prominently, repeatedly, do something very different.
He's got the guitars and piano holding down the rhythm so steadily that he doesn't need to.
He plays melodies, largely improvised, that are jumping around and going somewhere different from where you'd expect.
Come and get these memories was largely written before Eddie's involvement, and the bulk of the lyric was Lamont Dozier's.
He's said that in this instance he was inspired by country singers like Loretta Lynn, and the song's lyrical style, taking physical objects and using them as a metaphor for emotional states, certainly seems very country.
Had to stay friendly.
Here's some old Valentine cars.
I'm gonna get a gambling to your new sweetheart.
Lover, you've gone from me and left behind
so many memories.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Come and get these memories made number 29 on the pop charts and number six on the RB charts.
Martha and the Vandelas were finally stars.
As was the normal practice at Motown, when an artist had a hit, the writing and production team were given the chance to make the follow-up with them, and so the follow-up was another Holland Dozier Holland song, again from an idea by Lamont Dozier, as most of their collaborations with the Vandelas would be.
Heatwave is another leap forward, and is quite possibly the most exciting record that Motown had put out to this point.
Where Come and Get These Memories established the Motown sound, this one establishes the Martha and the Bandella's sound, specifically, and the style that Holland, Dojio, and Holland would apply to many of their more up-tempo productions for other artists.
This is the sub-genre of Motown that, when it was picked up by fans in the north of England, became known as Northern Soul, the branch of Motown music that led directly to disco, to high energy, to electropop, to the Stock Akin Wartoman Hit Factory of the 80s, to huge chunks of gay culture, and to almost all music made for dancing in whatever genre after this point.
Where Come and Get These Memories is mid-tempo, Heatwave races along.
Where Come and Get These Memories swings, Heatwave stomps.
Come and get These Memories has the drums swinging and the percussion accenting the backbeat.
Here, the drums are accenting the backbeat, while the tambourine is hitting every beat dead on 4-4.
It's a rhythm which has something in common with some of the Four seasons' contemporary hits, but it's less militaristic than those.
While Pistol Lalan's drumming starts out absolutely hard on the beat, he swings it more and more as the record goes on, trusting to the listener once that hard rhythm has been established, allowing him to lay back behind the beat just a little.
This is where my background as a white Englishman who has never played music for dancing, when I tried to be a musician myself, it was jangly guitar pop I was playing, limits me.
I have a vocabulary for chords and for melodies, but when it comes to rhythm, at a certain point my vocabulary goes away, and all I can do is say, just listen.
It's music that makes you need to dance, and you can either hear that or you can't.
But of course, you can.
And Martha Reeves' voice is perfect for the song.
Most female Motown singers were pop singers first and foremost.
Some of them, many of them, great pop singers, but all with voices fundamentally suited to gentleness.
Reeves was a belter.
She has far more blues and gospel influence in her voice than many of the other Motown women, and she's showing it here.
Heatwave made the top ten, as did the follow-up, a Heatwave soundalike called Quicksand.
But the two records after that, both still Holland Dozier Holland records, didn't even make the top 40, and Annette left, being replaced by Betty Kelly.
The new line-up of the group were passed over to Mickey Stevenson, for a record which would become the one for which they are best remembered to this day.
It wasn't as important a record in the development of the Motown sound as Come and Get These Memories or Heat Wave, but Dancing in the Street was a masterpiece.
Written by Stevenson, Marvin Gay, and Ivy Joe Hunter, it features gay on drums, but the most prominent percussive sound is Hunter, who, depending on which account you read, was either thrashing a steel chain against something something until his hands bled, or hitting a tire iron.
And Martha's vocal is astonishing, and has an edge to it.
Apparently this was the second take, and she sounds a little annoyed because she absolutely nailed the vocal on the first take, only to find out that there'd been a problem recording it.
Northland center in the street, they're dancing in Chicago.
And a new ordinary
in New York City, they bring it up.
That went to number two in the charts, and would be the group's cultural and commercial high point.
The song also gained some notoriety two years later, when, in the wake of civil rights protests that were interpreted as rioting, the song was interpreted as being a call to riot.
It was assumed that instead of being about dancing, it was actually about rioting, something the Rolling Stones would pick up on later when they released Street Fighting Man, a song that owes more than a little to the Bandala's classic.
The record after that, Wild One, was so much of a dancing in the streets sound-alike that I've seen claims that the backing track is an alternate take of the earlier song.
It isn't, but it sounds like it could be.
But the record after that saw them reunited with Holland Dozier Holland, who provided them with yet another great track, Nowhere to Run.
Got nowhere to run to, baby.
Nowhere to hide.
It's not love I'm running from.
For the next few years, the group would release a string of classic hits, like Jimmy Mac and Honey Child.
But the rise of the Supremes, who we'll talk about in a month, meant that like the Marvelettes before them, the Vandelas became less important to Motown.
When Motown moved from Detroit to LA in the early 70s, Martha was one of those who decided not to make the move with the label, and the group split up, though the original line-up occasionally reunited for big events, and made some recordings for Ian Levine's Motor City label.
Currently, there are two touring Vandelas groups.
One, Martha Reeves and the Vandelas, consists of Martha and two of her sisters, including Lois, who was a late-period member of the group before they split, replacing Betty in 1967.
Meanwhile, the original Vandelas consist of Rosalind and Annette.
Gloria died in 2000, but Martha and the Vandelas are one of the very few 60s hit-making groups where all the members of their classic line-up are still alive and performing.
Martha, Rosalind, Betty, Annette, and Lois were all also inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, becoming only the second all-female group to be inducted.
The Vandellas were one of the greatest of the Motown acts.
and one of the greatest of the girl groups, and their biggest hits stand up against anything that any of the other Motown acts were doing at the time.
When you hear them now, even almost 60 years later, you're still hearing the sound they were in at the birth of: the sound of Young America.
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This podcast is written and narrated by me Andrew Hickey and produced by me and Tilt Ariser.
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that's 500 the numbers songs.com to read transcripts and liner notes and get links to hear the full versions of songs excerpted here.
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Thank you very much for listening.