Few songs fill me with the kind of
elation I hear in every note of “I’m Gonna Make You Love
Me,” released as a single 50 years ago this week. This collaboration between
male and female singing colossi—The Temptations and The Supremes,
respectively—could have been merely an example of Motown mogul Berry Gordy Jr.’s matchless
sense of the musical mainstream of the Sixties.
But producers Frank Wilson
and Nick Ashford crafted what the London Independent called a “shivers-down-the-spine remake” of a song by 25-year-old Philadelphia-based composer Kenny Gamble and his mentor Jerry Ross.
In the process, Wilson and Ashford coaxed some of the most inspired performances
from two groups that, at close to their commercial zenith, were integral to the
success of “Hitsville, U.S.A.”
The genesis of the hit began with the 20 minutes it
took Gamble and Ross to write it at the piano in 1966. In the next two years, versions of it
became middling hits for Dee Dee Warwick (Dionne Warwicke's sister) and Madeline
Bell (Dusty Springfield’s friend and backup singer), and Jerry Butler also
recorded a very fine cover.
But now, Motown, in having The Supremes join forces
with The Temptations, was reaching beyond its own music factory for a
not-terribly-well-known product (Warwick’s take had been released by Mercury
Records). The studio had succeeded only once before with a similar move, with
the Four Tops' cover of "If I Were a Carpenter" the year before.
Maybe it took Ashford, who had sung backup on
Warwick’s single, to find the key to unlocking the song’s full commercial
potential. Having joined Motown, with writing-producing partner Valerie
Simpson, after working on the original single, he was now in a position to do
something about it.
What also can’t be discounted was Gordy’s decision
to magnify a highly successful studio formula. He had seen how duets with Tami
Terrell had nudged the diffident Marvin Gaye away from more traditional jazz
vocalizing and towards powerhouse rhythm and blues. Gordy especially loved the
opportunity that duets afforded to double an album’s customer base. That,
though, was with two voices. When
Gordy gave the green light to Diana Ross and the Supremes Join the Temptations, he was putting eight in the studio mix: three female, five male.
Those eight voices had been increasingly clamorous
of late. The year before, the Supremes’ Florence Ballard had been kicked out of
the group. Gordy yielded to Ross’ demand that her frontwoman status be formally
in the group’s new name—“Diana Ross and the Supremes”—altering the dynamics
between the lead and fellow singers Mary Wilson and Cindy Birdsong.
Turbulence was also the order of the day with The
Temptations. Heavy drug use and resulting erratic behavior by Dennis Ruffin led
to the painful decision to part ways with this powerful lead singer and replace
him in July 1968 with Dennis Edwards.
Though the addition of Edwards continued The
Temptations’ string of hits with the psychedelic “Cloud Nine,” a smash upon
release in October, Gordy may have felt the group could use, in effect, an
insurance policy. The combination with The Supremes seemed the best route to
go.
Diana
Ross and the Supremes Join the Temptations was meant to
reinforce a splashy prime-time TV special, TCB,
set to air during the 1968 holiday season. The climax of that production, “The
Impossible Dream,” was intended to be the single, with “I’m Gonna Make You Love
Me” a seeming afterthought.
Those careful plans were hastily put aside when radio
DJs, once they got hold of advance copies of the album, started to play “I’m
Gonna Make You Love Me” instead. It’s easy to see why.
The
production contrasted the moods and styles of the leads—Ross, arch and playful
(“I'm gonna use every trick in the book/I'll try my best to get you hooked”)
and the Temptations’ Eddie Kendricks, tender and yearning in his falsetto (“Every minute, every
hour/I'm gonna shower you with love and affection”). It was all supported by
Motown’s ace background musicians, including “Ready” Freddy Washington, who
managed to sight-read the tune’s complex bass chart on the first take.
Unexpectedly
hearing the Temptations-Supremes version of his song on the radio while out
driving, Gamble had to pull over to avoid crashing. “That was unbelievable,
hearing them play that song. This was my favorite group, the Temptations.”
After
that, a string of hits followed (notably, Jerry Butler’s “Only the Strong
Survive”), and, as Gamble recalled in an interview for the Grammy Awards Web site, “Everything was busting wide
open. It was a musical explosion.”
Gordy offered him and partner Leon Huff jobs at Motown, but the two decided to strike out on their own. By 1971, they had enough of a track record to launch Philadelphia International Records, later home of such million-sellers as "Love Train" (the O'Jays), "Me And Mrs. Jones" (Billy Paul), and "If You Don't Know Me By Now" (Harold Melvin and The Bluenotes).
Gordy offered him and partner Leon Huff jobs at Motown, but the two decided to strike out on their own. By 1971, they had enough of a track record to launch Philadelphia International Records, later home of such million-sellers as "Love Train" (the O'Jays), "Me And Mrs. Jones" (Billy Paul), and "If You Don't Know Me By Now" (Harold Melvin and The Bluenotes).
As for the song that gave birth to it
all: The Temptations played “I’m Gonna Make You Love Me” by themselves live in
concert in their heyday (e.g., this audio recording, from YouTube, at a 1970 London appearance), but they never did so live with Diana Ross and The
Supremes. (Ms. Ross had a flirtatious duet with Steven Wonder on The Hollywood Palace a year later.)
More’s
the pity: Though Gordy merged the male and female voices for entirely
commercial reasons, the meshing of the two different sounds made this an
artistic triumph, too.
You will find upteen covers of the
song between YouTube and the likes of Spotify (including by Lou Christie, and, inevitably, an “American Idol” version featuring
contestants Candice Glover, Amber Holcomb, and Angie Miller). But I can’t hear
any other version in my mind than the one by The Temptations and The Supremes. It carries
everything before it, like the love they hail so exultantly.
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