Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tamla Motown TMG 503 United Kingdom "It's Growing" "What Love Has Joined Together" The Temptations: Tamla Motown TMG 504 United Kingdom "Kiss Me Baby" "Tears in Vain" Stevie Wonder: Tamla Motown TMG 505 United Kingdom "All for You" "Too Many Fish in the Sea" Earl Van Dyke & the Soul Brothers Tamla Motown TMG 506 United Kingdom "Ask the Lonely"
In 1963, Motown signed with EMI's Stateside label ("Where Did Our Love Go" by the Supremes and "My Guy" by Mary Wells were Motown's first British top-20 hits). Eventually, EMI created the Tamla Motown label ("Stop! In the Name of Love" by the Supremes was the first Tamla Motown release in March 1965).
Tamla Greatest Hits, Volume 2: Marvin Gaye: TS-278 Tamla I Was Made to Love Her: Stevie Wonder: TS-279 Tamla Jimmy Ruffin Sings Top Ten: Jimmy Ruffin: SS-704 Soul Jr. Walker and the All Stars Live: Jr. Walker & All Stars: SS-705 Soul Everybody Needs Love: Gladys Knight & the Pips: SS-706 In Loving Memory: Various artists MT 642 Reflections ...
From Marvin Gaye and Diana Ross to the Jackson 5 and Four Tops, Detroit's Motown Records produced hit after hit. Here are the best 50 Motown songs.
The discography for American rhythm and blues record label Motown, as well as its subsidiaries and imprints, is divided into: Motown albums discography Motown singles discography
By 1964, Motown had accumulated enough British hits for EMI to release a greatest hits album, A Collection of Tamla Motown Big Hits. [1] Over the next few years, several more compilations were released, including six in the series 16 Original Big Hits. [2] In 1967, the label issued the first of the Motown Chartbusters series. Although the ...
Volume 3 was also a million seller. The double-LP was issued by Motown as two separate halves in 1986. Greatest Hits Vol. 1, Greatest Hits Vol. 2, Greatest Hits Vol. 3, and the American variant of The Supremes: At Their Best (a greatest hits collection for the post-Ross 1970s Supremes) were compiled and issued as The Supremes: Gold in 2005.
Motown founder Berry Gordy finally agreed to its release as a single on the Tamla subsidiary in October 1968, when it went to the top of the Billboard Pop Singles chart for seven weeks from December 1968 to January 1969, overtaking the Gladys Knight & the Pips version as the biggest hit single on the Motown family of labels up to that point.