Motown: The History Of A Hit Factory

Published: Nov. 16, 2018, 10:30 a.m.

Shortly after Michael Jackson died in 2009, Helen Brown, a music critic for the Daily Telegraph wrote that the Jackson 5\u2019s 1969 single \u201cI Want You Back,\u201d \xa0is \u201ccertainly the fastest man-made route to pure joy.\u201d And while Michael, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon, and Jackie may have stolen the spotlight, the group - like so many others - emerged from a hit factory created by a man named Berry Gordy Jr.

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Gordy founded Motown after stints as a boxer and as a worker in a Lincoln-Mercury plant. And he quickly turned the label into a force to be reckoned with, drawing on a formula of quality control he had learned at the auto factory, taking raw talent like Diana Ross and Smokey Robinson, and refining them into international stars. As a result, Motown became one of the most successful black-owned music companies in American history.

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We talk to music journalist Adam White, author of \xa0\u201cMotown: The Sound of Young America,\u201d about Gordy\u2019s meteoric rise and his lasting legacy.