Posted on 08/18/2025 2:34:14 PM PDT by nickcarraway
The group’s dramatic delivery and the peerlessly plaintive lead vocals of Levi Stubbs became their most famous calling card.
Motown 1098 may not sound like a particularly significant catalog number, but the track it denoted remains one of the defining moments of the company’s collective brilliance. The classic in question is the Four Tops’ “Reach Out I’ll Be There,” released on August 18, 1966. It was a US pop No.1 on October 15, and repeated the feat two weeks later in the UK.
Written by Brian and Eddie Holland and Lamont Dozier and produced by Brian and Lamont, the song came to the Four Tops during something of a lull after their breakthrough of the 1964-65 season. They had were continuing to enjoy support from their R&B constituency, but even there, the quartet’s previous single, Stevie Wonder’s song “Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever,” only made No.12, and fizzled at just No.45 pop. It was their lowest rating since their Hot 100 debut with “Baby I Need Your Loving.”
“Reach Out I’ll Be There” changed all that, its passionate sentiment perfectly matched to the group’s dramatic delivery and the peerlessly plaintive lead vocals of Levi Stubbs. Then there was the unprecedented daring for a Motown single of the choice of instrumentation. Flutes and almost galloping percussion detailed the melancholy introduction, before the unforgettable vocal liftoff that sent Levi’s narrative into orbit.
“Reach Out” was on the charts in no time, and made No.1 pop when it took over at the Hot 100 summit from The Association’s “Cherish.” As its two-week reign ended there, it started another on the R&B register, and a three-week run at the UK summit.
The Dylan influence
Even if it’s widely recorded that the producers had Bob Dylan’s concurrent success in mind when they requested similar urgency in Stubbs’ vocal performance, it’s still instructive to look back at how the Tops themselves described the song.
“We were talking to Holland-Dozier-Holland one day,” Lawrence Payton told the NME that October, “and we decided that what was needed was something in the folk-rock idiom. So they went away and came back with ‘Reach Out And I’ll Be There.’ I think it’s the best piece of folk-rock that’s been around in a long time.” Not too many who made it a transatlantic No.1 would necessarily call it folk-rock, but they’d all call it a soul classic.
Could It Be You? (1956)
I remember that day only too well.
That was was the day my boots hit the ground.
Fabulous tune. GREAT time in Motown. The Four Tops were part of those best days.
That was before Berry Gordy was writing songs for Jackie Wilson, let alone started Motown. Nice doo wop song, but they really thrived with Holland-Dozier-Holland songs.
I was blessed to be around when Baby I Need Your Lovin charted.. Best Motown song ever...
One of the Four Tops was actually Sri Lankan.
Besides cp-writing a boatload of hits, Eddie Holland and Lamont Dozier also waxed some discs of their own.
Let's Talk it Over--Lamont Anthony [Dozier] (1960)
Jamie--Eddie Holland (1962)
Bangladeshi but anyway
Abdul Fakir was born in Detroit, but his father was from Bangladesh, his mother was black.
Love's Gone Bad--Chris Clark (1966)
Great track. It sounds to me like that's Jimmy Jamerson on bass, and probably Benny Benjamin on drums.
I would take Chris Clark any day over Dusty Springfield. Go ahead, flame me.
Would Holland-Dozier-Holland even be the same without Jimmy Jamerson?
I always thought that “Just ask the Lonely” was great also. “Seven Rooms of Gloom” was very good also
IMHO
The lead singer of the Four Tops said a Detroit-area hospital restrained him and ordered a psychological exam after refusing to believe that he was part of the Motown music group.
Alexander Morris, who is Black, filed a lawsuit Monday against Ascension Macomb-Oakland hospital in Warren, alleging racial discrimination and other misconduct during an April 2023 visit for chest pain and breathing problems.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/article/2024/jun/11/four-tops-alexander-morris-hospital
Yes, another fabulous song. It was a great time to be a teenager. Got my drivers license in ‘66...was in Detroit a lot...Pistons...Tigers...Red Wings. I had a girlfriend in Detroit. The music of that time was the best...Motown, Beach Boys, Beatles Stones, British invasion. I went to Wayne State University in Detroit. Very fond memories during that time.
I didn’t know him well but Levi Stubb Jr. was a high school classmate.
Give Me a Kiss--The Hornets (1964)
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