A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 80: “Money” by Barrett Strong
Episode Date: April 27, 2020Episode eighty of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Money” by Barrett Strong, the dispute over its authorship, and the start of a record label that would change mus...ic. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on “Alley Oop” by the Hollywood Argyles. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt’s irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andrew Higy
Episode 80
Money
By Barrett Strong
Today we're going to look at a record
which was the first success
for one of the most important record labels of all time
which has one of the most instantly recognisable riffs
of any record ever
and which was the product of a one-hit one-hit one
who would, several years later, go on to be a hugely important figure as a writer rather than a performer.
Along the way, we're going to look at the beginnings of many, many other careers we'll be seeing more of in the next couple of years.
Today, we're going to look at Money by Barrett Strong.
When we left Barry Gordy Jr., he had just stopped writing songs for Jackie Wilson.
While the songs he'd co-written with his sister Gwen
and her boyfriend Rochelle Davis
had been massive hits for Wilson,
Wilson's manager had believed that any
songwriters could bring the same amount of success
and that Wilson's records were selling solely
because of Wilson's performances.
Davis and Gwen had started up a new record label
with the help of another Gordy sister, Anna,
after whom they named the label.
But at the start, Barry Gordy had little involvement
in that label. While Gwen had wanted Berry to become a partner in the business,
Barry had soured on the idea of business partners after some of his other ventures had failed,
due to conflicts between him and his partners. Barry was going to work for himself. He would
write and produce for his family's record labels, but he wasn't going to be a partner in their
businesses. Instead, he focused on a group he'd got to know. The Matador's were a vocal group he'd
seen audition and been mildly impressed with, but he had decided to work with them mostly because
he was very attracted to one of their singers, Claudette Rogers. He'd worked with them for a few
days before asking Claudette out, and she'd turned him down because she was seeing one of the
other group members, William Robinson. But by that point, Gordy had got to know Robinson and to appreciate
his talent, and his response was just to tell her how lucky she was to have a man like that. He took
them on as a management project and also decided to teach Robinson's songwriting. Robinson had
written a lot of songs which showed potential, but Gordy thought none of them were quite there yet.
What impressed Gordy most was Robinson's attitude every time Gordy told him what was wrong with the
song. Robinson would just go on to the next song, as enthusiastic as ever. Eventually, Robinson came
up with a song that they thought could be a hit. At the time, the silhouettes had to be a hit. At the time, the
Silhouettes had a big hit with a song called Get a Job.
Robinson had come up with an answer song, which he called Got a Job.
Gordy decided that that was good enough for him to produce a recording.
He'd recently started up a production company, which he primarily used to produce demos of
his own songs, with singers like Eddie Holland.
Gordy took the group into the studio and got a deal with George Goldner's label End
records to distribute the single that resulted. The only thing was, Gordy still wasn't happy with
the group's name. The Matadors sounded too masculine for a group which had a woman in it.
So they all chose other names, wrote them down, stuck them in a hat, and the one that came out was
The Miracles. And so Got a Job by The Miracles came out on End Records on William Smokey Robinson's
18th birthday.
Gordy at this point was a songwriter first and foremost.
But he wanted to make sure he was making money from the songs.
He had already started his own publishing company, after having not been paid the royalties
he was owed on several of his songs.
He'd decided that he could use his production
company to ensure his songs got a release. He'd leased the recordings out to other labels,
like End, or his sister's label Anna. The recordings themselves were just a way to get some
money from the songs, which were his real business. He and his second wife Raynomer also used
their production company, named Rayba as a portmanteau of their two names, in another way.
They would, for a fee, provide a full professional recording of anyone. You could,
walk in and pay for an arrangement of your song by Barry Gordy, instrumental backing, vocals by
the Rabah singers, a fluid group of people that included Raynomer and Eddie Holland, and a copy
of the record. If the amateur singer who came in was any good, the results would be quite
listenable, as in, I Can't Concentrate by Wade Jones, which they liked so much they later
even released it properly. But at this point, Gordy still wasn't making much money at all.
In 1959, according to court papers around a claim for child support for his kids,
he made $27.70 a week on average,
and almost all of that came from a single $1,000 check
for writing lonely teardrops for Jackie Wilson,
and producing the miracles didn't add much to that.
When Gordy received his first royalty check from end records for Got a Job,
he was astonished to see that it was only for $3.19.
To add insult to injury,
End Records tried to claim that the miracles were now their artists,
and they were going to record them directly,
without the involvement of Gordy.
This was a thing that many businesses connected with Morris Levy did,
and they were usually successful,
because if you get into an argument with the Mafia,
you'll probably not win.
But in the case of Gordy,
his family were so well known and respected in Detroit's black community,
and Gordy himself had enough cachet
because of his work with Jackie Wilson
that a contingent of black DJs
told end records
that they'd stop playing any of their records
unless they backed off on the miracles.
But all this led Gordy to one conclusion,
one he didn't come to until Smokey Robinson
pointed it out to him.
He needed to start his own record label,
just like his sisters had.
The problem was that he had no money,
and while his family was,
for a black family at the time,
very rich,
They held their money in a trust and required a proper contract and unanimous approval from all eight siblings
before they would provide one of the family with a business loan,
and Barry was regarded by his siblings as a useless drifter and underachiever.
But eventually he managed to win them round, and they lent him $800.
His original idea for the name of the label was Tammy, after Debbie Reynolds's hit,
to show that they weren't just aiming at the R&B market.
However, it turned out of the other label called Tammy, and so Gordy decided on Tamla instead.
Tamla's first record was by a local singer called Marv Johnson, who had a very similar voice to that of Jackie Wilson,
but who was known for having more of an ego than Wilson.
There's an anonymous quote by someone who knew both men.
The difference between Marve and Jackie Wilson
was that Wilson would kiss all the women,
especially the ugly ones,
because he knew if he did, they'd be with him forever.
Marve only kissed the pretty ones,
and that coldness came through in everything he did.
One can argue about whether it's colder
to cynically manipulate people's feelings
or to show contempt for them,
but it's definitely the case
that Marve Johnson does not seem
to have been well-loved by many of the people who knew him.
Johnson had recorded one previous single, My Babyo, on another record label.
Some sources claim that Barry Gordy produced that track, others that he was just present at the
session watching.
Whatever Gordy's involvement with Johnson before signing him to Tamla, the first Tamla
single, Come to Me, was the start of something big.
It was written by Johnson and Gordy, and featured a group of session play.
players who would form the core of what would become known as the Funk Brothers.
James James James Jameson, Benny Benjamin, Eddie Willis, Joe Messina and Thomas Beans Bowles.
On top of that, Brian Holland, who, with his brother Eddie, would later go on to become part of
arguably the most important songwriting and production team of the 60s, was on backing vocals.
Johnson wrote that song himself, and Gordy polished it up, giving himself a co-writing
credit. At the start, Tamlet was a very, very small operation. Other than the musicians they
employed, the team mostly consisted of Barry and Rayno McGordy, Smokey Robinson, acting essentially
as Barry's apprentice and assistant, and Janie Bradford, a teenage songwriter with whom Gordy
had collaborated on a couple of songs for Jackie Wilson. Bradford was given the official job title
receptionist, but she actually did almost all the admin at the label offices, doing everything
from sorting out the contracts to mopping the floor, along with chipping in with songs when she had an
idea. Because they were a shoestring operation, Gordy, Marv Johnson and Robinson would do most of the
legwork of getting the track to radio stations, and it only got local distribution. They followed up
with the second Tamla record, three weeks later, written by Barry and sung by Eddie Holland,
who had sung on Barry's demos for Jackie Wilson
and also had a Wilson-esque voice.
Marve Johnson's record,
Come to Me, became a local hit.
But as we've talked about before,
when you're running an indie label,
the last thing you want is a hit.
You have to pay to get the records pressed,
but then you have to wait months
for the money to come in from the distributors.
Becoming too big, too fast, could be a problem.
Luckily, before the record got too big,
United Artists stepped in.
They wanted to buy the master for Come to Me
and to buy both Johnson and Holland's contracts from Gordy.
Gordy would continue writing and producing for them,
but they would be United Artists performers,
rather than on Tamla.
Gordy got enough money from that deal
to continue running his label for a while longer,
and United Artists got their first R&B star.
Come to Me ended up going top 30 on the pop chart
and top ten on the R&B chart.
charts. Not bad at all for something put out on a little micro-label.
Eddie Holland, on the other hand, didn't do so well on United Artists.
He wasn't ever a confident performer, and after two years he was back with Gordy's
operation, this time working behind the scenes rather than as the main performer.
So Tamla was ready to put out its third single, and Gordy may have had a plan for how his
label was going to get much bigger. It's been suggested by several people that if, if you're
few of the early acts he signed were intended as ways to get more famous relatives of those
acts interested in the label. For example, the first female solo singer he signed to Tamla,
Mabel John, was the sister of Little Willie John, the R&B star. Mabel was certainly good enough
to be hired on her own merits, but at the same time, the thought must have crossed Gordy's mind
that it would be good to get her brother recording for him. In the same way, Smokey Robinson's
favorite local group was Nolan Strong and the Diabloes, who recorded the doo-wop classic,
The Wind.
Nolan Strong's cousin Barrett was also an aspiring singer, and Gordy signed him to Tamla,
and wrote him a song with his sister Gwen and her then-boyfriend Rochelle Davis, the same team
with whom he'd collaborated on Jackie Wilson's hits.
Unfortunately, Let's Rock wasn't a hit, and Gordy seemed to decide to try to throw a lot of records
at the wall to see what would stick.
Over the next few months, they put out a variety of odd singles,
none of which charted, and none of which seemed much like the music Gordy was generally known for.
There was Snake Walk, a jazz instrumental played by the Funk Brothers under the name of the Swinging Tigers,
with the songwriting credited to Gordy and Robinson.
There was It, a novelty song about an alien, performed by Smokey Robinson and Ronnie White of the Miracles,
under the name Ron and Bill.
and a few more.
But it wasn't until Barrett Strong's second single
in August 1959
that Tamla hit the jackpot again.
There are three very different stories
about how money was written.
According to Barry Gordy,
he came up with the music
and the whole first verse and chorus himself
and played it to Janie Bradford
who suggested a couple of lines for the second verse,
but he was impressed enough with her lines
that he gave her 50% of the song,
even though she didn't think she'd contributed very much.
Barrett Strung came and sat down with them uninvited
and started singing along,
but didn't contribute anything to the writing of the song.
According to Janie Bradford,
Barry Gordy was playing the riff on the piano,
but had no words or melody yet.
He said to her,
I need a title, give me a title,
something that everybody wants,
and she replied,
Money, that's what I want,
and the two of them wrote the lyrics together,
based on her lyrical idea.
And according to Barrett Strong,
who is backed up by the engineer
and the guitarist on the session,
Strong, who played the piano on the session
as well as singing,
was jamming the riff,
having hit upon it while messing around
with Ray Charles as what did I say?
Gordy only came into the session
after Strong had already taught
the instrumental parts to the musicians,
and Gordy and Bradford only wrote the lyrics
after the instrumental track was already completed.
The initial filing of the song's copyright credited Strong for words and music,
Gordy for words and music, and Bradford only for words.
According to both Bradford and Gordy, that's because Bradford, who filled out the form,
didn't understand the form and made a mistake.
Three years later, Strong's name was taken off the copyright,
and he wasn't informed of the change.
His name didn't appear on the label of the record.
Personally, I tend to believe strong.
The song simply doesn't sound that much
like Gordy's other songs of the period,
which were based far less on riffs
and which didn't tend to be 12 bar bluesers.
Whoever wrote it, the result was a great record,
and the first true classic to come out of the Gordy operation.
The B-side isn't quite as good,
but it's still a strong ballad,
and if you're a fan of John Lennon's solo work,
you might find the middle eight very familiar.
Money came out on Tamla and was initially fairly unsuccessful,
because Tamla didn't have any national distribution.
But Anna Records did.
That label had partnered with Chess Records.
Chess had sent Harvey Fuquhar,
who was working for chess as an executive as well as a performer,
over to work with Anna Records.
Fouquhar had brought with him another member of his latest lineup of the Moon Glows,
a young man named Marvin Gay, to work for Anna as a session drummer and part-time janitor,
and Marvin soon got into a relationship with Anna Gordy.
But Marvin wasn't the only one to get into a relationship with the Gordy sister.
Harvey Fouquhar had been dating Etta James,
with whom he was having a few hits as a duet act on chess.
But he soon struck up a relationship with Gwen Gordy.
He split up with James, Gwen Gordy split up with Raquel Davis,
and then Barry and Gwen Gordy and Raquel Davis wrote a song about the splits,
which Etta James performed for chess, back as a solo artist again.
That became a hit in June 1960, and that was also the month that Money finally became a hit,
nearly a year after it was released.
The Tamla record had been a local hit, but Tamla still didn't have any national distribution,
So Barry Gordy leased the recording to his sister's label.
He was re-released on Anna Records, distributed through chess,
and became the first national hit for one of the Gordy family's labels,
reaching number two on the R&B charts and number 23 on the pop charts.
The Gordy family of labels was starting to have some real success.
Unfortunately, that would be Barrett Strong's only hit as a performer.
Over the next 18 months, he would release on a show.
a whole variety of singles, none of which had any success, eventually trying the desperate
tactic of recording a follow-up to Money, titled Money and Me, with the writing credited to
Barry Gordy, Janie Bradford, Smokey Robinson, and Robert Bateman, a singer who was one of the
Rayber singers. That didn't work, and Strong ended up going back to work on the Chrys the production
line, giving up his singing career. But that won't be the last we'll see of him. He'll be back
with a new job in a few years' time.
But in late 1959,
they didn't know yet that money would even be a hit,
let alone a classic that would be remembered
more than 60 years later.
Indeed, the biggest success
that had come out of the Gordy operation
was still Marve Johnson,
and while he was signed to United Artists,
he was still making records with Barry Gordy.
Gordy was writing and producing his records,
and now they were also being recorded at Gordy's home.
He and Raynomer had bought a house with a recording studio in the back in August 1959.
They named the house Hitzville USA and it became the headquarters for the Gordy family of labels.
Berry and Raynomer lived in a flat upstairs, while the recording studio downstairs was open 22 hours a day.
Eventually they would buy all the other nearby houses and turn them into offices for their recording, publishing and management empire.
The whole family pitched in to make the company a success.
Barry's sister Esther took over the finances of Tamla,
with the assistance of her accountant's husband.
Their other sister, Lucy, took charge of the record manufacturing side of the business,
liaising with pressing plants, overseeing cover art, and so on.
And Raynomer managed Joe Bet,
the publishing company named after Barry's first three children,
Joy, Barry and Terry.
The Hitsville studio was primarily.
at first. The echo chamber was also the toilet and someone had to stand guard outside it
while they were recording to make sure no one used it during a session. But it was good enough
for Gordy to use it to make hit records from Marv Johnson, like You Got What It Takes.
That went top ten on both the pop and R&B charts, as did the follow-up, I love the way
you love. But those hits were on someone else's label.
was still looking to expand his own record business,
and so he decided he was going to start a second label,
to go along with Tamla.
Smokey Robinson had still not had a hit,
though he was writing a lot of material,
but then Smokey brought Berry a song he thought was a guaranteed hit.
Bad Girl.
Gordy decided that he was going to start up a new label just for groups,
while Tamla would be for solo artists,
and Bad Girl was going to be the first release on it.
But once again he didn't have a proper national distributor for his record,
so after it started selling around Detroit,
he licensed the record to Chess Records, who reissued it.
Bad Girl went to No. 93 on the Hot 100,
proving that Smokey Robinson did indeed have the potential to make a real hit.
But, as was so often the way,
Chess didn't pay Gordy's company the proper royalties for the record.
And so Gordy decided that his new label was going to have,
have to have national distribution.
He wasn't going to let any more of its records come out on chess or United Artists.
From now on, either they were on Tamla or they were coming out on the new label.
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