Friday, February 6, 2009

The Temptations Complete History


the temptations


The Temptations


The Temptations were formed in 1961 in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A., by former members of two local R & B groups.


Eddie Kendricks (b. Edward James Kendrick, 17th December 1939, Union Springs, Alabama, U.S.A., d. 5th October 1992, Baptist Medical Center-Princeton, Ensley, Alabama, U.S.A.)


and Paul Williams (b. 2nd July 1939, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A., d. 17th August 1973, Detroit Michigan, U.S.A.)


The Primes the primes


...both sang with 'The Primes'.


Melvin Franklin (b. David Melvin English, 12th October 1942, Montgomery, Alabama, U.S.A., d. 23rd February 1995, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.)


Eldridge Bryant (Eldridge 'Al' Bryant, b. 28th September 1939, Michigan, U.S.A. d. 26th October 1975, Orange County, Florida, U.S.A., buried in Thomasville, Georgia, U.S.A.)


and Otis Williams (b. Otis Clayborn Williams, 30th October 1941, Texarkana, Texas, U.S.A. His mother was Hazel Lee Williams)


...were part of 'The Distants'...


...later Temptations included...


David Ruffin (b. 18th January 1941, Whyknot, Mississippi, U.S.A., d. 1st June 1991, Philadelphia, Pennsylvannia, U.S.A.)


Dennis Edwards (b. Dennis Wayne Edwards Jnr, 3rd February 1943, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A.)


G.C. Cameron (b. George Curtis Cameron, 21st September 1945, Jackson, Mississippi, U.S.A.)


Louis Price (b. Louis Bernhardt Price, 29th March 1953, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.)


Ronald Wilson (of the group Bloodstone)


Raymond Davis (b. Raymond Davis, 29th March 1940, Sumter, South Carolina, U.S.A. d. 5th July 2005, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, New Brunswick, U.S.A.)


Damon Harris (b. Damon Othell Harris, 3rd July 1950, Baltimore Maryland, U.S.A.)


Glenn Leonard (b. Glenn Carl Leonard, 11th June 1947, Washington D.C., U.S.A.)


Harry McGilberry (b. Harry McGilberry Jnr, 19th January 1950, Pennsylvannia, U.S.A. d. 3rd April 2006)


Richard Street (b. Richard Dale Street, 5th October 1942, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.)


Ron Tyson (b. Ronald Tyson, 8th February 1948, Philadelphia, Pennsylvannia, U.S.A.)


Ali 'Ollie' Woodson (b. Ollie Creggett, 12th September 1951, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.)


Richard Owens (b. Richard Edgar 'Ricky' Owens, 24th April 1939, St Louis, Missouri, U.S.A. d. 6th December 1995, Los Angeles County, California, U.S.A.)


Dennis Williams


Theo Peoples (b. Theoplis Peoples III, 1961, St. Louis Missouri, U.S.A.)


and Cal Osborne.


Additional participants:


Cornelius Grant (guitarist and musical director, b 27th April 1943, Navarro County, Texas, U.S.A.)


Barrington Scott 'Bo Henderson (b. 10th June 1956, Washington, Pennsylvannia, U.S.A.)


Joseph Lucian 'Joe' Herndon (b. 5th January 1949, Washington D.C., U.S.A.)


Terry Wayne Weeks ( b. 23rd December 1963, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A.)


The Temptations were formed out of two groups, the Primes (whose line up included Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams and Kell Osborne) and the Distants (who in 1959 recorded the single 'Come On' for the Northern imprint).


The Primettes the primettes


The Primes manager had even put together a girl version of the group, the Primettes (three of the Primettes, namely, Diana Ross, Mary Wilson and Florence Ballard were later to form the Supremes).


After the Primes and the Distants had merged, they became the Elgins, a name that was later to change to the Temptations in 1961, at the request of Berry Gordy, who took the group to his Motown Records imprint.


Under the new mantle, they recorded three sides for the Miracle label (a Motown subsidiary), one of which was under the name of the Pirates.


They later moved to the Gordy imprint where they made the charts in 1962 with the song 'Dream Come True'.


Gordy then teamed up the Temptations with Smokey Robinson, a liaison that was to prove highly fruitful.


In 1963, Eldridge Bryant left the group (or was fired after physically attacking Paul Williams) and David Ruffin was recruited to the ranks, bringing to the music scene, what is considered by many to be, the 'classic' Temptations line-up.


David's coarser delivery proved to be the perfect foil for Eddie Kendricks' softer falsetto style of singing.


Between 1963 and 1965 the group recorded several chart hits, kicking off proceedings with 'The Way You Do The Things You Do'.


1965 saw the group hitting the number one spot with the song 'My Girl', with David Ruffin taking the lead.


'It's Growing', 'Since I Lost My Baby', 'My Girl' and 'Get Ready' followed on with varying levels of success into the following year.


Temptations Sing SmokeyTemptations Christmas Card


A parent album was released entitled 'Temptations Sing Smokey', an album considered by many pundits to be the finest album of that decade.


By the end of 1966, Smokey took a back seat as the groups Producer, with Norman Whitfield taking the helm.


Norman was to be employed in this role for the following decade, teaming up with the singer / songwriter Barrett Strong.


'Ain't To Proud To Beg' was the initial release under the new tutelage.


'Beauty Is Only Skin Deep' made the Top Three, followed by 'I'm Losing You' and 'You're My Everything'.


The Temptations at the apollo


The group also charted at the top spot with the classic song 'I Wish It Would Rain', the groups sixth number one tune.


By this time, David Ruffin had taken on the role of singing lead, which led to requests that he had an individual credit for his efforts.


This was refused and, after failing to appear at a 1968 live performance, the other four Temptations fired him and David left the line-up.


The lead singer in the group the Contours, Dennis Edwards, was then drafted into the ranks.


Norman Whitfield, following a need to take the group in a new direction, moved the groups sound into an area that reflected the burgeoning psychedelic scene of the late Sixties.


'Cloud Nine' reflected this political shift with it's obvious drug connotations.


The Civil Rights movement of the time also became reflected in Norman and Barrett Strongs writings, typified in the song 'Ball Of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)'.


The issues effecting teenagers were addressed by the song 'Runaway Child, Running Wild'.


Personal issues were also addressed in the form of 'I Can't Get Next To You', a song that hit the number one spot.


Even the Vietnam War came under Norman's scrutiny in the guise of 'Stop The War Now'.


whitfield & strong


Norman Whitfield set a musical styling that was way ahead of it's time and still influences the songwriters of today.


The groups new direction left Eddie Kendricks feeling uncomfortable with his vocal stylings being suited more to a ballad format.


He recorded some sides with the Supremes during the latter part of that decade.


Eddie did receive the lead role on the number one hit 'Just My Imagination', a beautiful song, however, he was to leave the group in 1971 fto pursue a solo career.


Richard Owens was then drafted in to replace Eddie, who was in turn substituted for Damon Harris the same year.


Paul Williams then departed the group, replaced by another member of the Distants, Richard Street.


In 1971, the group had a hit with 'Superstar (Remember How You Got Where You Are)'.


The following year, the group scored another number one hit with the song 'Papa Was A Rolling Stone', a song that perfectly embodies the production techniques of Norman Whitfield.


The song was later to win a Grammy Award.


Paul Williams, tragically, commited suicide in 1973 by shooting himself, following years of depression and drug abuse.


Norman and Barrett's liaison ended the same year.


The groups fortunes waned somewhat, although there were some excellent releases, including 'Masterpiece', The Plastic Man' and 'Let Your Hair Down' in 1973, followed by 'Happy People' two years later.


In 1975, Norman Whitfield left Motown, Damon Harris had left the line-up, replaced by Glenn Leonard.


1976, saw Dennis Edwards leaving, Louis Price replacing him, and the group leaving Motown for the Atlantic imprint after the group recorded 1976's 'The Temptations Do the Temptations', their final album for Motown.


The Temptations the temptations 1977


At Atlantic the group had a dabble with the disco market, releasing the LP's 'Bare Back' and 'Hear to Tempt You'.


This change of labels brought the group little chart success resulting in a return to the Motown stable.


Dennis Edwards rejoined the ranks and in 1980 the group released the album 'Power'.


In 1982, they teamed up with Rick James, recording the album 'Reunion', featuring the dancer 'Standing On The Top'.


This album also saw a return to the fold for Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin, however, this arrangement was to be shortlived.


After the departure of the pair, Ron Tyson replaced Glenn Leonard, and Ali 'Ollie' Woodson took over the role of lead vocalist from Dennis Edwards.


In 1984, the group charted again with the song 'Treat Her Like A Lady', their most successful song in a decade.


The parent album produced several singles including the title song 'Truly For You'.


David RuffinEddie Kendricks ruffin & kendricks


Tragedy struck in 1991 when David Ruffin died on the 1st of June 1991, after overdosing on cocaine.


On the 5th of October 1992, Eddie Kendricks died at the age of 52 of lung cancer.


In 1995, Melvin Franklin died after suffering a brain seizure, leaving Otis Williams (who published his autobiography in 1988) as the sole surviving founder member from the original line-up.


The Temptations continued to record and perform, achieving success in 1998 with their excellent outing 'Phoenix Rising' (featuring the band utilising a sample from 'My Girl'), on the excellent song 'Stay'.


A new, Grammy winning, album arrived in the year 2000, entitled 'Ear-resistable' (on Motown), which was well received.


The line-up was by now, Otis Williams, Harry McGilberry Jnr. (later replaced by Joe Herndon, former bass singer for Pookie Hudson & The Spaniels), Terry Wayne Weeks, Barrington Scott Henderson and Ron Tyson.


AwesomeLegacy


In 2001, the Temptations returned to the recording studio recording the album 'Awesome'.


In 2003, G.C. Cameron joined the groups ranks, and in 2004 the group released the album 'Legacy'.


Harry McGilberry passed away on the 3rd of April 2006.


The Temptations are, probably, the most enduring, hardworking and successful group in Soul Music.


The TemptationsThe Temptations


Real Player


Albums:


Meet The Temptations (Gordy 1964)


The Temptations Sing Smokey (Gordy 1965)


The Temptin' Temptations (Gordy 1965)


Gettin' Ready (Gordy 1966)


Temptations Live! (Gordy 1967)


With A Lot O'Soul (Gordy 1967)


The Temptations In A Mellow Mood (Gordy 1967)


Wish It Would Rain (Gordy 1968)


with Diana Ross And The Supremes: Diana Ross And The Supremes join The Temptations (Motown 1968)


with Diana Ross And The Supremes: TGB (Motown 1968)


Live At The Copa (Gordy 1968)


Cloud Nine (Gordy 1969)


The Temptations Show (Gordy 1969)


Puzzle People (Gordy 1969)


with Diana Ross And The Supremes: Together (Motown 1969)


with Diana Ross And The Supremes: On Broadway (Motown 1969)


Psychedelic Shack (Gordy 1970)


Live At London's Talk Of The Town (Gordy 1970)


The Temptations Christmas Card (Gordy 1970)


Sky's The Limit (Gordy 1971)


Solid Rock (Gordy 1972)


All Directions (Gordy 1972)


Masterpiece (Gordy 1973)


1990 (Gordy 1973)


A Song For You (Gordy 1975)


House Party (Gordy 1975)


Wings Of Love (Gordy 1976)


The Temptations Do The Temptations (Gordy 1976)


Hear To Tempt You (Atlantic 1977)


Bare Back (Atlantic 1978)


Power (Gordy 1980)


Give Love At Christmas (Gordy 1980)


The Temptations (Gordy 1981)


with David Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks: Reunion (Gordy 1982)


Surface Thrills (Gordy 1983)


Back To Basics (Gordy 1984)


Truly For You (Gordy 1984)


Touch Me (Gordy 1985)


To Be Continued ... (Gordy 1986)


Together Again (Motown 1987)


Special (Motown 1989)


Milestone (Motown 1991)


Phoenix Rising (Motown 1998)


Ear-resistable (Motown 2000)


Awesome (Motown 2001)


Legacy (Motown 2004)


Reflections (Motown 2006)


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Finding Nemo : The Disney on Ice show - Exclusive Report

Since many years each winter we have in France a new Disney on Ice show, and this year the show is themed on "Finding Nemo". Recently the show was in the town of Lyon, and Maureen, Disney and more regular contributor and damn' good young photographer was there!

She came back with a beautiful - and colorful - pictorial report, and it's real eye candy! As you will see below, the show looks a bit like the Animal Kingdom Nemo musical...but on ice! You all know Nemo's story, so comments are not needed, just look, double click on each to see the pictures in big size, and enjoy!

The last show in France was January 31st and i don't know if the show will go in others European countries, but if it comes to your town no need to say that i strongly recommand you to go see it!

Many thanks to Maureen for these great pictures that were not that easy to shoot, specially with ice skaters constantly moving! If you'd like to have some of them in wallpaper size, have a look at Maureen's Flickr page.




























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College Music Service Ruckus.com Shuts Down

Ruckus, an online music service geared towards universities that allows students to stream an unlimited amount of music, has apparently just closed its doors. The service was designed to appeal to college students, offering a legal alternative to the piracy that can be found on many campuses. Ruckus was initially offered as a subscription service, then eventually moved to an ad-supported model with partnerships with dozens of major universities. Eventually it opened to all students with an accepted university email address (typically .edu).

At around 5 PM EST today the site went down with a notice stating that it was undergoing an update. As of 5:30, it was displaying the shutdown notice seen above.

We’re told that music that has not passed its “renew date” still works, but that music that has expired will no longer work because the DRM licensing server has apparently shut down.

Last year Ruckus was acquired by Total Music, the joint venture between Sony and UMG, with the intention of using it as a backend for a service which still has yet to launch. Total Music has been struggling for some time - we hear that it made a strong pitch to provide Facebook’s music service, but that it was eventually denied when the social network was unwilling to share revenue and user data, which would have been part of the deal.

While Ruckus’ closure certainly doesn’t bode well for the initiative, Total Music doesn’t seem dead quite yet. Last month it quietly launched a site called Tunepost in private beta, which seems to offer streaming music through a widget.


for more info

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Metallica Fade To Black lyrics

Life it seems will fade away
Drifting further everyday
Getting lost within myself
Nothing matters no one else
I have lost the will to live
Simply nothing more to give
There is nothing more for me
Need the end to set me free

Things not what they used to be
Missing one inside of me
Deathly lost this can't be real
Can't stand this hell I feel
Emptiness is filling me
To the point of agony
Growing darkness taking dawn
I was me, but now he's gone

No one but me can save myself, but it's too late
Now I can't think, think why I should even try

Yesterday seems as though it never existed
Death greets me warm, now I will just say goodbye

Goodbye

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Yacht Murderer: I 'Never Really Felt Evil'

In his first network television interview since being convicted for murder, Skylar Deleon told ABC News Senior Law and Justice correspondent Jim Avila that he was guilty and, for the Hawks family, that he's "absolutely sorry."

In October 2008, the jury voted for the death penalty for Deleon, a former child actor who murdered Tom and Jackie Hawks aboard their yacht in 2004.

Each harrowing moment of the crime was laid out in painful detail during a calm confession from Alonso Machain, an accomplice and eyewitness to the murders.

Watch the story on "20/20" Friday, Feb. 6 at 10 p.m. ET.

In his confession, Machain described Deleon's plot to kill the Hawkses, including important details up until the moment Deleon pushed the couple overboard.

When asked about the murder, Deleon, 29, told ABC News, "I've never really felt evil. I felt more of, 'I don't care. I don't care about my life. I don't care about what happens to you.'"

An American Dream Shattered

Tom, 57, and Jackie Hawks, 47, had worked all their lives to retire early. They quit the 9-5 world to live the life they had saved for during all those hard years working. Tom Hawks was a parole officer and Jackie Hawks was a mother to his two boys, Matt and Ryan.

Ryan Hawks, 32, said his father lived a frugal lifestyle.

"The reason he was able to retire early and live on the water and do this dream of traveling through Mexico was because of his financial responsibility," he said.

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Drugs Missing From Police Property Room

Feb. 2, 2009

GALVESTON, Texas - Drugs are missing from the Galveston Police Department's property room, officials told KPRC Local 2 Friday.

Police said officers conducted a routine evidence count last week and noticed some of the narcotics from previous and pending court cases weren't there anymore.

"We are undergoing a comprehensive inventory," Police Chief Charles Wiley said. "Employees have been restricted access to that property room. Polygraph tests are being administered. We're conducting a full-fledged internal investigation."

Wiley said they do not have any leads as to what happened to the drugs.

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James Whitmore dies at 87; veteran actor brought American icons to life

James Whitmore, the veteran Tony- and Emmy-winning actor who brought American icons Will Rogers, Harry Truman and Theodore Roosevelt to life in one-man shows, died Friday. He was 87.

Whitmore died of lung cancer at his home in Malibu, said his son, Steve. He was diagnosed with the disease a week before Thanksgiving.
"He cared about acting; his whole life was dedicated to the theater and to movies," said actor David Huddleston, a longtime friend who appeared in Whitmore's 1964 movie "Black Like Me" and did a couple of plays with him. "I asked James Cagney one time to tell me the best thing you can about acting. He said never to get caught at it. That's kind of how I'd sum up Jim Whitmore."

James Arness, who appeared with Whitmore in the movies "Battleground" and "Them!," said Whitmore was "an actor's actor," adding that " it was always a treat to work with him."

Arness also remembered the "great intensity" Whitmore could bring to a role.

"When we wanted to get an actor to play a character who had that quality, Jimmy was the guy you'd think of," said Arness, who starred in "Gunsmoke," a TV series that Whitmore appeared on a number of times.

A stocky World War II Marine Corps veteran who bore a resemblance to actor Spencer Tracy and shared Tracy's down-to-earth quality, Whitmore earned early acclaim as an actor.

In 1948, he won a Tony Award for outstanding performance by a newcomer in the role of an amusingly cynical Army Air Forces sergeant in the Broadway production of "Command Decision."

Whitmore's Broadway success brought him to Hollywood, where he received an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor in his second movie, the hit 1949 World War II drama "Battleground," in which he played a tobacco-chewing, battle-weary Army sergeant.

Supporting roles and occasional leads in some 50 movies followed over the next 50-plus years, including "The Asphalt Jungle," "Them!," "Kiss Me Kate," "Battle Cry," "Oklahoma!," "Planet of the Apes," "Tora! Tora! Tora!," "The Serpent's Egg," "Nuts," "The Shawshank Redemption" and "The Majestic."

A frequent guest actor on television, Whitmore also starred in three series: the 1960-62 legal drama "The Law and Mr. Jones," the 1969 detective drama "My Friend Tony" and the 1972-74 hospital sit-com "Temperatures Rising" (although he left after a year, he later said, "because it was just a series of jokes").

In 2000, Whitmore won an Emmy Award as outstanding guest actor in a drama series for "The Practice," and he received a 2003 Emmy nomination in the same category for "Mister Sterling."

An avid flower and vegetable gardener, Whitmore also was known to TV viewers as the longtime commercial pitchman for Miracle-Gro garden products.

Whitmore often said he found acting in films and television boring because of the long waits between scenes; his passion was for the theater, and he continued to act on stage throughout his long career.

"I've been very, very lucky," he said in a 2003 interview with the Nashville Tennessean. "The stage is human beings sharing something together -- flesh and blood together -- and the others are mechanical and shadows on the screen."

Although he starred in productions of plays such as "Our Town," "Inherit the Wind" and "Death of a Salesman," Whitmore was best known for his three one-man shows: as Truman in "Give 'em Hell, Harry!," as Roosevelt in "Bully" and as Rogers in "Will Rogers' U.S.A."

The 1975 film of his performance in "Give 'em Hell, Harry!" earned Whitmore a best actor Oscar nomination.

But the one-man-show character he said he "always felt most comfortable with" was Rogers.

"He was wise with a sense of humor, and that's an unbeatable combination," Whitmore told the Manchester (N.H.) Union Leader in 2003.

He was initially resistant to the idea of playing the gum-chewing, lariat-twirling humorist -- his first one-man show -- when adapter-director Paul Shyre brought "Will Rogers' U.S.A." to him in 1969.

"I didn't think I could conceivably carry an evening by myself. I had difficulty holding the attention of my family," Whitmore recalled in a 1995 interview with The Times.

But any qualms he had disappeared when the show premiered in a small theater in Webster Groves, Mo., in January 1970.

"I realized immediately that I was in the presence of an extraordinary man," Whitmore told The Times. "I didn't realize that until I heard the response of other human beings to him."

Whitmore ultimately had about eight hours of Rogers' various comments about the topics of the day memorized, changing the show each time he did it.

"I tried to use whatever seemed to be of interest to the folks in the audience that day," he told the Tulsa World in 2001. "I took the news from today's newspaper but didn't change what Will Rogers said. It's amazing how little things have changed since Will was about."

Whitmore completed 30 years of on-and-off touring as Rogers at Ford's Theatre in Washington in 2000, and his costume is now housed in the Smithsonian Institution.

Born in White Plains, N.Y., on Oct. 1, 1921, Whitmore later moved to Buffalo, N.Y., where he attended public schools until his senior year of high school, when he attended the Choate School in Wallingford, Conn., on a football scholarship.

He was a pre-law major on an athletic scholarship at Yale University, but he had to quit playing football after suffering two knee injuries.

While at Yale, Whitmore helped launch the campus radio station.

"I was able to stay in school with a nightly sports show, 'Jim Whitmore Speaks,' with interviews and sports news. I made 40 bucks a week," he told the Tennessean in 2003.

With World War II underway, Whitmore joined the Marines during his senior year in 1942 and served in the South Pacific. After his discharge, he eventually moved to New York City and used the GI Bill to study acting at the American Theatre Wing.

In 1947, he married his first wife, Nancy Mygatt, with whom he had three children. They were divorced after 24 years. After Whitmore's second marriage in the 1970s, to actress Audra Lindley, he and his first wife were remarried but divorced after two years

Whitmore, who was an early student at the Actors Studio in New York in the late '40s, taught an acting workshop after moving to Hollywood. Among his students in the early '50s was young James Dean, whom Whitmore advised to go to New York.

"I owe a lot to Whitmore," Dean told Seventeen magazine in 1955. "One thing he said helped more than anything. He told me I didn't know the difference between acting as a soft job and acting as a difficult art."

For his part, Whitmore remained modest about his own acting talent.

"I never thought I was good," he told the Palm Beach Post in 2002. "I've touched the hem of the garment a few times but never grabbed it full-hand."

When he died Friday, Whitmore "was surrounded by what he considered to be the most important thing in his life, which was his family," his son Steve said.

In addition to his son, Whitmore is survived by his wife, Noreen; his sons James Jr. and Dan; eight grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.

Services are pending.

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