THIS WEEK 50 YEARS AGO: THE HOTTEST HIT IN THE USA!

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NUMBER 1 IN AMERICA ’65 * Temptations  * WEEK OF 2/28 – 3/6/1965

THIRTEEN WEEKS on the singles chart, My Girl,” by the Temptations peaked No. 1 (1 week) on the Billboard Hot 100, week of February 28, 1965 through March 6, 1965(source: Billboard).

MCRFB Link: For the previous No. 1 record in the U.S.A. 1965 GO HERE.

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DETROIT MOTOWN MONDAY RECORD FLASHBACK ’68!

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Motown Museum Detroit winter (WINTRY GLOW MCRFB)

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THE TEMPTATIONS * Silent Night * GORDY  (Motown 1968)

Motown Mondays.(MCRFB)Motown Museum in winter. (To fully appreciated the beautiful Motown Museum image posted above, click on image 2x for largest detailed view).

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TEMPTATIONS’ MOTOWN ACT ENTHRALLS COPA CROWD. . . APRIL 19, 1969

From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1969

Temptations a Polished Music-Making Machine

 

 

 

 

 

THE TEMPTATIONS with Dennis Edwards, who replaced lead David Ruffin, July 1968. (Click on image for largest view).

NEW YORK — The pleasure, pride and drama of steamrolling into the Copacabana last Thursday, April 10, with their million-sellers yielding to their million-sellers and hit albums crowding the current chart tops now belongs to Detroit’s own Motown Temptations, that relentless soul-to-gold hit machine, whose polish can be witnessed in person or can be researched in sneakers anytime on their fine album, “The Temptations Live At The Copa.”

Flashing their synchronized soul bursts, the quintet collaged their greatest hits into a picture of perpetual motions, striking the heights of excitement with “I Could Never Love Another,” “I’m Gonna Make You Love Me” and “I’m Losing You.” The crunching soul snarl of Dennis Edwards, melting into the sensitive notes and high cries of Eddie Kendricks, fluently eased into the chords given off by Paul Williams with his rendition of “For Once In My Life.”

The electrifying acts’ finality became even more crowd enthralled when Mel Franklin took the microphone by complimenting the staged event with his moving bass reading of “Old Man River.” The song had been previously entwined in the group’s indelible trademark ever since Motown released the Tempts Detroit Roostertail “live” performance LP in 1967.

The versatility and timeless popularity of the Temps has made them music makers as big as the music they have shaped themselves, a brand of music which is without question, still on top pulsating the rhythmic heartbeat of a nation dancing to Detroit’s Motown soul today. END

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(Information and news source: Billboard; April 19, 1969)

DENNIS EDWARDS and the Temptations, late-1968.


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