Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Brian Holland and Eddie Holland
Episode Date: February 3, 2022GGACP celebrates Black History Month with this encore presentation featuring Rock & Roll Hall of Famers Brian Holland and Eddie Holland. In this episode, Brian and Eddie reflect on the history of Mot...own, their work with The Supremes, Marvin Gaye and The Four Tops and the creative process behind their dozens of hits, including "Heat Wave," "Baby Love," "I Hear a Symphony," and "You Keep Me Hangin' On." Also, Martha Reeves makes her move, Berry Gordy builds an empire, The Beatles cover "Please Mr. Postman" and Eddie co-writes "Ain't Too Proud to Beg." PLUS: The Funk Brothers! The genius of Lamont Dozier! Motown goes psychedelic! Brian praises Richard Pryor! And Eddie remembers the legendary Jackie Wilson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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TV comics, movie stars, hit singles and some toys.
Trivia and dirty jokes, an evening with the boys.
Once is never good enough
For something so fantastic
So here's another Gilbert and Franks
Here's another Gilbert and Franks
Here's another Gilbert and Franks
Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
We're thrilled to welcome this week's guest to the show.
In fact, I don't know if I've ever seen Frank more excited.
They're musicians, arrangers, Grammy-winning record producers,
and two of the most successful, admired, and influential songwriters of the 20th century or any century.
or any century.
Along with fellow producing and songwriting legend
Lamont Dozer,
they're responsible
for some of the most beloved songs
of our lifetimes,
including
Where Did Our Love Go,
Baby Love,
Heat Wave,
How Sweet It Is
To Be Loved By You,
Come See About Me,
Stop In The Name Of Love, I Hear A Symphony, How sweet it is to be loved by you. Come see about me. Stop in the name of love.
I hear a symphony.
You can't hurry love.
Baby, I need your loving.
Bernadette, reach out.
I'll be there.
You keep me hanging on reflections.
Can I get a witness?
A band of gold and the hits just keep coming,
including 10 number one hits for the Supremes alone.
In addition to Penning, unforgettable tunes for Motown icons,
the Supremes, the Four Tops, the Temptations, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Marvin Gaye and Martha Reeves
and the Vandellas. Their songs have been recorded or covered by a who's who of popular music,
including James Taylor, Phil Collins, The Who, Michael Jackson, Barbara Streisand, Rod Stewart, Linda Ronstadt, Stevie Wonder,
the Rolling Stones, and even the Beatles.
They're members of the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
They were awarded stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame,
and they were quite deservedly inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Their terrific, best-selling new memoir is called Come and Get These Memories,
and it will soon be released as an audiobook. Please welcome to the show two artists who helped shape the soundtrack of our lives
and two talents sometimes referred to as America's Lennon and McCartney,
Brian Holland and Eddie Holland.
Wow, Frank.
Frank, how you doing? Good job, man.
That's not Frank. That's Gilbert.
No, that's Frank talking.
No, Gilbert was doing all that talking.
That was Gilbert, right?
Yeah, that's Gilbert.
I mean, I don't know who you're talking about.
I mean, you were giving us so many accolades.
I started to stand up and clap for the people.
I said, oh, he's talking about us.
Gentlemen, welcome. Now, he's talking about us. Now,
gentlemen, welcome.
Now, that's Gilbert there.
Right here. That's Gilbert
and Frank's over here.
Frank is in the blue shirt.
What? Yeah.
That's Frank there in the blue shirt.
Yeah, but you can thank me
for the intro too, Eddie.
Oh, okay.
That's guilty.
No.
I'm going to tell you.
You know already.
I'm going to tell you.
I'm telling you.
Guys, thanks for taking the time to do this today.
Okay, now you Gilbert.
Yes, I am.
In a blue shirt.
Okay, good.
In a blue shirt, okay.
In a white shirt with the squares. Okay, good. Okay, in a blue shirt. In a white shirt with the squares.
Okay, good.
Okay, good.
But we often portray each other.
Okay, no problem.
But the way you were talking and carrying on, I thought we was going to run for president.
You got my vote, Brian.
You got my vote.
Maybe we can hold cards of our names.
I know your name.
First of all, it's right there.
I know his name.
I got his name.
Or name tags.
That's Gilbert.
I got Gilbert.
I got you in the blue shirt.
And what's that shirt say?
What does that shirt say?
Gilbert, what does that shirt say?
He wants to know what your shirt says.
Oh, this is some comedy club.
Oh, good. Which one?
I get all my shirts for free.
You know, Brian Gilbert loves a free shirt.
I understand.
If you have any shirts, say it.
Well, unfortunately, at this point, we don't have one.
I don't think that, you know.
Tell us about music becoming a part of your lives in the first place,
because it was a number of factors.
It was the church choir.
It was the piano that Brian snuck into the church to play.
It was your Uncle James record collection.
I mean, you guys always had music in your lives growing up.
Always, always, always.
I couldn't think of a day that has gone by that I didn't have music in my life.
But, you know, growing up in Detroit, it was a big music city anyway.
Because, like I said, as kids coming up, Brian and I, you know, teenagers,
our pastime was really having our little vocal groups together, you know, standing on the
corners, making harmony, often waking up the neighbors, sometimes having the neighbors
to get out of their beds, chase you and chase you down the street because you were making
so much noise and they had
to get up, especially the ones that
had to get up and go to factory workers.
The factory workers at Ford's.
They would jump up and, man, we would be
flying down the street and say, Edward, Brian,
you guys can sing, but don't
sing so loud. I don't know how
he heard us all the way down
the street. So we must have really been
singing loud.
But that was a big part of our lives, you know.
And going to, you know, going to the theaters.
And they had a lot of shows, you know, where you had the talent shows.
You know, I didn't participate in any of those.
But I would go and watch them.
As a matter of fact, that's when I first saw I Continue to Turn is one of those shows.
Oh, at the movie theaters in Detroit.
Yeah, they used to have them all over the city.
Little Willie John you saw, too.
Oh, man.
First of all, Little Willie John, I went to school with him.
He was tough.
He was kind of tough.
Always could sing. I mean, this guy was so, he was kind of tough. Always could sing.
I mean, this guy was so, he was such a great singer, you know.
And every time he would see me, if I would see him in a club somewhere where he was performing,
he was always going to say, hey, homeboy.
Yeah, that's right.
We've had a lot of singer-songwriters on this show.
Yeah, we had Paul Williams and Jimmy Webb.
Oh, Jimmy Webb, okay.
Yeah.
And all of them, when we asked the question,
what got you into the music business,
they all seemed to say to pick up women.
Pick up women.
Wow.
Or that at least girls were part of the incentive
That was not my incentive
To be honest with you
Although, you gotta be honest
It came later
I just enjoyed the singing
I just enjoyed the group
I didn't really like singing professionally.
That was never my intention.
But I enjoyed it.
It was a great part of my life and the entertainment.
You know, we grew up with a grandmother that was a very, very disciplinarian.
And she would, you know, first of all, we had to go to church at least five or six times a week.
And for a breather and a relaxer, we would love to go to the shows or have our groups and perform. surprising is the way my grandmother had us singing in church or you know, I was surprised she would
allow us to sing the so-called
secular music. But she
for some reason, she was very
considered. I guess she said, oh, they're just
teenage boys, you know, give them, let them
have some fun. As long
as we, as much as we love
also going to the theater, movie
theater, she would never let us go on a Sunday.
Couldn't go on Sunday, so don't waste your time.
I see.
But other than that, you know, she, you know, she was tough disciplinarian.
Well, we're going to talk about your upbringing a little bit more, but we'll address Gilbert's question on the subject of women.
Because there's a fascinating thing in the book, Eddie, about all these women that heard your song lyrics and started turning up in droves at Motown headquarters to meet you.
Because they thought you understood them.
Oh, that happened.
Yeah, I don't know about droves, but it happened.
I was surprised.
I mean, you know.
But I was surprised.
I was surprised.
But I was surprised.
I was surprised.
You know, there were basically a few people come from Cleveland,
some few from Chicago, and that's what they were saying.
They say, well, I said, why?
I want to see you.
I want to meet you.
I want to talk to you.
I said, well, why?
They said, because I listen to your records.
You understand me. You understand me. I mean, well, why? You know, they said, because I listen to your records. You understand me.
You understand me.
I mean, I was shocked.
I didn't understand.
I mean, I understood what I was writing about because that was the way I was able to write because I understood how, you know, especially those teenage girls and how they were.
You know, I had most of the attention when I was in intermediate school.
You know, I had a lot of attention there,
more than I really truly wanted, you know,
because sometimes they would, in between their classes,
they would come to my homeroom, and they'd be sitting by the window,
I mean, you know, the homeroom, and I asked the teacher
because she moved me a couple times, and it happened.
But, you know, they would follow me home, and I had a lot of attention.
But then as I got a little older, I would talk to them and find out what was it.
Because they became very interesting to me.
I noticed, yeah, I thought that the females, I learned very, very early that they were not as plain or as simple-minded, so to speak, as the guys would think they are.
I learned very, very early.
So I would spend a lot of time asking them questions.
What do you do this for and how do you do this?
What do you like about this and What do you like about this?
Just to get them to
talking.
I learned a lot, especially
by the time I was in my early 20s.
They really
educated me to
the ways of females, which was
very tricky.
It was tough.
It was very helpful in writing. Yes, which was very tricky. I mean, it was tough. Helpful. It was very helpful in writing. Yes. Yes.
Yes. I was going to say, yes, because you, you wrote a lot.
You wrote from women's point of view. I mean, it sounded like you keep me hanging on.
That's, that's exactly what I did, you know, but it was, you know,
I had a bit very interesting, you know, and I'm going to tell you something.
It wasn't that easy to get that kind of information from females.
It wasn't that easy.
We still don't have it.
It's almost as if it was a female club
and they didn't want to talk about it.
And then I would sort of press them in such a way
and then they say, well,
you know, they would go into the crying
act and how females
would cry. And they say, you know,
men, they have a tendency
to think that
we all, we succumb
to them because we're shedding
tears. They said, but look, this is a game.
I said, game? They said, oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
We play the game. And I
said, well, and they started talking.
I said, look,
let me show you how it works. And they were talking
to me and explaining, and the tears were just flowing.
See how easy it is.
So I learned a lot listening to them.
I was a big listener.
Then it got to the point that they would spend a lot of time calling and talking to me because they, too, thought I understood them.
That I had insight lyrics how they function
right and they would you know so it was it was interesting that's that's part of his uh his
dopamine in his life as endorphins you know what I mean oh I see and and it's funny that you went
on to work for Motown and Mot Motown was known for, you know,
respecting women workers.
Well, and that Barry hired a lot of women
in influential positions.
Well, first of all, Barry Gordy grew up
with women dominating his life
when he went in the middle of the night.
His mother was a very strong woman, okay?
His sisters grew up being influenced by their mother,
and they became
very strong women.
And very dominating,
as Brian said. So he
learned to respect the women.
He was like,
matter of fact, I think several of
them were really older than him.
And they, hey.
But that is the first time
I noticed a man being as respectful towards women.
That was a good influence on me.
Wasn't that different for a record company, though, at that time, to have women making influential decisions?
Well, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
It was.
It was.
To his credit.
To his credit.
It was good.
And then he used Billie Jean.
First of all, he used his
sisters, Lucy Wakefield
and his older sister,
Esther Edwards,
were very
influential
to him.
They were smart, and he respected
that.
Like he always said,
they were smarter than him. They were smarter, and he respected that. Because like he always said, they were smarter than him.
He was always smarter than me.
And one thing, Frank and I were fascinated by how Gordy came up with the idea for Motown.
You know that story.
You mean applying the assembly line mentality from his work in the auto industry?
It's fascinating.
It is, it is, it is.
But when I met Barry Gordy, you know, he wasn't really thinking in terms of a record company.
He was a record producer, producing for Jackie Wilson.
And he was a writer.
You met him as a teenager.
Absolutely, for Jackie Wilson. And he was a writer. You met him as a teenager. Absolutely.
For Jackie Wilson.
And so he sort of, I would say, became involved in it because Barry had a tough time when he started off.
Let me tell you something. I would go to Barry, you know, to New York, you know.
And he would be in the lobby in this company called Gone and In.
I don't know if you remember that company, you know.
And he was pushing his record, you know.
And he would get a lot of rejections, you know.
He would always be trying to, you know,
he'd go and do his masters and records and whatever.
And he would get a lot of rejection, you know.
And then he noticed that his royalties was not that great.
I don't think he was getting hardly paid at all from Nat Tarnable.
I see.
Jackie Wilson.
You know, and so he told me, he said, you know,
Smokey said I should start my own record company.
And I said, oh, he did?
He said, yeah.
He said, I'm kind of thinking about that.
So he mulled that over for several years
before he really, really got involved in it.
I was going to say, there's a great documentary
that Showtime put out last year
for the 60th anniversary of Motown
called Hitsville, The Making of Motown.
And people that are interested
can get Barry's story
about how he worked in the auto plant,
how he started a record store,, all all the all the steps and all the all the various hurdles that that he overcame to start and launch Motown.
It's absolutely fascinating because he said in it that working on on the assembly line where each person had their job of slapping something new on the car is where he got
the idea of like how about music acts right and the idea for quality control which became a which
became a part of motel very important yeah very important yeah i want to ask about a turning point
too from the book brian i want to talk you talk in the book about hearing your song on the radio for
the first time. And I think it was Please Mr. Postman. Yeah. Matter of fact, it came on CKLW
at that time. And it was in competition with a record called Sitting Here Yaya Waiting For My
Lala. Do you remember that record? Yes, I remember that one, sure.
Lee Dorsey, I think that was his name.
Yes, Lee Dorsey.
And it was in competition, and one week Postman would go to number one,
fall down and go.
Sitting here, ya-ya, would go to number one, fall down,
and Postman went back to number one.
I mean, that was one of the greatest feelings.
And then Postman became such a huge record. I mean, that was one of the greatest feelings. And then Postman became such a huge record.
I mean, so many people did that song.
Oh, yeah.
Including the Beatles.
Oh, I made more money with the Beatles than I did with anybody.
Eddie, wasn't Please Mr. Postman a turning point for you, too?
Because it was one of the songs where you looked at Brian's royalties?
Right.
Let me say this. Indirectly
it was Please Mr. Postman.
Directly, it was the check
that my brother received.
You know, we were kids, man.
You know what I mean? And the fact
of the matter is
we say, wow. I looked at it because i know when i was
recording i had this this this this this this uh hit you know i think it would top 20 or something
like that jamie and you know i went around did dick clark shows and hollows and theaters or
whatever and then i you know look at my royalty statement, you know, you know, I actually,
I had a few, that's why I put it
all in the book, because I wanted people
to know. And then
I noticed, I'm looking for
this royalty.
I owe, right
now, you owe,
I don't care how much, but some thousands
of dollars to the company. I said,
I owe thousands of dollars because you're recording it.
You recorded this and this and this, and you got advances and this and this.
I said, oh, my God.
And then I looked at my brother, and he was looking.
He had an angelic look on his face, gleaming.
He was gleaming.
He's gleaming his eye.
Yeah, he was excited.
He was gleaming.
He was gleaming his eye.
Yeah, he was excited.
But I mean, and I looked at him because, I mean, it did,
obviously it caught his attention what he was looking at.
And I said, Brian, did you get any, did you get any check?
He said, yeah.
I said, well, let me see it.
So I said, I want to look at his statement and check to see how he got this money.
And then when I saw he got it from the song and this and that, and nothing was deducted.
I mean, just check.
And I said to myself, you know, I'm in the wrong end of this business.
Because, I mean, making money is really what I was interested in.
It was not really singing at all.
I really was interested in making money.
That's what it was.
And you taught yourself songwriting really from scratch.
Absolutely. You talk in the book, you picked apart two of Smokey's songs and broke them down and tried to teach yourself from the ground up how to write a song.
Absolutely. Because I had no idea how to write a song.
And I was asking some people, well, how do you put a poem together?
And I'm like, how do you do this?
Well, I said, you know, I was asking everybody, like a guy in my neighborhood, his name was
Walter Lee, and he could write poems and he was
writing this poem and I said
where'd you get that from? He said well I wrote that
I said let me see it
so he showed it to me
and
it's something about Longfellow
or something you know and I said
you want to sell this?
He said yeah
I said I give you $50 for it he said how much? I said, you want to sell this? He said, yeah. I said, I give you $50 for it.
He said, how much?
I said, $50 for it.
He said, yeah.
I wanted to take it, not to take his song, but to examine how he put this poem together.
Because I had no idea.
So I studied his structure and everything also.
So I studied his structure and everything also.
But Smokey's work was the key because I always felt that Smokey is the best of the best.
And I just felt that, you know what?
I said, Smokey was so good, man.
I kept asking myself, how can this guy be so good at this young age?
He beat me to the punch, and my guy, and oh.
I mean, I said, in the rhyme schemes.
Shop around.
Shop around.
I said, how would he, as young as he was,
because we were very young, you know.
I said, how in the world does he know what he's talking about?
Anyway, I got two of his songs, which I don't remember which two, and I just
studied them and studied them, but I came to
a quick conclusion
that, you know what, I said
to myself, I said, Ed,
first of all, it would take
you a lifetime
to learn to function
in this way with song.
I said, I don't have a lifetime
to try to learn. I said, I'm gonna have
to come up with another approach and technique of my own. And that's what I really did. You know,
I worked on it and worked on it. Then I came up with another technique and another approach to it.
And it was very effective, you know. So Brian, while Eddie was teaching himself songwriting, you were already
writing with other people.
Yeah, kind of.
Obviously, Please Mr. Postman was one of those songs.
Yeah, Postman, and then I wrote
a song with
Lamont Dozier.
I met him through his wife.
And then I wrote this song,
Forever, that we recorded on
Marvelous and Marvin Gaye.
And from there, we just started coming up with a couple more songs.
And then Edward, he saw where we could make a team,
and he could join in and write the lyrics faster than we could,
because I was not a lyric writer. Lamar could probably write the lyrics faster than we could because we're not i was not a lyric writer
lamar could probably write some lyrics but primarily we were just sung you know playing
music you know i mean so everyone said he won't get involved he write all the lyrics and you know
what i mean and that's how hd got started see frank what i what i noticed is this, that Brian was a great melody person, and Lamont was very, very good also.
And I noticed that it took them a long time to write the lyrics to these melodies, because they were coming up with the melodies at a fast rate, okay?
Right.
And they would go in the studio, and they would put these things together at a fast rate, okay? Right. And they would go in the studio,
and they would put these things together at a fast rate.
But it took them forever, in my opinion, to do the lyric.
And so when I noticed that, I said, you know what?
I said, you guys would make so much money.
I was telling it to my brother, really.
You would make so much money if you had someone to do the lyrics while you're doing those melodies.
You'd get more product out.
And I said, if I did the lyric, because at that time, I think I was just trying to make $10,000, you know, which was a lot of money back in those days.
You know, you got to understand something. The average worker back in those days was making $5,000, you know, which was a lot of money back in those days. You know, get an understanding, the average worker back in those days was making $5,000 a year.
The average attorney was making $15,000 to $20,000 a year.
You know, so, you know, and so it wasn't all that money that the people are making now.
You know, it wasn't that kind of money.
It puts the money that Barry was paying Jamerson per week in perspective.
Absolutely.
A thousand a week in those days, what, $7,000 today?
Yeah.
And he was worth every penny.
Oh, absolutely.
Because even then, you can think, and people think in terms of which was the hot car in that day was Cadillac.
Cadillac was $5,500.
which was the hot car in that day was Cadillac.
Cadillac was $5,500.
Rolls Royce was $25,000.
You get a brand new Silver Cloud.
I mean, so it was a different, different time.
Of course.
But the important thing, we were excited about doing what? Making money while we were enjoying and having fun about what we were doing.
And did Baron Gordy have a rule that you had to hook the audience in like the first six seconds of the song?
He never ruled.
Well,
that was not a rule,
but he was just saying he would make the statement that...
Well, I don't know.
Well, I say,
Brian is being technical.
I wouldn't say that technically
it was a rule, but
he believed
it was workable.
He believed that the product should be that way.
The intro should get you in the way.
He said it was very, very.
So to me, it might as well have been a rule because he was so strong about it.
And he was the songwriter.
I mean, again, we were just learning.
We were still learning.
So if being successful as he was writing
those songs for Jackie Wilson if he given you a direction to say you should
have it have these songs to catch you at first I don't know if it's six sets of
the ten second but it was intro that's for sure so that was that's part of the
habit we learned and it helped us I think of a song like you keep me hanging On and that Walter Winchell type teletype sound at the beginning of the song.
That draws you right in.
Absolutely.
Absolutely. Set me free, why don't you, baby? Get out my life, why don't you, baby?
Cause you don't really love me.
You just keep me hanging on.
You don't really need me, but you keep me hanging on.
Why do you keep on coming around
Playing with my heart
So you guys worked hard to come up with riffs and hooks.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And also that they were saying in Motown,
any sound at all that people heard,
they were putting into... town, any sound at all that people heard, they could,
they were putting into,
yeah, like they, you'd hear a car
horn or something.
And you'd go,
that would be good
in a song. Absolutely.
You've got to understand, all this fancy
equipment and all these
creative sounds they had,
we had none of that to work with.
I think at first we were working on eight.
You didn't have synthesizers.
We were working on, was it eight track at first, Brian?
Eight track.
Eight track we were working.
Then it was 16 track.
And then we went to 16 track.
But you got to understand something.
When we had eight tracks, that was big for us.
Then 16 track, oh, my God.
We got 16 tracks to work
on, man. But you know
what, so they were
piling up, and I remember a lot of times I was doing
demo records,
and I would be
on take
45, and then
once you got the record, then if
a drummer was off or somebody else
was off, oh, you got to do that take again.
So you had to know
what you were doing. But let me tell you something.
It gave us great training.
Because for some reason,
and I noticed
later on, is that
these producers were
using 24,
34 tracks and they were cutting.
In other words, if they want a guitar sound,
then they might do a guitar, get the 7, 8, 10, 12 times.
We didn't do that.
We had trained our ears to immediately know what they were doing.
We had trained our ears to immediately pick out.
If he did it twice, okay, that's the one.
Go back to that.
We didn't need all of those
tracks because we made decisions
as we went along, but
it helped us sharpen our
instinct and ears to
know what we wanted. This stuff
about 30 times, this
nonsense. To think of
Gilbert's comment, I think, too, of
using interesting sounds,
Brian, I think of the oscillator.
Oh, man! When you guys got a little
psychedelic.
Oh, yeah.
That's right.
Yeah. We use the oscillator
for that.
That's another thing. That's another hook at the top
of that song that draws you right
into it. Ha, ha, ha. Why did you guys only have three hours?
Was it because you only had Studio A?
You only had the Snake Pit?
You had to come out of a three-hour session with three completed songs?
It seems like a lot of pressure.
You didn't have to come out
with three completed
sessions.
But you had to
do two.
We would only really go for two.
It's just that at one
point,
that's where we were going for,
for the most part.
But,
I would say this,
that one point,
we went into the studio,
and cut the first,
I don't know,
three,
four,
number one records
on the Supremes.
We did three in that one session,
you know.
But then we were hungry.
Then we were,
we were aggressively moving.
Why?
Because we found out that this record
Word I Love Though With The Spurbreeze
was going to be the biggest thing
Motown had ever
experienced. It would thrust
them into Oregon.
You know what I mean?
And so we were excited about that
because Barney Ailes, the salesman, said
hey, Barry,
and this is all according to Barry
Gordy. He said, Barry, you got to understand this record is so phenomenal now. It's taking us in
places and areas that we have never been. So Barry, when he left Barney's, you know, and which
I tried to write a book about it and describe it as close as I possibly could.
He and I happened to be standing on the porch
in Motown and when Barry passed,
leaving Barney's office.
And Barry stopped and he started talking to me.
He said, Eddie, he said,
we got to have follow-up with this record
because Barney feels that this is the image,
this is the threshold, this is the image. This is the threshold.
This is the direction of what the company is going with these girls, the Supremes, you know.
And so I immediately, when I talked to Barry, I listened to what he said.
I said, okay.
I immediately went up there talking to Brian and talking to Lamont.
And I said, man, we got to come up with some records immediately for that follow-up.
And that's what I did, you know.
And they worked on it hard.
I mean, a couple weeks or something, a week or whatever, I don't know.
But it was exciting times.
I'm going to tell you, it was exciting.
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Brian, on the subject of where did our love go,
and Eddie used an interesting
word, he used the word orbit, the song wound up
being played in outer space.
Oh yeah, that's true, that's true.
What was your reaction
to that? I didn't know that.
I thought it was really great
that it
was played out of space.
I think for the Gemini astronauts.
It was played out of space. I remember that the Gemini astronauts. It was played out of space.
I remember that.
Yeah, I remember that, too.
How about that?
That's having some reach.
That's out of space.
What happened with the song Baby Love?
When you were, you guys, that was one of your drag-out fights, as you talk about in the book.
Oh, yeah.
Well, baby love.
Yes, it was.
It was not a drag. No, no, no. Love. Yes, it was. It was not a draw.
No, no, no.
It was not a draw.
No, it was not a...
You call it a knockdown fight.
No, we're a love duo.
You said Baby Love was one of those arguments
because you hated the title.
Hated the title.
Yeah, yeah.
But I didn't...
You know, a lot of it, Brian never knew.
So that didn't happen to be a knockdown,
drawn-out fight like Love Like Tune and a couple of others.
Brian and I would battle around the office and argue and argue.
And Ahmad would ease his way out and disappear to wherever he was going.
He would just let you guys settle.
Yeah, he didn't want the confusion.
People do it that way now because we still get into it now with our opinions.
We're just very opinionated guys.
And usually at that time, I would win because Brian got tired of arguing with me.
And he'd just say, hey, okay, fine.
Let me see a way to make this work so this guy can shut up.
That's what it boiled down to.
But baby love, when he gave it to me,
I knew that he was sensitive about
it. So I didn't fight him on
that because I knew that
it had something to do with Diana
Ross and whatever
his feelings were.
But the thing about it,
I said, wow, Baby Love.
I had to fight
myself because I thought it was such a trite title. I said, wow, Baby Love. I had to fight myself because I thought it was such a trite title.
I said, man, I cannot write enough Baby Love.
Baby Love, what the hell is that?
But anyway, it took me two weeks, at least two weeks, you know, to decide, was I going to use this trite title Baby Love?
How was I going to make sense out of this thing?
this title Baby.
How was I going to make sense out of this thing?
But I could make sense out of it because I knew Brian's
feeling at that time.
He described
enough and the way he was
doing this melody, I could feel
it. See, that was always the advantage
of me doing the
melodies that Brian would
create because I could feel
it and I would just sort of describe the words melodies that Brian would create because I could feel it.
And I would just sort of describe the words that felt this talk to me.
You know what I mean?
I would take words that express the feeling that he conveyed to me.
That's why I was doing it. And you got to understand something.
All those top 10, number one records, whatever.
I was still learning.
Of course. I was still learning. Of course.
I didn't consider myself a professional writer. It's just that
I was learning to put
this, we call it block building.
I would just put...
Brian, would Eddie say to you,
you've got to write more bars here because I haven't
told my story? I need more story?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, man, yeah. I didn't finish my storyline. Boy need more story. Oh, man.
I didn't finish my storyline.
Boy, man, you're talking about some knockdowns running out of arguments, man.
Because Brian
just thought of the lyrics as what?
Just another instrument. That's all.
And barely that. Barely
the instrument. It's just something that
filled in his instrumentation
of the track.
He said, look, man, nobody listens
to lyric. Nobody listens to
lyric. He said, that's the last thing you listen to.
He said, it's going by the music,
the melody, and the movement
of that track. That's what people get into.
I said, Brian, but you got to have
the lyric that makes sense. He said, well,
that makes sense. That's all we need.
Nobody's going to get into the lyric.
I was just a stickler for
words to be as
complete as he wanted
his production to be completed.
Gotcha.
Now, this might be complete
and total bullshit
because I got it
from the same documentary.
Where did the song Stop in the Name of Love come from?
Oh, you know what?
That was a title that Lamont came up with.
How he got the title, where he got the title, I never knew.
He got it out of a movie book.
He gave it out of a movie book.
Oh, yeah, the movie book?
Yeah, that's what he told me. He got it out of a movie book. O'Brien said he got it out of a movie book. He gave it to him in a movie book. Oh, yeah, the movie book? Yeah, that's what he told me.
He got it out of a movie book. O'Brien said he got it out of
a movie book.
But it wasn't unheard of for you guys
to use something from your personal
life as a
source. Which,
you don't really love me, you keep me hanging on,
you just keep me hanging on? Oh, yeah.
That was from my... One of those lyrics?
That was mine, yeah.
Because someone told me that. That was for my... One of those lyrics? That was mine. Yeah, that was mine.
Yes.
Because someone told me that. That got into some kind of personal conflict.
And the girl, she never...
She was a very strong-willed woman.
And I think it hurt her feelings.
So because of my involvement,
and she started breaking up.
She started crying.
I was surprised.
She said, you don't love me.
She said, you just keep me hanging on.
And she said, just get out of my life.
Get out of my life.
Did you leave the room and jot that down?
No, I just looked at her.
I didn't say much.
I didn't try to argue with her because I knew, you know,
and I just hoped that she calmed down.
And she talked to her mother because she was still around the next two or three days,
and I was surprised because she was one of those kind of females
that if she said something, that's what she was going to do, you know.
I see.
And so I didn't dare open up that can
of worms, but then I asked her.
I had to ask her. After that
third or fourth day she was still around,
I said, well, what happened
to change your mind? She looked at me
and she said, you know what changed my mind?
My mother. My mother
changed my mind. Because she said,
my mother said you were a decent man
and you were an honorable man and you were an honorable man
and you were honest.
She said she could tell.
She said,
let me explain something to you.
She said,
when a man is that young
and make that kind of money
and he is not bad to look at,
you got to understand
females are going to be after him.
He doesn't have to be after them. They're going to be after him. He doesn't have to be after them. They're going to
be after him. So you might as well live with it because that's the way it's going to be.
On the subject, Brian, of you, let's say, underappreciating the contribution of lyrics,
what is this great story from the book where years and years later you heard I Hear a Symphony
and you decided you had to pick up the phone and call Eddie?
Yes, yes, sir.
Absolutely.
I had to call him because I was, what happened?
I was in the gym working out.
And then when I finished working out, I got in my car and I Hear a Symphony came on.
And I heard it, Diane singing it.
And after it kept going on and on and just kept going on,
I hear a symphony.
Every time you speak to me, I hear a symphony.
And I said, man, I started crying.
I started crying myself.
I said, that lyric is really great.
I never thought about it two bucks until I heard it that day. I said, that lyric is really great. I never thought about it, two books,
until I heard it that day.
I mean, really.
Decades later, he paid you a compliment, Ed.
I know, and I said to myself,
man, you're going to wait 30 years to tell me
that I wrote a great lyric
in your opinion. I said, man, get out of here.
Well, that line...
See, the thing about it,
I had been trying when I first started
I was trying to get a response
to Brian because I felt
it was my role
since I volunteered
to do Lyric
that he had to be pleased
you know I figured that that was part of my
responsibility he never would
say anything
I would say was was it okay?
Am I doing it right?
Yeah, yeah, it's okay.
It's okay.
That's all he would say.
So I never knew how I was doing, except when the lyric got in his way.
He said, wait a minute.
I had horns in this part.
I don't need lyrics there.
I don't need lyrics there.
I got some strings in here. I got a background. Your lyrics are in the way of my strings. He said, it's in this part. I don't need lyrics there. I don't need lyrics there. I got some strings in
here. I got a background. Your lyrics are in the way of my strings. He said, it's in the way. He
said, man, I said, look, Brian, I can't be breaking up those songs just because of the instrument.
And so he said, man, you got to start writing, but you don't get in the way of the production
arrangement, you know? Well, I got to agree with Brian because a particular line in that song,
baby, baby, as you stand holding me, whispering how much you care,
a thousand violins fill the air.
That is poetry, my friend.
And I can see why you cry.
Yeah, that's right.
My wife came into the room.
I was playing for her about an hour ago, and she stopped what she was doing, and she said, and I quote with no prompting for me, Ed, she said, that man is a poet.
Oh, wow.
Are you serious?
Now, that is flattering to me.
Because let me tell you something.
I've been struggling to be an accomplished lyric writer all my life.
Because always, like I said, my idol has been Smokey
Robinson. Here's Smokey Robinson.
He's the greatest of the greats.
But wow, that's quite a compliment.
She got
me standing. She's got me walking.
I'll be walking out of here at least three feet
higher now.
On a cloud.
By the way,
on the subject of I Hear a Symphony,
there's also a great story in the book about Brian showing up at your door,
Eddie, at night and saying, we need this by the morning.
Oh, no, he didn't show up at the door.
He called me from the studio.
I see.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He called me from the studio, and he said,
we got to have this song
tomorrow because the girls
are leaving town.
And I think it was about 10,
11 o'clock then, at least 10.
It was late for me.
Because I was not
a person that stayed up very late
unless I was writing.
But
I didn't think I could do it.
I just said to myself,
see, again, I'm in the learning stage.
It would take me two to three weeks to write a song.
And that is constantly added with thick piles of papers,
constantly going over and over it
and trying to use the building block to get the feeling
and being inspired by the music and hoping that the words
would express what I felt and what the music was saying to me.
So I didn't think I could do it, and it was the most painful situation
that I had to experience.
And like I said once and I'll say it again, I will never go through that again because it was like living hell.
Because I was so tired trying to write that song that two, twice I would go to the phone to call my brother and say, Brian, I can't do it.
There's no way I can do this.
And I felt bad about it, and I stopped.
And I went on and worked again for another two hours.
Then the sleep hit me, and I couldn't think.
My mind, you know, when you get real, real tired, you burn out.
I mean, man, that is a horrible feeling.
So I went to the phone again and went through it.
And the fact of the matter is, and I stopped again.
I had a hard to tell him that.
So the fact of the matter is that
I was writing this all the
way to the studio.
At the studio,
while I was rehearsing Diana
Ross, I was still finishing
up Touches of the Lyric.
Wow.
That's a lot of pressure.
Oh, man. I'd never do it again. I will not. I got a lot of pressure. Oh, man. I'd never do it again.
I wouldn't know.
I got a couple of questions from listeners, including Whoopi Goldberg, who says, and I'm going to run this one, I'm going to direct this one at you, Brian.
Whoopi wants to know, do artists, performers, and songwriters today seem as hungry as
they once were, or as they were in your guys'
era? Well, I can't answer that.
Well, I,
in my opinion, I would say no.
I would say no.
Especially performers. I don't
know about the writers so much,
but performers, I would say
no. And
successful artists, I would say no. And successful artists, I would say no.
For the simple reason, back in those days, it was very, very difficult to be successful.
I mean, really difficult.
You know, as the youth progressed, the business had grown so much.
I mean, for us to sell or get a gold record, I mean, that was a difficult situation.
It's nothing for these kids to get a gold record.
That's nothing for them.
They get seven and eight, three, four platinum records.
The fact is that they make a lot more money now.
They also, the population has grown
so. And the money that they make,
it's no need for them to do
what we did. I mean, you got to understand something. For us to get a million seller,
you didn't get any more than $10,000, okay,
from the record company and another maybe five or six or seven from BMI, okay? Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Let me tell you, I've had many samples of songs that we've done for Go Forever
where picking up 30%,
the check was
$307,000. That was
unheard of when we were coming up.
But that only shows
how many people are
out there buying records. They have a
lot of what you call
leisure money.
A lot more. You didn't have that kind of leisure
money when we were kids. When they said the
record business was a penny business,
absolutely it was a penny business.
Disposable income. That's right.
Disposable income. You had to
scuffle for that money.
Out here now, it's a little bit,
but many got,
first of all, I admire all of them.
Because they have
put their situation together in many, many ways.
They ask for more.
They involve themselves in the business much more than Brian and I or Smokey did.
Well, the artists of that day, of our day coming up, and they, I mean, they're just much more
business about
what they're doing.
They want to control more.
And what they,
and what they do control,
they make,
I mean,
they make so much money,
it's unbelievable.
And I'm proud of them.
One of the songwriters
we had on this show
that Gilbert alluded to
or mentioned directly
was Dennis Lambert
of Lambert and Potter.
Oh,
Dennis Lambert.
And they said,
and Dennis wrote to me
and he said,
would you please tell the Holland Brothers that their work with the Tops,
the four Tops, set the standard for great R&B songwriting and production.
Baby, I Need Your Lovin', Reach Out, I'll Be There,
Seven Rooms of Gloom, Bernadette, I Can't Help Myself, Need I Say More,
they are the greatest R&B writers and producers of all time.
So not so much a question, but
a compliment. Okay, but I
think he and his
partner were great, too.
Because I heard the things that they
did on the fourth time. Those
records are great.
Ain't no woman like the one I got.
Whatever they did, whatever, if we
influenced it,
that just makes us proud.
But let me tell you something, they mastered whatever it took, and they handled
it and executed it.
And the fact that
other than ourselves, nobody else had ever did.
Well, he'll be happy to hear you say that.
It's great stuff, man.
Yeah, he's a big talent.
Love the stuff they did on the four tops.
They're great.
He's down in Florida now.
I'll put you guys in touch.
Okay.
Tell us something about the Funk Brothers.
Tell us how important they were to your records.
And only two are still with us, by the way.
Only Joe Messina and the great Jack Ashford are still around.
Yeah, sadly, of the 13 profiled in the movie and standing in the shadows of Motown.
I mean, James Jamerson, Joe Hunter, Benny Benjamin.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
Frank, you know what?
I mean, you mentioned the guy's name is just so, I mean, the memories and the emotional impact of what you're asking now, it just overflows within me.
The fact of the matter is the Fugg brothers were extremely instrumental to the success of Motown, period.
Okay?
Extremely instrumental to the success of the writers.
Extremely instrumental to the success of the producers.
Now, let me say this.
Not because they orchestrated our songs for us,
because Brian knew exactly what he wanted, okay? And he Brian knew exactly what he wanted.
Okay.
And he had to get what he wanted.
But the difference is they mastered it.
It is very difficult, especially the type of things that Brian comes up with,
the type of chords Brian used.
It is very difficult for the average musician to master that,
especially back in those days.
I don't know about now so much,
because they've learned a lot.
But back in those days, it was very, very difficult.
They mastered it.
And when you're talking in terms of bass, I mean... Well, Jamerson was peerless.
Oh, yeah, he was.
See, I met Jamerson, I think I was about 14 years old.
And I remember Jameson was walking across the street.
He had this huge instrument.
I said, what the hell is that?
He said, that's the bass.
I said, man, what is he carrying that ugly thing around for?
And I could understand it.
The thing was taller than him and bigger than him.
And he was carrying this thing from his house to the bus and carried it on the bus.
Now, and in those days,
you know, the guitar
was a romantic
instrument. If you're a guitar player,
oh my God, all the girls
and everything else, you know.
I said, where did he carry this ugly
instrument? The next time I saw him, it was
that Motown with the Fender Rose.
You know, which
it was a bass, but yeah.
But he had become so masterful at his instrument.
It was unbelievable.
Yeah, two fingers.
Two fingers.
Yes, amazing.
I can remember once, you know, when Brian was in the studio,
and because it did get to a point where the guys got a little envious, a little bit.
I don't know what kind of conversation they had between themselves.
But Jameson, they were saying, because Holland Ocean and Holland was making so much money,
and they were making good money too,
but not the kind of money we were making, you know, nowhere near.
And I remember Jameson being in the studio, and Brian was directing him.
And he said, and he played some chord.
He said, what do you want, Brian?
He said, you mean this chord?
Brian said, no, no. He said, well, this one here? He said, what do you want, Brian? He said, you mean this chord? Brian said, no, no.
He said, well, this one here?
He said, no.
And Brian said, he told him what chord he wanted.
He said, I want you to play this chord over this,
blah, blah, blah.
And it shocked Jamison.
Because Jamison, like all the other musicians,
was under the impression we knew nothing about music.
As a rule, you you know the producers didn't
not the way Brian does
Brian's ear he could tell you what
chord how to get the chord and everything else
you know so he was shocked so
that changed Jamison's
attitude towards that but
not saying
that notwithstanding that
this guy and all those funk brothers, they were magnificent.
And again, we would have never been able to make the money because for simple reason,
we could have never done three and two tunes for one three-hour session. We would have never been
able to do it. Most people stay in that six hours for one tune. We always came out with at least two.
Well, my friend Gary Citro asked a question, too.
How much freedom, then, did the studio musicians have in shaping a song?
Not much.
Not with Brian.
Not much at all.
Not with Holland.
Not with Brian, yeah.
Not with us.
Not with Holland Dozier.
No, no, no.
No, no.
Not with us, no.
Because Brian knew what he wanted.
No, no, not with us, no.
Because Brian knew what he wanted.
Brian was telling him he knew what he wanted while I was doing this lyric or telling him how many bars I wanted for this song.
Brian was hearing the music then.
He was telling me, no, no.
In other words, when I would tell Brian, I said, Brian, I need eight bars here.
I said, you gave me four bars before, or you gave me six bars before.
I need eight bars. He said, what for? He said, because I got my music coming in here. I said, you gave me four bars before, or you gave me six bars before. I need eight bars.
He said, what for? He said, because I got my music coming in here. He said, can't you hear this?
I said, Brian, no, I can't hear it. You can't hear these instruments in his head. He was hearing the
horns. It was in the violin. I said, Brian, no, I can't hear that. But I do know this. This is what
I need to write this song, you know.
So anyway, he knew what he wanted, knew exactly what he wanted.
But we direct our listeners, too, and we have a lot of them,
to check out Standing in the Shadows of Motown,
a documentary from about 18 years ago about the Funk Brothers,
which is fascinating and part of the Motown story,
an essential part of the Motown story, an essential part of the Motown story.
Gil, did you want to ask about something in the documentary that touched you about when Barry sent the artist down south?
Yeah.
You had to go out and tour on a bus.
Well, yeah, Smokey.
You guys didn't go, right?
Well, let me tell you something.
Smokey was there. Martha was there.
I know about it.
We knew about it, but no,
we didn't do that.
What did you hear about
the bus? Well, we just heard
that a lot of the
racism
and a lot of the prejudice at that time in the South.
You can only eat at certain places.
And you can only eat at certain places.
And there are no bathrooms on the bus.
So they had to stop to use the bathroom.
Additional problem.
They shot a couple of times.
They shot at the bus.
Somebody shot the bus. And I also knew, you know, this is that our album covers had to be, you know, a certain way where it doesn't reflect a whole lot of blackness.
The record and the music was black, but the covers could not reflect too much blackness because the South was not happy.
They weren't going to buy the records.
Thank heaven for Barney for helping get
those white stations.
Barney Ellis,
man, was so instrumental.
Oh, yeah.
And this is
also fascinating
and something from the book.
I think it was you, Eddie,
that the term R&B you had an
issue with because you thought it was in some ways a segregated term. You guys were writing
for all audiences. Yeah, it wasn't true. You guys were writing pop. See, first of all, we weren't
writing true R&B, okay? Not really, okay? And my attorney, who is very, very black,
and he would say, Holland, what do you got?
You and Brian, you know,
he said, you're doing this
aureole music.
I said, what do you mean?
He said, man,
there ain't no black music.
He says, aureole music.
He said, white on the inside
is black on the outside.
But, you know,
because we were just,
we were brought up
in such a mixture of music,
you know, in our homes.
And we would just listen to so much of it.
And all kinds of music.
It was mostly like comp, bassy, jazz.
I mean, you name it.
Bean Cosby.
I mean, you know, it wasn't white or black music.
Nat King Cole, what was he singing?
He wasn't singing white.
Of course.
Of course.
Everybody was buying his music wasn't singing white. Of course. Everybody was buying
his music, black and white.
But it was
hey man, it was music.
That's what he was doing.
That's who you guys were writing for.
That's who we grew up with.
Brian, being listening,
impressed with the orchestrations
and the symphonic sounds when he was
going to school. He was impressed with
all the music, all the
instruments. So in his
chords, that's what caused him to be
very, very expansive in his chords.
And by the way, you guys should
hear Gilbert sing. We're going to send you
Gilbert singing
MacArthur Park with Jimmy
Webb.
You guys will never be the same.
Hey, don't leave that cake out in the rain now.
Wasn't that a great line?
Wasn't that a great line?
Jimmy Webb came away and left the cake out in the rain.
The cake in the rain.
Man, that was a great line.
Too long to bake it.
Right.
And then they say, I never had that recipe.
I can never get that recipe again.
Yeah, that's it.
What was the most disappointing and heartbreaking moment of talking to Jimmy Webb?
I always thought that was so brilliantly poetic.
Let the cake out in the rain.
And then he said he was in the park
and there was a piece of cake on a bench
and it was raining.
Are you serious?
Yeah, yeah.
And I thought, what the fuck is that?
I wanted some brilliant piece.
I thought, oh, what a poetic genius.
You thought it was an ingenious metaphor, not a literal cake.
You know what, Gilbert, that's the same thing that I always thought.
And I'm glad you cleared it up because you've been driving me crazy.
I said, how did a guy come up with that line?
Why did I come up with that line?
You know, because one thing certain writers, they will do, they'll see a line, they'll love it.
They'll say, wow, I wish I would have came up with that line.
I wish I would have written that song.
So now the pressure's
off of me now. So
maybe I should get something else in the ring
and create
some kind of inspiration.
Shakespeare.
We will return to
Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
But first, a word from our sponsor.
We got to ask you guys about some of these giants that you work with.
I mean, first off, I don't think we've done 320 of these podcasts.
I don't think we've interviewed anybody who knew Jackie Wilson personally.
I knew him personally.
And I know you're the first one. Can you tell us in a couple of, can you tell us something
that stands out in your mind or your memory about the great Jackie?
Well, first of all, let me go all the way back. My uncle married Jackie Wilson's cousin,
My uncle married Jackie Wilson's cousin, okay?
And my uncle, he would often talk about Jackie Wilson, Jackie Wilson,
and I'd heard about Jackie Wilson around the neighborhood.
Oh, Jackie Wilson, Jackie Wilson.
But I didn't really know that much about him as far as singing.
And then my uncle, when he, and he said, you know what? He said, Jackie Wilson went and auditioned for the Dominoes to take Clyde McFatter's place.
I can imagine anybody having a nerve to take Clyde McFatter's place.
Because I thought he was the greatest of the great.
And he said that they didn't take him, though.
He said, so he went home.
And then he told me, you know what?
He said, Billy Ward came by Jackie's house to get him.
He wants him in the Dominoes.
He said, because Clyde McFadden, he just fired.
So it went from there to Clyde McFadden performing for the Dominoes
and my uncle always buying his records.
So he would play his records over and over and over again.
And so I was impressed with
the records. And when I hear a person that can sing, I would always say, well, I could sing that.
Let me sing this song. So he would have this song, Christmas in Heaven, Love Me Now, Let Me Go,
and like that. I said, oh, I can sing that. And I would just sing the songs. And then I found out,
you know, when I would go to groups, they said, well, what do you sing?
I didn't know that many songs.
They said, well, I said, well, I know this song, Christmas in Heaven.
They said, Christmas in Heaven?
He said, you can sing this?
Yeah.
They said, well, let me hear it.
Because they didn't think I could sing it.
But I didn't realize they didn't think I could sing it at the time.
So they would listen to me, and they were always impressed.
And that's what I would do to audition at the time. So they would listen to me and they were always impressed. And that's what I would do to audition
all the time. I would do a Jackie
Wilson song because nobody
could sing Jackie Wilson's song,
which I didn't know at the time
because they were very easy for me to sing.
Because I would
always listen.
See, Mario Lanza
was really my idol.
Mario Lanza? Wow. I would listen to Mario Lanza was really my idol. Mario Lanza?
Gee.
Wow.
Yes.
I would listen to Mario Lanza music in the movies, and I would buy Mario Lanza's records,
and he sang his opera, all that.
He would say, man, I love Mario Lanza.
And I would buy his records, and I would listen to Mario Lanza's record and go to every movie
as many times as I could.
And then I noticed that Jackie Wilson was singing almost like an operatic technique.
He did that operatic song from that opera.
Yeah.
Come back, my darling, you're gone.
But this was even before that.
I mean, I was a teenager.
I was 17, 16.
What was it like seeing Mr. Excitement on stage?
Oh, he was great.
Well, he's very, very good.
And you know what really impressed me is this.
It's when Barry had him over to his house.
And I came by to Barry's house to rehearse.
And then Jackie Wilson was there in the bathroom shaving and singing
I said oh my god Jackie's in there
and then I was hearing Jackie Wilson I said
man that guy he's better than I thought he was
the way his
voice was I said oh my
gosh he's better than I thought he was
and then when he came out he was very very
nice you know and then Barry
was boasting on me
Jackie you should check he should hit
his guy in the aisle he can sing like Sam cooking saying your stuff he and
Jackie said he can't say yeah what about somebody else we lost way too young at a
great Marvin and you guys wrote two wonderful signature Marvin hits,
Can I Get a Witness?
And, of course, How Sweet It Is.
How Sweet It Is, yeah.
He was truly one of a kind.
Very, very unique individual.
He was always extremely, extremely moody.
Often I would see him and I would say,
Marvin, what's wrong, man?
What's wrong?
He's all nothing, all nothing.
And I would try to get him to talk about it.
He wouldn't talk.
He wouldn't talk about it.
He's all nothing.
So who knew?
He wouldn't say.
He was just so introverted, you know, but very pleasant, very nice, you know.
But he was always, it's like, he was bothered with something.
He was extremely moody, you know. A troubled guy. Yeah, he was troubled. He was troubled. Yeah, he was bothered with something extremely moody you know
a troubled guy
he was troubled
great singer
obviously
and also don't forget now Willie John
the kid when I was going to school
he was 14, 15 years old
Willie John was maybe
the greatest
I'm going to tell you man that guy was so good he was 14, 15 years old. Willie John was maybe the greatest. I'm going to tell you, man, that guy was so good.
He was 14, 15 years old.
He would sing and perform like he was 35 or 40.
I don't know how.
He was just a gifted singer.
He was gifted.
There are certain singers that are good, and there are certain gifted singers.
Now, here's a story.
Like Gilbert is gifted.
I heard it from the documentary, so you can tell me to go fuck myself.
What about the story?
Yeah.
Now, the story is of giving a song to the receptionist at Motown.
Oh, Martha? Yes.
Martha.
Oh, yeah.
She came to audition and wound up answering
Barry's phone.
Maybe it wasn't Barry's phone.
It was Mickey's phone.
Mickey made her secretary.
Matter of fact, she was the secretary
when we got to sing Heat Wave.
She was the secretary then.
We needed somebody to sing the song.
And we got Martha Reed to sing the song heat wave.
Did the Supremes turn down heat wave
before you came into power?
Okay, so see, this is bullshit
that's floating around on the internet.
We've got to dispel these myths.
Let me make it real, very, very, very clear.
Barry Gordy, the way he ran his company, Motown, is this.
He would only hire certain people with certain personalities in the first place.
Because Barry was a stickler for being able to get along with people.
He felt that was important.
Now, I say that to say this.
If a producer recorded an artist, Barry didn't allow an artist to tell the producer they're not going to sing this. If a producer recorded an artist, Barry didn't allow
an artist to tell the producer
they're not going to sing it.
You can't do that.
If you do, you better
tell Barry, let Barry have it.
Because Barry didn't like the idea of
any artist telling the producer no.
Because that would stop the flow.
That would stop the creativity from the producer
to the artist. It would stop it creativity from the producer to the artist.
It would stop it.
Because then you would have producers redoing songs and say, well, I don't want to give it for this person.
I don't want to write for this person because they're never going to do this.
It would kill the enthusiasm.
So Barry, you know, he was smart.
I'm glad we cleared that up.
He was smart in many, many ways.
Oh, of course.
That was like in the old studio system.
They told an actor to do a movie, and there was no such a thing as saying,
no, I don't want to do it.
Oh, I know.
Right.
That's right.
That's right.
Only one.
I think Bette Davis and Joan Crawford.
Well, mostly Bette Davis.
She had to fight them for years.
She had to sue them, and then she sued him for years.
You know what?
Martha's answering the phones for Mickey
and winds up singing the lead on Heat Wave
reminded me and Gilbert of when
Carole King had her babysitter,
Lil' Eva, sing the locomotion.
Oh, I heard about that.
Is that something?
At the risk of starting yet another
argument between you two guys,
is there still sore feelings?
Are there still sore feelings about Eddie collaborating with Norman Whitfield
on Ain't Too Proud to Beg?
Sore feelings?
Oh, yeah.
Who said that?
This is not me.
This is what happened.
It's in the book.
No, it's true.
Brian doesn't remember.
See, this is what happened. And I never even book. No, it's true. It's true. Brian doesn't remember. See, this is what happened.
And I never even discussed this.
This was Brian.
Norman, at that time, was asking me.
The great Norman Whitfield.
The great Norman Whitfield.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
He was asking me to do his lyric, okay?
And the fact of the matter is, is that he came to me.
He'd always have me to write certain songs for him.
Then he came to me doing a song called
Ain't Too Proud to Be.
And I really didn't want to do it,
because when I heard it, I didn't like it.
It didn't make much sense to me.
There was no real lyric there.
And the track, there was no real melody there.
So he played the track, and he kept telling
me, do this, do it, I'll get a hit
record, I'll get a smash, because
I can beat Smokey's
record out on the next Temptations
I said, man,
leave Smokey alone, Smokey,
anyway, make a long
story short,
Norman came to me
and said, Ed, if you write this,
I could get it. I could beat him out
on this release. And I
said, okay, Norman, I'll listen to it.
I listened to it, and I
said, there's no lyric here.
I said, there's one
line, I think it was in the third
verse. I said, here's one
line here that says,
ain't too proud to beg. I said, that's the only one that makes sense to me. I said, here's one line here that says, ain't too proud to beg. I said, that's the only
one that makes sense to me. He said, I said, I could probably take that line and create a story
around it. He said, well, do it. Do anything you want to, as long as you write it. I said, okay.
And I had to take it and I had to ad-lib the melody. There was no real melody there. I just ad-libbed through the track
and it came out good. So I did that
one, two, three song
and then my brother, he said something,
I don't know if he remembers. He came to me
and he said
something about
when you,
he was sort of sarcastic, but
he just meant it. It's like
he was saying, if you weren't spending so much time working on Norman Whitfield's song,
maybe it was some song I was late for and had delivered something for.
He said, if you didn't spend so much time on Norman Whitfield's song.
And I just looked at him and thought, we didn't argue about it.
We didn't fight about it.
But he made that statement.
So I knew then that whatever I was doing,
it was interfering with something he wanted me to do.
You know?
And that's all he said.
Well, Norman's over it now.
I mean, excuse me.
Brian's over it now.
I've been over it.
No, he didn't hold a grudge.
But I'll tell you one thing.
Actually, I felt very, very bad about it at the end of the year
because Holland, Ocean Holland had won Songwriter of the Year through PMI
two times in a row.
They would have won three times in a row if it was not for me
and those three tunes I did for Norman Whitfield.
How about that?
So there was competition.
I mean, Norman was directly trying to compete with Smokey,
and the Temptations were Smokey's thing.
They were Smokey's domain.
But like I said, to this day, I still say, man,
they would have won three times in a row.
Because those three songs I did with Norman
made me the songwriter of the year
because they took the ones I did with Holland Dozier,
then they took the ones I did with Norman Whitfield,
so that third year, I became songwriter of the year.
But I still felt badly about it then.
I feel badly about it now
because I was always trying to keep
and maintain the image of Holland
Dozier Holland.
I'm sorry I brought it up.
I'm sorry too, Holland.
I always wanted to ask you guys this.
What Holland Dozier Holland covers do you guys appreciate?
Phil Collins' version of You Can't Hurry Love, James Taylor's cover of How Sweet It Is,
Johnny Rivers did a pretty damn good version of Baby, I Need Your Lovin'.
Very, very, very good question.
Which one or ones do you guys enjoy on their own merits?
Well, let me tell you.
The guys from England, one of them, You Keep Me Hangin' On.
Oh, I'll have to look that up.
Brian loved that.
I thought they did a great job.
Brian heard that.
Yeah, Brian, when he heard that.
I can't think of the group's name offhand.
I can't think of it either, Brian.
But you know what?
I remember Brian coming to me.
He said, man, you should hit his group.
They did. What is it? You Keep Me coming to me. He said, man, you should hear this group. They did.
What is it? You Keep Me Hanging On.
He said, man, you should hear
their version.
Brian was so excited about their
version. Brian is never excited
about too much of anything
he thinks is exceptional.
You know?
But I like
Johnny River.
I like that one Brian liked, too, because it was a unique version of it.
But I like The Baby I Need You Lovin'.
I do.
And the way he sings.
Was it Vanilla Fudge?
Vanilla Fudge.
Oh, there you go.
There you go.
Oh, you looked it up, huh?
Yeah.
I looked it up.
Vanilla Fudge.
I don't know how I could have forgotten. Yeah. I looked it up. Good. No fugs. I don't know how we could have forgotten.
Yeah.
I looked it up.
I cheated.
No, you didn't.
No, you didn't.
James Taylor does a wonderful job with how sweet he is.
He does.
He does.
He does.
Sweet baby James, they call him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And one other question, which is sort of a life perspective question.
I mean, you guys are two guys that grew up in Detroit, you know, borrowing your uncle's records, singing on street corners.
There you are in 1990, and Diana Ross is standing on the stage inducting you guys into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Did you get choked up?
Did you think, wow, how
the hell did we get here?
You know what? The Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame,
the only time I was
choked up and wondered
how did we get here,
I was
in the hallway in some
kind of way. They had all those awards
with all the people that I have admired
for years and years.
And I was trying, I saw,
I was there by myself then,
and I said to myself,
how did I get here?
Because I didn't think I qualified
for being in the presence
of all these people that I admired
for so many years.
And it was just like an out-of-body experience with me.
And I figured that what a privilege it was to be even associated
with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Because I knew that that was only for performers.
Sure, sure.
And the other one is the Velo Award.
The Velo Award from England. Yeah, that's great, sure. And the other one is the Velo Award. The Velo Award from England.
Yeah, that's great, too.
But I mean, rock and roll.
First of all, that's the English top award.
I know.
That's great.
For musicians, not songwriters.
Oh, okay.
Well, here's one for you.
Since you brought up Betty Davis and Joan Crawford, how was it joining their company on the Hollywood Walk of Fame?
Oh, man. How did that feel?
That was great, really great.
That was wonderful.
I think my family, they come in town
and go to Hollywood just to see that star.
Yeah, that was really something.
But Shirley is here looking at me
because she works many in his hours.
And she said that she worked almost 16 years on that, trying to get us that star.
And she keeps reminding me, you didn't even thank me when you were on the floor.
Oh, you didn't thank Shirley?
She even your accolades.
She said you could have at least given me a shout-out.
But you know what?
I wasn't myself that day,
to be perfectly honest with you.
I really wasn't.
But it was one of those things.
But it was good to do it.
The only time, like I said,
I've ever been excited
is when I was standing in front of
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
That's the only time.
Yeah.
You were pretty excited, too, according to the book, a day in August, I believe in 1963 at Motown,
when you heard a booming voice coming down the hallway.
You know who I'm referring to?
Oh, you're talking about Dr. King.
Dr. King was in the building.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was. You used the words in awe. King was in the building. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I was.
You used the words in awe.
I was. When he walked through
the door, and I was in the... I can remember
just like it was yesterday. Barry and I
was in the recording studio.
Okay? And I was
there, and then a voice came
and walked in, and the door opened,
and I remember he said,
Barry? I said, Barry?
I said, wow. When I looked and saw
that man, I said, oh, wow.
I can't believe it.
How about that?
I mean, I couldn't
even pinch myself enough to wake up
to say, give me your autograph
or nothing. I was just in awe.
But you know,
I was in awe
when I saw Richard Pryor at Motown.
He was going to sign with Motown, but I don't know what happened.
But he was there, a very shy guy.
I mean, he's just a different kind of person, very different.
Richard Pryor.
And another thing I was in awe of
when Shirley introduced me to
Rosa Parks.
Oh, wow.
Man, I was so in awe.
She was saying, why don't you take us to dinner?
Take you to dinner, man. I couldn't do it.
I could not. I said, Shirley, I can't do it.
I, just in her
presence.
About that.
No, not to lunch. I couldn't do it.
Because I, I mean, I was so stunned and so, it was such a weird experience for me.
And I looked at Rosa, but I didn't want to speak to her.
I was just in awe, you know.
And it was, I'm sorry that I didn't, but man, I was, I was, I was so in awe and you know. And it was, I'm sorry that I didn't, but man, I was so in awe
and so impressed.
I was just,
if I was ever speechless or stunned,
it was that time.
Yeah.
Of course.
She's royalty.
Gilbert got to know Richard Pryor
a little bit, Brian.
Oh, yeah?
Oh, wow.
Okay.
Yeah, he did a terrible film with him.
Oh, yeah.
And I didn't make it to the final cut.
Oh, wow.
But he couldn't have been.
He was treating me like he was a starstruck kid.
And that he was, you know, can't believe he's meeting a big star.
He was terrific. Oh, yeah, he was, you know, can't believe he's meeting a big star. He was terrific.
Oh, yeah, he was.
I never met him other than Motown.
He came in there.
But he didn't want to talk to nobody.
He just looked away.
He was very shy, very shy.
One of a kind talent.
Oh, yeah.
One of a kind talent.
Let's plug this wonderful book, which is coming out on audio, Shirley tells me.
The great Shirley Washington, who, by the way, we have to thank for all of this.
Uh-huh.
And Shirley put all this together.
We're indebted to her and to Brandon Lewis, Shirley's son, who set up the tech and saved our lives today.
But this book is not just a memoir
about your guys' lives.
I mean, it's a story of the period.
It's a story of Barry.
It's a story of the history of Motown.
It's a story of the history of pop music in America.
It's an indispensable book.
I've recommended a fair amount of books on this show,
but I cannot recommend this one enough
to our listeners.
Come and get these memories, and we're going to plug it like crazy on social media because it's essential history.
And, Eddie, you wanted to put a different title on it.
Yeah, but I just didn't want to use come and get these memories.
I didn't know which one I wanted to use.
At first I said maybe Reflections, but I wasn't really sure.
But I'm glad that I left it like it was.
I really am.
Didn't you want to call it Setting the Record Straight?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you got it.
Setting the Record Straight, absolutely.
I wanted it to be like, what do you call it?
The co-title, what is it called now?
You know, come and get these memories
and then right under it
in large print.
Oh, like a subtitle.
Setting the record straight, I sure did.
Yeah. Right.
You guys set the record straight today.
I'm going to send you some
episodes where Gilbert sings.
Oh, okay.
He is a gifted stylist, right, Gil?
Oh, yes.
I have to thank Shirley.
Let me say something.
First of all, I've been watching Gilbert for many, many years
and been laughing about his comedic style and that for years.
Oh, thank you.
He's not new to me.
How about that, Gil?
Two fans.
I used to try to emulate him, but I couldn't quite get it.
I couldn't quite get the way he did.
Do an imitation of me now.
I don't care.
I couldn't.
I couldn't.
No, I'm not going to embarrass myself.
I've tried many times.
I could not do it.
Guys, we know you have another interview.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
This was a joy, an absolute joy.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for all the pleasure you brought us over the decades.
And can you two come back and just talk about me?
Absolutely.
How's Barry doing, by the way?
You talk to him all the time?
No, I don't talk to him that much.
He's retired, but every time I try to find out how he's doing, he's okay.
What a great American success story.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
They'll never be another Motown.
They'll never be anything else but with that model.
Yeah, you're right.
You know, it is unique.
It is a unique period in history and in the culture.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
He's a giant.
You guys are such a part
of history. We're really so grateful to
the two of you for all the work and for sharing
your time with us today. We know you're busy.
Thank you very much.
We thank you for taking your masks off to do the interview.
Stay safe.
And this has been
Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal
Podcast with my co-host
Frank Santopadre, and we've been talking
to the legendary members of Motown, Brian Holland and Eddie Holland.
I got one last question I'm squeezing in, and I know you can't, this is like picking your children.
One song, one song that you guys want
to be remembered by, each of you. Brian? Oh, well, it's hard to say because I love them all.
Of course. But I would say if I had to pick one, I'll pick I Hear a Symphony. Okay, now I have to
pick out one that wasn't as successful as the others, and it's Love Is Here And Now You're Gone.
I love that record. Love the production.
Thank you, gentlemen.
Thank you.
Thank you, Frank. A feeling that's so new, so inviting, so exciting.
Whenever you're near, I hear a symphony, a tender melody, pulling me closer, closer to your heart.
Then suddenly, your lips are touching mine, a feeling so divine, till I leave the past behind. I'm lost in a world made for you and me. Whenever you're near
I hear a symphony
Play sweet and tenderly
Every time your lips meet mine
Now baby, baby, baby
You bring us joy within
Don't let this feeling in
Let it go on and on and on
Now baby, baby, baby
Those tears that feed my eyes, I cry not for myself, but for those who've never felt the joy we've felt.
Whenever you're near a symphony, each time you speak to me, I hear a tender rhapsody of love. Now baby, baby, as you stand up holding me, just worry how much you care. Bye.