How Motown changed the landscape of American popular culture

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Contents

Introduction     1

I. Family Happiness     9

II. A Usable Black Present or the Lessons of Booker T. Washington and Joe Louis     35

III. The Midwest as Musical Mecca and the Rise of Rhythm and Blues     67

IV. The Shrine and the Seer     107

Appendixes     137
Gordy Speaks: The Billboard Interview     139
Just the Music: The Diana Ross Interview     169
Interview with Stevie Wonder     187
What's Really Going On with Marvin Gaye?     197

Notes     223

Selected Bibliography     225

Index     229

Description

In its heyday Motown Records was a household word, one of the most famous and successful black-owned businesses in American history, and, arguably, the most significant of all American independent record labels.

How it got to be that way and how it changed the face of American popular culture are the subjects of this concise study of Berry Gordy's phenomenal creation. Author Gerald Early tells the story of the cultural and historical conditions that made Motown Records possible, including the dramatic shifts in American popular music of the time, changes in race relations and racial attitudes, and the rise of a black urban population. Early concentrates in particular on the 1960s and 70s, when Motown had its biggest impact on American musical tastes and styles.
With this revised and expanded edition, the author provides an up-to-date bibliography of the major books that have been written about Motown Records specifically, and black American music generally. Plus, new appendices feature interviews with four of the major creators of the Motown Sound: Berry Gordy, Stevie Wonder, Diana Ross, and Marvin Gaye.

Gerald Early is an award-winning music, sports, and popular-culture scholar. He is Merle Kling Professor of Modern Letters in the Department of Arts and Sciences at Washington University. His book, The Culture of Bruising: Essays on Prizefighting, Literature, and Modern American Culture, won the 1994 National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism.

"Gerald Early and Motown . . . seem as inevitable and harmonious a coupling as Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell."
---The Nation

Read from NPR: "Does 'Dreamgirls' Offer Lowdown on Motown?" Link | 1/25/2007