|
|
|
|
|
|
The Four Tops are an American Motown musical quartet, whose repertoire has
included doo-wop, jazz, soul music, R&B, disco, adult contemporary, and
showtunes. Founded in Detroit, Michigan as The Four Aims, lead singer Levi
Stubbs and groupmates Abdul "Duke" Fakir, Renaldo "Obie" Benson, and
Lawrence Payton remained together for over four decades, finally forced to
endure a lineup change when Payton died in 1997. At that time, Theo Peoples
was added to the lineup; Peoples later replaced Stubbs, who fell ill from
cancer, and Ronnie McNair assumed Peoples' spot. In July, 2005, Benson died
of lung cancer with Payton's son Roquel replacing him. And as of April,
2005, Fakir, McNair, Payton and Peoples still perform together as The Four
Tops.
***
***
Among a number of groups who helped define the Motown Sound of the 1960s,
including The Miracles, The Marvelettes, The Temptations, and The Supremes,
The Four Tops were notable for having Stubbs, a baritone, as their lead
singer; most groups of the time were fronted by a tenor. The group was the
main male vocal group for the songwriting and production team of Holland-Dozier-Holland,
who crafted for the group a stream of popular hit singles, including two #1
hits: "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)" and "Reach Out I'll Be
There". After Holland-Dozier-Holland left Motown in 1967, the Four Tops were
assigned to a number of producers, primarily Frank Wilson. When Motown left
Detroit in 1972 to move to Los Angeles, California, the Tops stayed in
Detroit and moved over to ABC Records, where they continued to have charting
singles into the late-1970s. Since the 1980s, The Four Tops have recorded
for, at various times, Motown, Casablanca Records, and Arista Records.
All four members of the group began their careers together while they were
high school students in Detroit. At the insistence of their friends,
Pershing High students Levi Stubbs and Abdul "Duke" Fakir performed with
Renaldo "Obie" Benson and Lawrence Payton from Northern High at a local
birthday party. The quartet decided to remain together, and christened
themselves The Four Aims. With the help of Payton's songwriter cousin Roquel
Davis, The Aims signed to Chess Records in 1956, changing their name to The
Four Tops to avoid confusion with The Ames Brothers.
Over the next seven years, The Tops endured unsuccessful tenures at Chess,
Red Top, Riverside Records and Columbia Records. Without any hit records to
their name, The Tops toured frequently, developing a polished stage presence
and an experienced supper club act. In 1963, Berry Gordy, Jr., who had
worked with Roquel Davis as a songwriter in the late-1950s, convinced The
Tops to join the roster of his growing Motown record company.
During their early Motown years, The Four Tops recorded jazz standards for
the company's Workshop label. In addition, they filled in time by singing
backup on Motown singles such as The Supremes' "Run, Run, Run" and "When the
Lovelight Starts Shining Through His Eyes".
In 1964, Motown's main songwriting/production team of Holland-Dozier-Holland
created a complete instrumental track without any idea of what to do with it.
They decided to craft the song as a more mainstream pop song for The Four
Tops, and proceeded to create "Baby I Need Your Loving" from the lyric-less
instrumental track. Upon its mid-1964 release, "Baby I Need Your Loving"
made it to #11 on the United States pop charts. After the single's success,
The Tops were pulled away from their jazz material and began recording more
records in the vein of "Baby I Need Your Loving".
The first follow-up single, "Without the One You Love (Life's Not Worth
While)", missed both the pop and R&B Top 40 charts by only three positions.
"Ask the Lonely", released early in 1965, was a Top 30 pop hit and a Top Ten
R&B hit, and the from there, the Tops' fortunes began to improve.
After scoring their first #1 hit, the often-covered and revived "I Can't
Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)", in April 1965, The Four Tops began a
long series of successful hit singles. Among these first wave of these hits
were "It's the Same Old Song", "Something About You", "Shake Me, Wake Me
(When It's Over)", and "Loving You is Sweeter Than Ever". Four Tops records
often represented the epitome of the Motown Sound: simple yet distinctive
melodies and rhymes, call-and-response lyrics, and the musical contributions
of The Funk Brothers. Holland-Dozier-Holland wrote most of Levi Stubbs'
vocals in a tenor range, near the top of his range, in order to get a sense
of urgency in his gospel preacher-inspired leads. In addition, H-D-H used
additional background vocals from female background vocalists The Andantes
on many of these songs, to add a high end to the low-voiced harmony of The
Tops, with "Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever" being one of the few
exceptions.
August 1966 brought the release of the Four Tops' biggest hit, and one of
the most popular Motown songs ever: "Reach Out I'll Be There", which hit #1
on the U.S. pop charts and soon became The Tops' signature song. It was
almost immediately followed by the similar sounding "Standing in the Shadows
of Love"; its depictions of heartbreak reflected the polar opposite of the
optimism expressed in "Reach Out".
The Top 20 "Bernadette", centered around a man's complete obsession with his
lover, continued The Four Tops' successful run in February 1967, followed by
the Top 20 hits "7-Rooms of Gloom", and "You Keep Running Away". By this
point, The Tops were the most successful male Motown act in the United
Kingdom (in the United States, they were second to The Temptations), and
began experimenting with cover versions of more mainstream pop hits. They
scored hits with their versions of Tim Hardin's "If I Were A Carpenter" in
late 1967 and the Left Banke's "Walk Away Renée" in early 1968. These
singles and the original "I'm In a Different World" proved to be their last
hits produced by Holland-Dozier-Holland, who left Motown in 1967 after
disputing with Berry Gordy over royalties and ownership of company shares.
Without H-D-H, the quality of The Four Tops' output, like that of The
Supremes, began to decline, and hits became less frequent. The group worked
with a wide array of Motown producers during the late-1960s, including Ivy
Hunter, Nickolas Ashford & Valerie Simpson, Norman Whitfield, and Johnny
Bristol, without significant chart success.
Their first major hit in a long time came in the form of 1970's "It's All in
the Game", a pop Top 30/R&B Top Ten hit produced by Frank Wilson. Wilson and
The Tops began working on a number of innovative tracks and albums together,
echoing Whitfield's psychedelic soul work with The Temptations. Their 1970
album Still Waters Run Deep was an early ancestor to the concept album. It
also served as an inspiration for Marvin Gaye's 1971 classic album What's
Going On, the title track of which was co-written by The Tops' Obie Benson.
In addition to their own albums, The Tops were paired with The Supremes, who
had just replaced lead singer Diana Ross with Jean Terrell, for a series of
albums billed under the joint title "The Magnificent Seven": The Magnificent
Seven in 1970, and The Return of the Magnificent Seven and Dynamite! in
1971. While the albums themselves underperformed, The Magnificent Seven
featured a Top 20 version of Ike & Tina Turner's "River Deep - Mountain
High", produced by Ashford & Simpson.
The Motown company began to change in a number of ways during the early
1970s. Older acts such as Martha & the Vandellas and The Marvelettes were
being slowly placed aside to focus on newer acts such as Michael Jackson and
The Jackson 5, Rare Earth, and the now-solo Diana Ross. In addition, the
company was slowly moving many of its operations from Detroit to Los
Angeles, California, where Berry Gordy planned to break into the motion
picture and television. In 1972, it was announced that the entire company
would be moving to Los Angeles, and that all of its artists had to move as
well. Many of the older Motown acts, already neglected by the label, opted
to stay in Detroit, including The Funk Brothers backing band, Martha Reeves,
and The Four Tops
The Tops departed Motown for ABC-Dunhill, where they were assigned to
songwriter-producers Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter, with The Tops' own
Laurence Payton also serving as a producer and arranger. "Keeper of the
Castle" was their first pop Top 10 hit since "Bernadette" in 1967;
follow-ups such as "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)", "Sweet
Understanding Love", "Midnight Flower", and "One Chain Don't Make No Prison"
all hit the R&B Top Ten between 1972 and 1974. By the release of "Catfish"
in 1976, however, the hits had dried up again, and the group disappeared
into obscurity in the late-1970s. Scoring a deal with Casablanca Records in
1980, The Four Tops made a comeback in 1981 with the #1 R&B hit "When She
Was My Girl".
By 1983, The Tops had rejoined Motown, and were featured on the company's
television special Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever. One of the
highlights of the show was a battle-of-the-bands between The Tops and The
Temptations, patterned after similar competitions Berry Gordy had staged
during the 1960s. Levi Stubbs and Temptation Otis Williams decided the
Temptations/Tops battle would be a good one to take on the road, and the two
groups began a semi-regular joint tour; as of 2005, the two groups continue
to play dates together.
The first of The Tops' albums under their new Motown contract was Back Where
I Belong. A whole side of the album was produced by Holland-Dozier-Holland,
including the R&B Top 40 single "I Just Can't Walk Away". Only two more Tops
albums would be released by Motown, 1985's Magic and 1986's Hot Nights, as
the group and the label began to quarrel on matters of marketing and musical
direction. In 1987, The Four Tops decided to leave Motown for Arista
Records, buying back the masters they had recorded for an in-progress album
and bringing them with them. The result was 1988's Indestructible, the title
track of which was the group's final Top 40 hit.
In addition to their own recordings, The Four Tops also worked in the fields
of television and motion pictures. The group as a whole performed a song for
the 1982 film Grease 2, and Levi Stubbs performed the vocals for the
man-eating plant Audrey II in the 1986 musical film Little Shop of Horrors;
and the voice of the evil Mother Brain on the Nintendo-based NBC Saturday
morning cartoon Captain N: The Game Master from 1989 to 1991.
Since the late-1980s, The Four Tops have focused on touring and live
performances, only recording one album, 1995's Christmas Here With You,
released on Motown. On June 20, 1997, 59-year-old Laurence Payton died of a
heart attack, after singing for forty-four years with the Four Tops, who,
unlike many Motown groups, never had a single lineup change until this
point. At first, Levi Stubbs, Obie Benson, and Duke Fakir toured as a trio
called The Tops, in 1998 they recruited former Temptation Theo Peoples to
join the act to restore the group to a quartet. By the turn of the century,
Stubbs was becoming ill from cancer, and Ronnie McNair was recruited to fill
in the Laurence Payton position, with Peoples stepping into Stubbs' shoes as
the lead singer of The Four Tops while Payton's son Roquel replaced an ill
Obie Benson, who later died on July 1, 2005.
The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, and into
the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1999. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
FOUR TOPS PICTURES |
|
|
Warning: include() [function.include]: URL file-access is disabled in the server configuration in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/f/four-tops/four-tops-biography.htm on line 229
Warning: include(http://www.123celebs.net/footer.htm) [function.include]: failed to open stream: no suitable wrapper could be found in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/f/four-tops/four-tops-biography.htm on line 229
Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'http://www.123celebs.net/footer.htm' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/f/four-tops/four-tops-biography.htm on line 229
|