The enduring legacy of Motown Records is not without its controversies. Still, the music produced by the powerful soul label ...
Lamont Dozier, who helped write and produce songs “You Can’t Hurry Love,” “Heat Wave” and dozens of other hits and helped make Motown an essential record company of the 1960s and beyond, died Monday ...
GRAMMY Museum ExperienceTM Prudential Center will explore the enduring legacy and influence of Motown Records' premier recording artists with the unveiling of Legends Of Motown: Celebrating The ...
If there was an American Music Hall of Fame, the Detroit-born group The Supremes would be in it, hailed as the Queens of Motown. As it is, the group is in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, inducted in ...
Before they became one of the most successful groups in pop history, The Supremes had a reputation problem. While Motown's other girl groups racked up hits, Diana Ross, Mary Wilson and Florence ...
Motown legend Lamont Dozier, a songwriter who crafted hits for the Supremes and Marvin Gaye, among other icons, has died, according to a statement from his son shared on Instagram. He was 81. “Rest in ...
Mary Wilson, a founding member of the Supremes, died on Monday at her home in Las Vegas. She was 76. Wilson’s publicist, Jay Schwartz, confirmed the singer’s death to Rolling Stone, but did not reveal ...
Singer with Motown band whose hits included Where Did Our Love Go? dies in Las Vegas Mary Wilson, the co-founder of the Motown band the Supremes, has died age 76. Wilson’s publicist said she died ...
Mary Wilson, outspoken co-founder of Motown’s legendary “girl group” The Supremes, has died. She was 76. She passed away suddenly Monday at her home in Las Vegas, her longtime publicist Jay Schwartz ...
Vocalist Mary Wilson, who co-founded the Supremes as a 15-year-old in a Detroit housing project and stayed with the fabled, hitmaking Motown Records trio until its dissolution in 1977, died on Monday ...