
The Fifth Dimension
Three childhood friends, Billy Davis Junior, Ron Townson and
Lamonte McLemore came together in the early 60s in Los Angeles as
a singing group called The Versatiles. They were joined by former
beauty contestant winners Marilyn McCoo and Florence LaRue.
They
recorded a demo tape and sent Lamonte to Detroit to meet with
Berry Gordy at Motown
Records.
Gordy listened to the demo and was impressed
with their sound but didn't hear any potential chart hits. He
asked that they return when they had more songs for him to listen
to.
Meanwhile, the Director of West Coast
Operations at Motown
(Marc Gordon) heard the group and offered to manage them. They
recorded You're Good Enough For Me and Bye Bye Baby (both co-written by Gordon) on
the Bronco label, but it wasn't until Gordon introduced them to Johnny
Rivers, who was starting Soul City Records, that their
career began to take off.
Johnny
Rivers liked their sound and decided to produce the
group, although he insisted on changing their outdated look and
name.
Re-christened The Fifth Dimension, and
with new "mod" outfits, the group released I'll Be
Lovin' You Forever in 1966. Their 1967
follow-up single, Go Where You Wanna Go, went
Top 20 in the US Charts.
Up, Up
& Away was released in February 1967, along
with an album of the same name. The single entered the Top 10 and
stayed on the Top 40 for 10 weeks. It also earned the group four
Grammy awards - Best performance by a vocal group, Best
contemporary group performance, Best contemporary single and
Record of the year.
Stoned Soul
Picnic was released in May 1968 and became their first
million-seller, remaining in the Top 40 for 12 weeks. Sweet Blindness was released a few months
later, peaking at Number 13, and at the beginning of 1969, California Soul also became a Top 40
hit.
The group decided to splice two songs
from Hair - an exciting new Broadway
hit show - together (Aquarius and Let The Sunshine In) and the resultant single
hit the Number 1 spot and remained there for six weeks. Both the
single and album Age Of Aquarius went gold
and received two Grammy Awards (for Record of the year and Best
contemporary vocal by a group). The song eventually sold over
three million copies, making it the biggest selling single that
year.
In September 1969, Wedding
Bell Blues soared to the top of the charts, closely
followed by Workin' On A Groovy Thing
(co-written by Neil
Sedaka) and Blowing Away. That same
year, Marilyn McCoo married Billy Davis Jnr, and Florence LaRue
married manager Marc Gordon.
Their singles
and LPs continued to sell well, and in October 1970, One
Less Bell To Answer (a Burt Bacharach/Hal David
composition) hit Number Two, eventually selling over two million
copies. By 1972 the group began recording tracks with solo vocals, and
Marilyn's solo, (Last Night) I Didn't Get To
Sleep At All, made the Top 10. Five months later
another McCoo solo (If I Could Reach You) was
released. It also went Top 10.
The final
Fifth Dimension album with all five original members was Earthbound, issued in 1975. Marilyn and Billy
then left the group to venture in another musical direction.
Despite several subsequent personnel changes in the group,
Florence LaRue and Lamonte McLemore never left the group. Ron
Townson left for a little while to sing as a solo artist, and to
form Ron Townson and Wild Honey, but later
returned.
In 1991, The original Fifth
Dimension received a star on Hollywood's Walk Of
Fame.
After a four-year battle with kidney
disease, Ron Townson died in his home in Las Vegas in 2001 from
renal failure. He was
68.
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