The Temptations
The early history of The Temptations parallels that of
The Supremes. The group actually started life as The Primes while The
Supremes were called The Primettes.
They joined Motown at
roughly the same time and employed the classic gospel-group
formula; a light tenor against a gutbucket rasp, with flashes of
falsetto for emphasis.
The Temptations'
debut album (Meet The Temptations) signalled
that the group were ready to become stars. The LP wasn't
overloaded with hits, and their trademark harmonies weren't quite
polished yet - but the potential was obvious on such songs as Check
Yourself and Farewell My Love.
Both Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin had their bright moments
and The Way You Do The Things You Do marked the official
beginning of The Temptations reign.
The Temptations had the benefit of the significant writing
and production skills of Norman Whitfield and Smokey
Robinson - who crafted songs for them such as The
Way You Do The Things You Do and My Girl - and
any doubts that the group would be the ruling group of the soul
era were forever erased with their third album, The Temptin'
Temptations.
The record contained classics such as Don't Look Back,
Girl (Why You Wanna Make Me Blue), I'll Be In Trouble
and My Baby, which were seldom off the airwaves
or discotheque turntables.
Ruffin left in 1968, the year the group experimented with
psychedelia (Cloud Nine and Psychedelic Shack)
and Kendricks quit in 1971. Beset by personal problems and
undergoing treatment for alcoholism, Paul Williams also left in
1971, but continued to draw a salary as an adviser and supervisor
of the group's choreography.

Increasingly the group fell under the spell of Norman
Whitfield's grandiose productions, although Whitfield rose to the
occasion magnificently in 1972 with Papa Was A Rolling Stone
- It was the groups last Number 1 hit - and in 1976 the group left
Motown for a brief stint with Atlantic
before returning to the fold.
Paul Williams committed suicide on 17 August 1973. Police found
his body slumped over the steering wheel of his car in Detroit -
barely two blocks from the Motown offices. There was a gun in his
hand and a bullet hole in his forehead. He was 34.
David Ruffin died of a drug overdose in the early hours of 1
June 1991at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, in
Philadelphia. He was 50 years old.
Melvin Franklin, the soulful bass voice of The Temptations,
died in Los Angeles on 23 February 1995. The 52-year old was
struck by heart failure resulting from a brain seizure while being
treated at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
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