Cloud Nine (Temptations album)
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Cloud Nine | ||
Studio album by The Temptations | ||
Released | February 17, 1969 | |
Recorded | Late summer 1968 - January 1969 | |
Genre | Soul/psychedelic soul | |
Length | 31:35 | |
Label | Gordy GS 939 |
|
Producer(s) | Norman Whitfield | |
Professional reviews | ||
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The Temptations chronology | ||
Live at the Copa (1968) |
Cloud Nine (1969) |
The Temptations Show (1969) |
Cloud Nine is a 1969 album by The Temptations for the Gordy (Motown) label. The album is a watershed for several reasons. It is the first regular Temptations studio LP to feature Dennis Edwards as the new lead singer, replacing David Ruffin, who was fired in June 1968. In addition, it marks the beginning of the Temptations' four-year delve into psychedelia, recording, at the behest of producer Norman Whitfield, in a fusion genre referred to as "psychedelic soul."
Contents |
[edit] Background
Norman Whitfield took the Temptations into psychedelic territory after a suggestion from the group's defacto leader, Otis Williams. Williams had been discussing Sly & the Family Stone's music, and the changes it brought to the soul music industry, with his friend, producer Kenneth Gamble. Gamble agreed with Williams that Sly Stone's funkier production style and multi-lead vocals was here to stay and that it was time to learn to adapt to it.
While Williams, Whitfield, and Williams' then-wife Ann Cain were standing outside of the Casino Royale nightclub in Motown's home city of Detroit during the summer of 1968, Williams suggested that Whitfield might try to produce something like Sly & the Family Stone's "Dance to the Music" for their next single. The Temptations had been successful with romantic ballads such as "My Girl" and midtempo numbers such as "(I Know) I'm Losing You", but Williams, taking Gamble's advice, felt that it was time to update the group's sound. "Man, I don't want to be bothered with that shit," remarked Whitfield, who regarded the Family Stone sound as a "passing fancy".
[edit] Overview
Regardless of his original opinion of Sly Stone's work, by the fall of 1968, Whitfield had the Temptations recording "Cloud Nine", which featured all five members (Otis Williams, the newly drafted Dennis Edwards, and founding members Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, and Melvin Franklin) trading lead vocals over a Family Stone-like instrumental track. Although Otis Williams denies the connection, "Cloud Nine's" lyrics have frequently been cited as empathizing with drug use [1]. The song seems to suggest that the best way for someone to deal with the problems that come with being poor and black in America was to "ride high on 'cloud nine'". "Cloud Nine" was a number six hit on the US pop singles chart, and a number two hit on the US R&B singles chart, and won Motown Records its first Grammy Award, for Best Rhythm & Blues Group Performance, Vocal or Instrumental.
The album's second single, "Run Away Child, Running Wild", delved further into unusual territory for the Temptations, turning a story about a lost runaway into a nine-minute epic of doo-wop vocals, droning organ lines, and hard-hitting drums similar to those typically heard in Sly & the Family Stone and James Brown records. Halfway through its running time, "Run Away Child" segues into an instrumental jam session (the single mix only includes the vocal half of the song). Future Temptations songs produced by Norman Whitfield, such as "Hum Along and Dance", "Smiling Faces Sometimes", and "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone", would further emphasize extended instrumental passages, often allowing said passages to overshadow the songs' vocals.
"Run Away Child" was a number-one hit on the US R&B singles chart, and, like "Cloud Nine", a number six hit on the US pop chart. Earl Van Dyke, who performs the prominent organ solo during the instrumental section of the record, recorded his own instrumental version of "Run Away Child, Running Wild", which was released as a single the same year.
The rest of the Cloud Nine album is made up of more standard Temptations fare, most of which is relegated to the flip side of the LP. "Why Did She Have to Leave Me (Why Did She Have to Go)" features Dennis Edwards delivering a Ruffinesque lead on a slow ballad, and the Eddie Kendricks-led "I Need Your Lovin'" also finds the group in familiar surroundings. Edwards, Kendricks, and Melvin Franklin share the lead on "Love is a Hurtin' Thing", while "I Gotta Find a Way (To Get You Back)" is a showcase for Edwards alone. Paul Williams is given two solo numbers, "Hey Girl" and "Don't Let Him Take Your Love From Me", re-recorded as an upbeat single for The Four Tops the same year. The ballad "Gonna Keep on Tryin' Till I Win Your Love", led by Edwards, would later be re-recorded by the group in 1971 for the Sky's the Limit LP, with Kendricks on lead.
The one song that does not fit into either the ballads classification or the psychedelic soul classification is the Temptations' cover of the Gladys Knight & the Pips version of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine". Stripped to its rhythm track, the Temptation's version of "Grapevine" retains the tempo of Knight's hit version, but uses a less gospel based and more pop/blues based vocal arrangement.
After receiving positive critical reception for his new production style, and winning the Temptations a Grammy with "Cloud Nine", Whitfield would take the Temptations even further away from "My Girl" and onwards towards trippier singles such as "Don't Let the Joneses Get You Down", the #1 hit "I Can't Get Next to You", "Psychedelic Shack", and "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World is Today)" before hard-edged psychedelic soul fell out of favor with audiences.
[edit] Track listing
All selections produced by Norman Whitfield.
[edit] Side one
- "Cloud Nine" (Barrett Strong, Norman Whitfield)
- "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (Strong, Whitfield)
- "Run Away Child, Running Wild" (Strong, Whitfield)
[edit] Side two
- "Love Is a Hurtin' Thing" (Dave Linden, Ben Raleigh)
- "Hey Girl" (Strong, Whitfield)
- "Why Did She Have to Leave Me (Why Did She Have to Go)" (Strong, Whitfield)
- "I Need Your Lovin' (Strong, Whitfield)
- "Don't Let Him Take Your Love from Me" (Strong, Whitfield)
- "I Gotta Find a Way (To Get You Back)" (Cornelius Grant, Edward Holland, Jr., Eddie Kendricks, Strong, Whitfield)
- "Gonna Keep on Tryin' Till I Win Your Love" (Strong, Whitfield)
[edit] Singles history
- "Cloud Nine"
- Gordy single 7081, October 25, 1968; b-side: "Why Did She Have to Leave Me (Why Did She Have to Go)"
- 1969 Grammy Award Winner: Best Rhythm & Blues Group Performance, Vocal or Instrumental
- "Run Away Child, Running Wild"
- Gordy single 7084, January 30, 1969; b-side: "I Need Your Lovin'"
[edit] Chart history
Name | Chart (1966 - 1967) | Peak position |
---|---|---|
Cloud Nine | U.S. Billboard Pop Albums | 4 |
Cloud Nine | U.S. Top R&B Albums | 1 |
"Cloud Nine" | U.S. Billlboard Pop Singles | 6 |
"Cloud Nine" | U.S. Billboard R&B Singles | 2 |
"Run Away Child, Running Wild" | U.S. Billlboard Pop Singles | 6 |
"Run Away Child, Running Wild" | U.S. Billboard R&B Singles | 1 |
[edit] Reference
- Williams, Otis and Romanowski, Patricia (1988, updated 2002). Temptations. Lanham, MD: Cooper Square. ISBN 0-8154-1218-5.
[edit] Sample
- "Cloud Nine" (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- Released in 1968 as a single from Cloud Nine, the first Temptations song of the "psychedelic soul" era.
- Problems listening to the file? See media help.