Stoned Love

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"Stoned Love"
"Stoned Love" cover
Single by The Supremes
from the album New Ways But Love Stays
Released October 15, 1970
Format 7" single
Recorded Hitsville USA (Studio A): March 10, April 2, and April 27, 1970; New York City studio: May 12, 1970
Genre Soul/pop
Length 3:01 (single edit)
4:09 (album version)
Label Motown
M 1172
Writer(s) Kenny Thomas1
Frank Wilson
Producer(s) Frank Wilson
Chart positions
The Supremes singles chronology
"Everybody's Got the Right to Love"
(1970)
"Stoned Love"
(1970)
"River Deep - Mountain High" (with Four Tops)
(1970)

"Stoned Love" is a 1970 hit single recorded by The Supremes for the Motown label. It was the final Billboard Pop Top Ten hit for the group, and their final Billboard number-one R&B hit as well. It and "Up the Ladder to the Roof" are the only Top Ten Supremes singles to feature Jean Terrell on lead vocals instead of Diana Ross, who had left the group in January 1970 to pursue a solo career.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Song information

A plea for love and peace similar to those recorded by Sly & the Family Stone in the late 1960s, the lyrics of "Stoned Love" were a plea for the people of the world to end conflict and animosity between each other, specifically the Vietnam War. Thomas chose the term "stoned love" (or alternately, "stone love") to define the concept of an unchanging bond between one another.

"Stoned Love" was originally written by a Detroit teenager named Kenny Thomas. Thomas had entered some of his songs into a local radio talent show, which record producer Frank Wilson happened to tune in to. Wilson arranged a meeting with the young musician at Thomas' house, where he proceeded to play a number of songs on a guitar that only had two strings. One of the songs he played was an unfinished version of "Stoned Love." Wilson was very much impressed with the song, and came back to Thomas' house a few days later with, to Thomas' delight and surprise, Supremes member Mary Wilson (no relation to Frank).

After a few lines of the song were revised by the producer, "Stoned Love" was recorded during the spring of 1970. The instrumental track was recorded with The Funk Brothers and at least 30 other session musicians in Detroit, while Jean Terrell, Mary Wilson, and Cindy Birdsong recorded their vocals in New York.

[edit] Release and controversy

Many people saw that the song as a coded reference to drug use, and many radio station owners were at first apprehensive to play the record. Motown founder Berry Gordy was also said to have hated the song, and label executive Barney Ales had to arrange for the RKO radio stations to agree to play "Stoned Love" before releasing the single. Fearing that the song was indeed a reference to drug use, CBS cut a live performance of the song from a November 1970 episode of The Merv Griffin Show.

"Stoned Love" was the main single from The Supremes' album, New Ways But Love Stays, released in October 1970. It also appears in the 1994 motion picture Forrest Gump, starring Tom Hanks. In 2004, neo soul singer Angie Stone covered the tune as the intro to her LP Stone Love.

[edit] Notes

  • 1 Kenny Thomas' writing credit on "Stoned Love" is listed as "Yennik Samoht"; his name spelled backwards. He did this both to emulate Stevie Wonder (who sometimes billed himself as "Eivets Rednow"), and because he though "Samoht" was close to the last name of his idol Nina Simone.

[edit] Credits

[edit] Sample