iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
Opening Apple Books.If Apple Books doesn't open, click the Books app in your Dock.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To buy and download Essentials playlists, get iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes

Motown Classics 2: 1972-1998

Various Artists

To preview a song, mouse over the title and click Play. Open iTunes to buy and download music.

  • The Basics

    At the beginning of the '70s, Motown moved its H.Q. to L.A., and the legendary assembly-line era was over. Not only had key artists — think Marvin, Stevie, Smokey, and Diana — grown professionally, they'd also grown [i]artistically[/i], demanding more independence. Though Gordy & co. still turned to them for hits, they also groomed new artists as their potential replacements. While the Commodores built their rep as make-out music masters on Lionel Richie's chrome-plated pipes, it's Walter Orange's nasal, funk-dripping growl that drives "Brick House" to the pinnacle of discofied [i]nastay[/i]ness. Funk-fortified superfreak Rick James dials the thermostat up to [i]smoldering[/i] with protégé/partner/superfreakette Teena Marie on "Fire and Desire." And Boyz II Men took their hip-hop doo-wop harmonies to the top of the charts for [i]14 weeks[/i] with "I'll Make Love to You," only to knock [i]themselves[/i] from the top spot — something that hadn't happened since Beatlemania's heyday.

    In Next Steps, we hear from an artist who started out as "Little," but ended up a giant; a singer whose "distant lover" brought a whole [i]coliseum[/i] to its feet; and a guy who no longer needed Miracles to make miraculous hits.

    null The Basics
  • Next Steps

    Despite the move (and all the newcomers to the Hitsville family), Motown still raked in bushels of hits from the legends who'd turned it into a musical powerhouse. The man once known as "Little" Stevie Wonder couldn't have gotten any bigger than when he cut his triple- GRAMMY®-winning performances on [i]Songs In the Key of Life[/i], including the chart-topping cauldron of hip-bumpin' funk "I Wish (Single Edit)." One of the smoothest of smooth grooves ever rolled out within the confines of a recording studio, Marvin Gaye's "Distant Lover (Live Edit 1974 Oakland-Alameda Coliseum)" took on a whole new level of seduction in front of an audience [i]packed[/i] with women who — quite vocally — demonstrate their eagerness to aid in Marvin's sexual healing. But where Gaye's ballad ripples with the dark undercurrent of s-e-x, Smokey Robinson's sugar-spun "Being With You (Single)" glides along, light and fluffy as a cloud of love. And it became the biggest hit of his solo career.

    In Deep Cuts, we'll hear from a musical family once thought to be the Jacksons' heirs, a Temptation gone solo, and the sparkle-gloved King of Pop himself.

    null Next Steps
  • Deep Cuts

    Ex-Temptation Eddie Kendricks didn't exactly invent disco, but his bass-blastin', dance-floor-fillin' "Boogie Down" set the stage for the white-suited polyester revolution that soon took its place under the mirrored ball's twinkling lights. At a time when most kids are still popping wheelies and shooting hoops, Michael Jackson was already marching toward (pop) world domination and singing [i]way[/i] beyond his age, in terms of both poise [i]and[/i] material, with "I Wanna Be Where You Are." And by the '80s, Motown was angling for a band to replace the departed Jackson 5, and another quintet of siblings, DeBarge, [i]almost[/i] inherited their crown. Lead singer El DeBarge floats a whipped-cream-smooth vocal on top of an air-kiss promise of everlasting love in the group's 1983 crossover hit, "Time Will Reveal." But the story doesn't end there; half a century removed from its humble beginnings, Motown's still making memories, still making history…and still making hits.

    null Deep Cuts
  • Complete Set

    What happens when Motown leaves Motown? In 1972, Hitsville moved to Hollywood, and while the assembly line didn't entirely shut down — plenty of hits still proudly bore the Motor City's most famous imprint — the Motown Sound [i]did[/i] change. It [i]had[/i] to. Some artists had left the label. Others grew up. And the world they [i]all[/i] lived in was a very different place than it was when Berry Gordy bought the house that hits built — and the house that built hits — on West Grand Blvd. From classic-era superstars like Smokey Robinson, Marvin Gaye, and Diana Ross to second-generation funk, soul, and smooth-groove masters like Boyz II Men, the Commodores, and Rick James, we've got all the sounds of a label reinventing itself in a shifting sonic landscape.

    null Complete Set

Customer Reviews

Amazing

I cant say it enough, old school ROCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Motown Classics 2: 1972-1998 The Basics
View in iTunes
  • null The Basics
  • Released: Aug 25, 2009

Customer Ratings