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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Big Improvement over previous Contours collection, September 14, 2001
This review is from: The Very Best of The Contours (Audio CD)
This quintet recorded for Motown (actually the Gordy subsidiary label) for seven years (1961-1967), yet they never really got much respect. While one of Motown's most visually exciting acts, the Contours represented R & B at its raunchiest. This raw R & B sound was at odds with the smooth grooves Berry Gordy was creating with acts like the Supremes in order to successfully woo all of young America to the Motown Sound. The Contours would have been far more appreciated had they come out of Memphis and recorded for the Stax or Volt labels.
The frenetic dance smash "Do You Love Me" from 1962 was their biggest hit. It also established the Contours' sound, as Billy Gordon's screaming lead took them unharmoniously through a series of semi-successful dance singles like "Shake Sherry," "Can You Jerk Like Me," "Can You Do It," and the Smokey Robinson penned "First I Look At The Purse" (the latter is probably their best recording - how can you go wrong with lines like "She can be covered with a rash, long as she's got some cash!"). After Gordon left, the Contours cut their most melodic singles with a pair of great short-term lead singers: former Falcon Joe Stubbs on "Just A Little Misunderstanding" (1966) and future Temptation Dennis Edwards on "It's So Hard Being A Loser" (1967).
All of the singles noted above are found on the Contours' ten-track, 1981 Motown compilation which was also titled Do You Love Me. What this fifteen-track set gives you in addition to the hits is a few of the B-sides and some previously unreleased material. Especially noteworthy is the Stubbs-led "Determination" and the pre-"Do You Love Me" single "Funny" (the latter previously unavailable anywhere on CD). My only quibble: the omission of the Edwards-led "Baby Hit And Run." If you love Motown, you gotta have this Contours set in your collection. You'll be dancing for days!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Motown's raw and outrageous Contours, November 9, 2004
This review is from: The Very Best of The Contours (Audio CD)
Growin up as a child in the 60's, I loved this group. When the needle hit the record (any of their songs), it was hard not to move or tap your feet. "Do You Love Me" had to be played loud. Penned by Gordy, it was a instant smash hit. "First I look At The Purse written by Smokey, the song was another danceable tune. I love "Pa, I need A car"...the music will remind u of Marvin Gaye's "Pride & Joy". "Can You Do It" also was a monster dance tune. "It's So Hard Being A Loser" was lead by Dennis Edwards who later joined the Temptations. I recommend this CD. Get it because God knows how long this will be in stock. Too bad the original album "Do You Love Me" is out of print. If u can find it on ebay. Get it and hold on to it for dear life.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
All their goodies in one place, February 28, 2003
This review is from: The Very Best of The Contours (Audio CD)
The absence of Holland-Dozier-Holland material in the Contours catalog, attests to the second-string status this group held at Motown, despite a right-out-of-the-box 1962 dance smash, 'Do You Love Me.' A subsequent generation became enjoyably familiar with it too, thanks to the film, 'Dirty Dancing.' The group's raucous image couldn't have been all put-on, as Berry Gordy is quoted as referring to them as hoodlums, and endeavored to keep his female stars well away from them. (He didn't succeed there completely: one of his Marvelettes, Julianna Tillman married Contour Billy Gordon.) Despite no H-D-H material here, Smokey Robinson came through for this group wonderfully on two occasions here. 'First I Look At The Purse,' was Motown's first, funny novelty hit - not Shorty Long's 1968, 'Here Comes The Judge.' as might be supposed. 'Purse' was a must have single in my neighborhood in the summer of '65, as much as any top ten hit of this group's stablemate Supremes, Tops or Temps. Then, Smokey profoundly subdues the groups wild image with 'That Day When She Needed Me,' orginally the B-side to 'Can You Jerk Like Me.' 'Day' is the story of a guy who didn't let his girl know in time how much she meant to him, and is as good as any heartbreak ballad Smoke did with his own group, The Miracles. The lead's sad story is matched wonderfully with perfectly sympathetic inquiry by the rest of the group. I don't think Robinson ever more perfected a 'call & response' record that bests this. 1963's 'You Get Ugly,' while funny, and perfectly in line with the group's image, can't escape clear comparison to it's obvious influence: Jimmy's Soul's #1, profoundly pre-feminist era hit the same year - 'If You Wanna Be Happy.' Dance jams like 'Can You Do It,' 'Can You Jerk Like Me,' and 'Shake Sherry,' round things out nicely and augment their signature, 'Do You Love Me.'
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