OUR MOTOWN RECORDING HERITAGE

Second Chapter

MAY 25, 2002 ISSUE

OUR MOTOWN RECORDING HERITAGE - Second Chapter chronicles the Detroit Motor Town scene after "The Great Exodus" of their #1 Songwriting & Production team of Holland-Dozier-Holland.  The vibe of Motown began to die on West Grand Blvd. but the vibe lived on in the HDH "splinter" group.  

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Our Motown Recording Heritage - Part 17

DIVIDED WE FALL

By Bob Dennis

          The Motown Years
The explosion of Motown was largely due to the Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting/producer team.  Motown had captured 10% of the market in 1964, but a full 75% of the releases that were hits were written and/or produced by the HDH team members.  Theoretically, at least, HDH by themselves could have been the biggest hit record company in the world.  
But by 1967 the relationship between this writing team and Motown was getting strained.  Because HDH was so important to Motown, BG had let Brian Holland know that he would be getting a block of stock in the company.   When that didn't come about, Eddie Holland suggested a label deal with Motown where the team would write and produce for 3 new acts.   When BG said no to this, the team left Motown to start their own label, outside of Motown.  They established both the Hot Wax and the Invictus labels.
The New Labels Build
The three team members of HDH were under exclusive writing contracts with Motown, but nothing prevented them from being music publishers - which brought in just as much money.  In part 16 of this series I described how they used their vast talent to develop new writers for their new publishing company - keeping a flow of hit songs coming.   Lamont Dozier and Brian Holland were under exclusive production contracts with Motown, but Eddie Holland was not.  Eddie had been helping with production for years, so there was nothing preventing him from being the producer.  It looked like they could keep the team operating much like it did before, without Motown.
Almost instantly the new HDH labels started getting hit records.   They had the Hot Wax Records label distributed by Buddah Records and the Invictus label distributed by the giant Capitol Records.  They went with two different national companies so that they could not be exclusively under the control of any one company - an business decision that they should have stuck with.   Over the next few years they got a dozen gold records with these labels, on artists such as the Honey Cone, Freda Payne and the Chairmen of The Board.
Divided We Fall
HDH left Motown early in 1968 and for a while were a major force in the industry, producing black recording artists.  But by 1971, it became apparent that all was not well in music-land.  By that time, Buddah Records had gone under, leaving HDH with only one national distributor.
Although hit singles kept coming, album sales through the Capitol distribution system were disappointing.  Record companies make the majority of their profits though albums, not singles.  HDH began feeling that Capitol would never get the kind of album sales that they knew were possible with their black artists.  The team  knew that they would never have a completely successful record company unless something was done to get better album sales.  Then Clive Davis called...
Clive Davis was the CEO of CBS Records (Columbia/Epic labels).  CBS was the biggest major record company in the world.  CBS wanted to make its mark in the black music segment of the industry.  Because it didn't have the in-house staff to create this type of music, they wanted associations with independent black labels.  CBS told HDH that they could , with their superior distribution, sell three to four times the records that Capitol could.
After switching to CBS the problems really intensified.  Report of records doing well on radio, but without product in the stores began to surface.   Sales dropped for albums and even for the main product of HDH, the hit singles.
CBS had not only gone after distribution of HDH product, but the distribution of every major black independent record label.  Once critical deals were made,  all of the black labels being distributed by CBS suffered  from reduced sales.  CBS began to offer the black artists  on those labels  new deals to have the artists abandon their independent label and contract directly with CBS as artists.  The same type of arguments were used to convince the artists to switch, "You can sell more records though us."  When the Jackson Five and Michael Jackson switched from the Motown Label to the CBS Epic Label, the "raiding" was all but complete.
Deceit, raiding and underhanded business practices would be the words used by the black labels.  I'm sure CBS would describe it differently.  I think, however,  the proof lies with the result.

Copyright © 2002, by Robert Dennis, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Published in Recording Engineer's Quarterly and Alexander magazines with permission

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