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Smokey Robinson And The Miracles - Going To A Go-Go / Away We A Go-Go (Remastered) (2001)

Smokey Robinson And The Miracles - Going To A Go-Go / Away We A Go-Go (Remastered) (2001)
  • Title: Going To A Go-Go / Away We A Go-Go
  • Year Of Release: 2001
  • Label: Motown
  • Genre: R&B, Soul, Funk
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:07:56
  • Total Size: 167/433 Mb
  • WebSite:
Smokey Robinson And The Miracles - Going To A Go-Go / Away We A Go-Go (Remastered) (2001)


Tracklist:

01. The Tracks Of My Tears
02. Going To A Go-Go
03. Ooo Baby Baby
04. My Girl Has Gone
05. In Case You Need Love
06. Choosey Beggar
07. Since You Won My Love
08. From Head To Toe
09. All That's Good
10. My Baby Changes Like The Weather
11. Let Me Have Some
12. A Fork In The Road
13. Whole Lot Of Shakin' In My Heart Since I Met You
14. You Don't Have To Say You Love Me
15. Come Round Here I'm The One You Need
16. Save Me
17. On Be My Love
18. Can You Love A Poor Boy
19. Beauty Is Only Skin Deep
20. I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself
21. Baby Baby
22. Walk On By
23. Swept For You Baby
24. More More More Of Your Love

Scoring over 40 hits in the R&B Top 40 charts, the Miracles started out as the Five Chimes in the mid-'50s while the members were still in high school. The Detroit vocal group consisted of William "Smokey" Robinson, Warren "Pete" Moore, Clarence "Humble" Dawson, Donald Wicker, and James "Rat" Grice. Not too long after the group formed, Wicker and Grice left and were replaced by cousins Emerson "Sonny" Rogers and Bobby Rogers, who both sang tenor, and baritonist Ronnie White was in Dawson's place. The vocal quintet then changed their name to the Matadors, and in 1956 Claudette Rogers joined the band after her brother Sonny Rogers was drafted. The Matadors auditioned for Jackie Wilson's manager, Nat Tarnapol, in 1956. Although Tarnapol wasn't interested, finding the group too similar to the Platters, Jackie Wilson's songwriter Berry Gordy Jr. was, and he soon began producing the band, who now went by the name the Miracles. Gordy produced their first single, "Get a Job," which was issued by the N.Y. label End Records in 1958.

After one more release on this label, the Miracles recorded their first song for Gordy's new Motown/Tamla label, 1959's "Bad Girl" (which was issued nationally on the Chess label). Next came the first hit for both the group and the label, 1960's "Shop Around," which reached number one on the R&B charts and number two pop. The next song by the Miracles to hit the number one R&B spot and reach the pop Top Ten came two years later with "You've Really Got a Hold on Me." Smokey and Claudette got married in 1963, and she retired from the group a year later. The band's last big hit before they changed their name from the Miracles was "Going to a Go-Go" (1966), which climbed into the Top Five on the R&B charts, and the pop Top 20. Later that year, "I'm the One You Need" reached the Top 20. After this, the group's name changed to Smokey Robinson & the Miracles and they scored two more number one songs: "I Second That Emotion" (1967) and "The Tears of a Clown" (1970).

Smokey left the group to pursue a solo career in 1972 and 20-year-old Billy Griffin was brought in to replace the lead singer. Once again the Miracles, the band scored several more hits, including "Do It Baby" and "Don't Cha Love It," which both reached the R&B Top Ten. The Miracles experienced a big success in early 1976 with "Love Machine (Part 1)," which reached number one on the pop charts. The multi-million selling single came off of their second album without Smokey, 1975's City of Angels, and stayed on the charts for over six months, making it the longest-running hit the band ever had. Their final album on the Motown label, The Power of Music, followed. After this, the Miracles added a new member, Billy Griffin's brother Don, and the band switched over to Columbia Records. Their first CBS release was Love Crazy (1977), which contained a single, "Spy for the Brotherhood," that was pulled off the record after complaints from the FBI. The group's last charting single, "Mean Machine," made the R&B Top 100 in 1978. Billy Griffin pursued a solo career, and Warren "Pete" Moore became a record producer in Detroit. In the late '80s, Bobby Rogers started the New Miracles, and in 1990 the Miracles (including Billy Griffin and Claudette Robinson) reunited to re-record "Love Machine" for the U.K. Motorcity label. Ronnie White died from leukemia in 1995 and Griffin died in 2013 from diabetes complications.


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 13:44
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.