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Tamla T 54040 (B), June 1961
B-side of No Love
(Written by Berry Gordy)
A helping of fun, but forgettable, faux-blues. Written very quickly by Berry Gordy (the liner notes to The Complete Motown Singles: Volume 1 claim it was knocked off in just five minutes, a feat he was supposedly able to achieve as a result of his close and long-lasting friendship with Mable, plus his supposed innate understanding of similar-minded women thanks to his family upbringing), it’s much more uptempo, much more pop than the smoky A-side No Love, but also more ephemeral and less affecting.
This is an upbeat, wryly earnest pop song, in the mould of Mable’s previous Tamla single Who Wouldn’t Love A Man Like That, but faster and frothier. One of a whole clutch of early Motown records with a discernible blues flavour, Looking For A Man is, if nothing else, an indication of where the label might have been headed in Berry Gordy’s mind at the time.
Before the emergence of the immediately-recognisable peerless pop-soul that would come to be known definitively as “the Motown Sound”, it was in Gordy’s commercial interests to chase success in as many different directions as possible, going after lots of different audiences on the chance that one of these forays would hit the jackpot. In 1961, blues-influenced, radio-friendly pop music – blues-lite like this – must have seemed as good a bet as any, and it was arguably this avenue which did eventually lead Motown to where it was going. After all, there’s not exactly a million miles between this and Mary Wells’ hit I Don’t Want To Take A Chance, released just a couple of weeks previously.
This one definitely has a go, anyway; it has a suitably slinky setting, the band laying down a bouncy track as Mable advertises her search for the perfect husband, setting out her strict criteria and contrasting these qualities with the losers she’s encountered to date. (Supposedly Mable provided Berry Gordy with the raw material for his lyric by giving an off-the-cuff answer to his question about what she looked for in a man). It’s quite good fun to start with, as she informs us she’s looking for a man “who don’t smoke and don’t drink and don’t fool with no woman but me”, and pours scorn on a “two-timing rascal telling me that I’m the one / Let me tell you people, a man don’t fool me none”.
Unfortunately, that’s about all there is to the song. Like the A-side, it’s yet another early Jobete song that promises much before delivering little, but the biggest problem in this instance turns out, rather unexpectedly, to be the singer. Just as with Barrett Strong’s earlier efforts, highlighted in particular on Two Wrongs Don’t Make A Right, the combination of singer and song sounds wrong. Here, Mable’s voice, so convincing on throaty, gospel-inflected, and – crucially – slow numbers like No Love, somehow just doesn’t really work. It turns out Mable isn’t ideally suited to doing a sassier, poppier song like this one, and as a result, another bad match of vocalist and material leads to a record that, while fun, ends up being less than the sum of its parts.
MOTOWN JUNKIES VERDICT
(I’ve had MY say, now it’s your turn. Agree? Disagree? Leave a comment, or click the thumbs at the bottom there. Dissent is encouraged!)
You’re reading Motown Junkies, an attempt to review every Motown A- and B-side ever released. Click on the “previous” and “next” buttons below to go back and forth through the catalogue, or visit the Master Index for a full list of reviews so far.
(Or maybe you’re only interested in Mable John? Click for more.)
Mable John “No Love” |
Gino Parks “Same Thing” |
Damecia said:
I think most women are still looking that guy! (LOL).
“Looking For A Man” is much better than it’s A-side, yet it still isn’t a hit record. Hard to believe that this and “I Don’t Wanna Take A Chance” were released weeks from each other. “I Don’t Wanna Take A Chance” sounds much more contemporary compared to this. Whereas “Looking For A Man” sounds dated. Maybe Mary Wells’s youth had something to do with this.
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benjaminblue said:
Is it true that Diana Ross & The Supremes were the background vocalists on this track? If so, how did they acquit themselves? Are there voices recognizable? Was the background vocal intricate or simplistic?
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MotownFan1962 said:
The backing voices don’t sound very much like The Supremes (there are men on this song!). I think they sound more like the Rayber Voices (a group that usually consisted of Raynoma Liles Gordy, Robert Bateman, Brian Holland, Sonny Sanders, Gwendolyn Murray, and/or whoever else was available, and sang background for a lot of Motown’s artists until around 1962). Furthermore, I don’t think any of the Supremes are on this song alone (each of them has a distinctive voice, neither of which I hear on this song), but I wasn’t there when they recorded it, so I don’t know.
The backing vocals aren’t too complicated, but their not too simple either, and the harmony is good. I’d recommend listening to it.
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Robb Klein said:
I don’t hear ANY men singing background on this song. So, I’d rule out The Rayber Voices. It sounds like 3 women. None of them are recognisable to me. They don’t sound like The Supremes, nor The Andantes, nor The Vandellas/Vells. They may be an ad-hoc amalgum of stray women who were available, in the studio at the time of recording. I’m not surprised that this song sounded less “modern” than “I Don’t Want to take a chance”. It is a Blues song. Blues didn’t really progress into a changing sound, unlike pop and R&B (which was moving in the direction of more innovations instrumentally, and in song writing style, and vocally, in the phrasing and singing style).
It’s interesting to me that Mable had worked as a secretary for Berry Gordy’s mother’s insurance company, and Berry worked on songs with her starting in 1958, and got her gigs at The Flame Bar and Grill. In 1959, he got her signed with United Artists. Unfortunately, they never released any records, and I’m not sure they recorded her. We know that, in addition to Marv Johnson and Eddie Holland, Berry got Wyatt “Big Boy” Shepherd signed to UA. He even had one 45 released.
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