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What's in Store
 
 
Four Tops
Lost Without You: Motown Lost & Found
 
 
Disc 01
1. Get My Hands On Some Lovin' 
2. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me 
3. Gotta Say It, Gonna Tell It Like It Is 
4. Wonderful Baby - alternate version 1 
5. Wonderful Baby - alternate version 2 
6. Baby Baby Come Home 
7. What You Gonna Do With Me Baby 
8. Fantasy 
9. It's A Lonely World Without Your Love 
10. Sweeter As The Days Go By 
11. Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever - alternate mix 
12. Lost For Words 
13. If You Don't Want My Love - stereo mix 
14. Just One Last Look 
15. Your Love Is Wonderful - stereo mix 
16. Lonely Lover - stereo mix 
17. I Can't Escape Your Memory 
18. I'm So Afraid Of Losing You 
19. Sweet Was The Love 
20. Woman Woman 
Disc 02
1. Same-O Same-O 
2. Clip My Wings 
3. I Can’t Hold Back 
4. Old-Fashioned Man 
5. No Time 
6. My Love Keeps On Growing 
7. You Can’t Keep A Good Man Down 
8. My Fatherless Son 
9. Never Say No To Your Baby 
10. Have A Little Faith 
11. Magic Mary 
12. Don’t You Think You Owe Me Something 
13. Starving For Your Love 
14. Rocks In My Bed 
15. Which Way Is The Sky 
16. These Are The Questions 
17. Deep In The Pit Of Your Love 
18. You’re My Kind Of Woman 
19. Where Do I Go From Here 
20. Baby Dumplin’ 
21. Lost Without You 
 
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RELEASE DATE: May 25th 2005
CD Edition limited to 5000 non-numbered limited edition copies.


Levi Stubbs, Obie Benson, Lawrence Payton and Duke Fakir of the Four Tops were jazz singers, the best kind of close four-part harmony heard in the mid-west in the 1950s – and nationally, for a time, when they backed up their idol, Billy Eckstine, on tour. The Tops had a few singles in the Fifties and early Sixties, mostly then-contemporary styles of rocking doo-wop that did little to further their career. Berry Gordy at Motown heard them live, loved them for what they did best, and signed them to his fledgling Workshop Jazz label in 1963.

After a year recording a jazz album that did not see the light of day for 35 years, the Tops saw the Workshop label close down. But they survived to become one of the icons of the Motown Sound. Their versatility brought more than H-D-H productions to the music stand. Gordy also knew they could perform in any venue, singing show tunes and pop-jazz. Subsequently, their albums were filled with covers of current hits by the likes of The Monkees, and Broadway music such as “Fiddler On The Roof.”

Doesn’t mean nearly every Motown producer wasn’t in the Snakepit recording like mad for them anyway. Lost Without You surveys those many Motown sessions from the beginning of the Tops’ label tenure through the end of the decade. Hip-O Select’s second set in the revived “Motown Lost & Found” series, Lost… features 41 unreleased and rare tracks, 34 of which have never been heard before anywhere. Several of the released tracks are in new, extended stereo mixes.

Of particular note – besides the great B-sides – is the majestic new mix of Ivy Jo Hunter’s “Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever,” which restores the track to the way he intended it be heard. “Lonely Lover,” once found a on a U.K. collection, is given a surprise ending. And “Wonderful Baby” is not the version known to fans – this collection includes alternate versions from two years earlier, providing an exclusive glimpse into the inner workings of Hitsville U.S.A.

The Tops had most of their collaborations with Holland-Dozier issued. Only two unreleased cuts from H-D-H surface here: “Gotta Say, Gonna Tell It Like It Is,” which appears to have been considered as a B-side for “Baby I Need Your Loving,” and “Just One Last Look,” later issued by The Temptations. Digging deep in the vaults, Select discovered the Tops were in the groove with every stripe of Motown staffer: Johnny Bristol, Ashford & Simpson, Jack Goga, Wade Marcus, Raynard Miner (direct from Chicago’s Chess Records), the Miracles’ Smokey Robinson and Pete Moore, George Gordy, Ron Miller, Frank Wilson (who would cut their classic Still Waters album), and even famed radio DJ Scott Regen, with his first-ever studio production (“Magic Mary”). These were the cuts left behind when cover songs took precedent. Well, one cover got left behind too: Frank Wilson’s one-take production of Gary Puckett & The Union Gap’s “Woman, Woman.”

The Tops’ special energy, passion and Motown magic are in every track here. Great songs, once lost, are now found.

 

Hipocrates Says:

While legend has it that the Tops’ first Motown recordings were their jazz sides, it’s the first two cuts on this set, the up-tempo “Get My Hands On Some Lovin’” and “I Can’t Believe That You’re In Love With Me,” that were their very first recordings at Hitsville, on April 13 and 14, 1963.

 


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