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Mary Wells - Prove It (2018)

Mary Wells - Prove It (2018)

BAND/ARTIST: Mary Wells

  • Title: Prove It
  • Year Of Release: 2018
  • Label: nagel heyer records
  • Genre: R&B, Pop, Soul
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
  • Total Time: 1:16:30
  • Total Size: 470 / 176 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. He's the One I Love
02. What's the Matter with You, Baby
03. Does He Love Me
04. To Lose You
05. Everybody Needs Love
06. I Want You 'Round
07. Can You Fix It (My Broken Heart)
08. You Beat Me to the Punch
09. Looking Back
10. Two Lovers
11. I Love the Way You Love
12. What Love Has Joined Together
13. My Guy
14. When I'm Gone
15. Teach Me Tonight
16. Honey Boy
17. Once Upon a Time
18. The Day Will Come
19. Forgive and Forget
20. Two Wrongs Don't Make a Right
21. Guarantee (For a Lifetime)
22. My Heart Is Like a Clock
23. What's Easy for Two Is so Hard for One
24. Laughing Boy
25. When Your Lover Comes Back
26. Prove It
27. Whisper You Love Me Boy
28. Your Old Stand By
29. Goodbye and Good Luck

Time and legions of other soul superstars have obscured the fact that for a brief moment, Mary Wells was Motown's biggest star. She came to the attention of Berry Gordy as a 17-year-old, hawking a song she'd written for Jackie Wilson; that song, "Bye Bye Baby," became her first Motown hit in 1961. The full-throated approach of that single was quickly toned down in favor of a pop-soul sound. Few other soul singers managed to be as shy and sexy at the same time as Wells (Barbara Lewis is the only other that springs to mind), and the soft-voiced singer found a perfect match with the emerging Motown production team, especially Smokey Robinson. Robinson wrote and produced her biggest Motown hits; "Two Lovers," "You Beat Me to the Punch," and "The One Who Really Loves You" all made the Top Ten in the early '60s, and "My Guy" hit the number one spot in mid-1964, at the very height of Beatlemania.

Mary turned 21 years old as "My Guy" was rising to the top of the charts, and left Motown almost immediately afterward for a reported advance of several hundred thousand dollars from 20th Century Fox. The circumstances remain cloudy years later, but Wells and her husband-manager felt Motown wasn't coming through with enough money for their new superstar; she was also lured by the prospect of movie roles through 20th Century Fox (which never materialized). It's been rumored that Wells was being groomed for the sort of plans that were subsequently lavished upon Diana Ross; more nefariously, it's also been rumored that Motown quietly discouraged radio stations from playing Wells' subsequent releases. What is certain is that Wells never remotely approached the success of her Motown years, entering the pop Top 40 only once (although she had some R&B hits). Motown, for their part, took care throughout the rest of the '60s not to lose their big stars to larger labels.

Wells' departure from Motown was so dramatic and unsuccessful that it has tended to overshadow the quality of her later work, which has almost always been dismissed as trivial by critics. True, it didn't match the quality of her Motown recordings -- Smokey Robinson could not be replaced. But her '60s singles for 20th Century Fox (whom she ended up leaving after only a year), Atco, and Jubilee were solid pop-soul on which her vocal talents remained undiminished. She wrote and produced a lot of her late-'60s and early-'70s sessions with her second husband, guitarist Cecil Womack (brother of Bobby), and these found her exploring a somewhat earthier groove than her more widely known pop efforts. She had trouble landing recording deals in the '70s and '80s, and succumbed to throat cancer in 1992. ~ Richie Unterberger


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  • User offline
  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 18:42
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Thank you so much!!!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 21:16
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Many thanks for Flac.