Smokey Robinson and Berry Gordy, the visionary creative duo behind the revolutionary Motown genre, saw their legacy play out onstage Friday at a pre-Grammy gala honoring their life's work.
From Robinson's "The Tracks of My Tears" to "My Girl" songs, Motown defined the 1960s and influenced scores of artists that followed.
Gordy's now iconic Motown Records, which the 93-year-old founded in Detroit in 1959, also played a pivotal role in uniting Black and white music fans in a decade convulsed by racial divisions.
"There had never been anything like Motown before Motown," the now 82-year-old artist told AFP on the red carpet. "There will never be anything like Motown again."
The star-studded gala that this year included Motown prodigy Stevie Wonder is an annual pre-Grammy tradition from MusiCares, the charitable wing of the Recording Academy that raises money to help musicians in need.
"Both loom so large in music, and their stories are so intertwined, that picking just one as the MusiCares Person Of The Year -- an honor previously bestowed on Joni Mitchell, Quincy Jones, Aerosmith, and other luminaries -- would be a half-measure," the institution said.
- 'Motown family' -
The Temptations opened the show with a rollicking rendition of their smash hit "The Way You Do The Things You Do" and later crooned "My Girl" as Gordy and Robinson flashed megawatt smiles and bopped along.
Sheryl Crow belted out Jackson 5's "I Want You Back" in a feathered, sparkling minidress, and Jimmie Allen performed "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" with Valerie Simpson, who co-wrote that hit, which Marvin Gaye and later Diana Ross made famous.
"How in the world did I get to be in the Motown family? How in the world did I get a chance to have a catalog and be sitting here in front of my two amazing mentors?" said Lionel Richie in a heartfelt tribute.
"You guys mean the world to me," he said before singing "Easy," the beloved track he made famous with the Commodores in a performance that bought the room to its feet.
"I wouldn't be here" without Robinson and Gordy, said Wonder -- the virtuoso and music luminary who auditioned for Motown at just 11 years old.
"I can never repay you," he said. "Thank you, I love you, thank you, I love you."
"We should write a song like that!"
mdo/dva
© Agence France-Presse
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