Four Tops
Four Tops | |
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The Four Tops in 1968 | |
Background information | |
Also known as | Four Tops, The Four Aims, The Tops |
Origin | Detroit, Michigan, U.S. |
Genres | Soul, R&B, jazz, rock n roll, pop |
Years active | 1953–present |
Labels |
Chess Records Red Top Riverside Columbia Motown ABC-Dunhill Casablanca Arista |
Members |
Abdul "Duke" Fakir Ronnie McNeir Lawrence Payton, Jr. Harold Bonhart |
Past members |
Levi Stubbs Renaldo "Obie" Benson Lawrence Payton Theo Peoples |
The Four Tops are an American vocal quartet from Detroit, Michigan who helped to define the city's Motown sound of the 1960s. The group's repertoire has included soul music, R&B, disco, adult contemporary, doo-wop, jazz, and show tunes.
Founded as The Four Aims, lead singer Levi Stubbs, and groupmates Abdul "Duke" Fakir, Renaldo "Obie" Benson and Lawrence Payton remained together for over four decades, having gone from 1953 until 1997 without a change in personnel.
The Four Tops were among a number of groups, including the Miracles, the Marvelettes, Martha and the Vandellas, the Temptations, and the Supremes, who established the Motown Sound around the world during the 1960s. They were notable for having Stubbs, a baritone, as their lead singer, whereas most male/mixed vocal groups of the time were fronted by a tenor.
The group was the main male vocal group for the highly successful songwriting and production team of Holland–Dozier–Holland, who crafted a stream of hit singles on Motown. These included two Billboard Hot 100 number-one hits for the Tops: "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" in 1965 and "Reach Out I'll Be There" in 1966. After Holland-Dozier-Holland left Motown in 1967, the Four Tops were assigned to a number of producers, primarily Frank Wilson, but generally with less success.
When Motown left Detroit in 1972 to move to Los Angeles, California, the Tops stayed in Detroit but signed a new recording deal with ABC Records' Dunhill imprint. Recording mainly in Los Angeles, they continued to have chart singles into the late 1970s, including the million-seller, "Ain't No Woman", their second release on Dunhill, produced by Steve Barri and composers Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter.
In the 1980s, the Four Tops recorded for Casablanca Records, Arista Records and Motown, returning to that label on two occasions for brief stays. Apart from their Indestructible album (owned by Sony Music Entertainment), Universal Music Group controls the rights to their entire post-1963 catalog (through various mergers and acquisitions), as well as their 1956 single, "Could It Be You".
A change of line-up was finally forced upon the group when Lawrence Payton died on June 20, 1997. The group initially continued as a three-piece under the name The Tops,[1] before Theo Peoples (formerly of The Temptations) was recruited as the new fourth member. Peoples eventually took over the role of lead singer when Stubbs suffered a stroke in 2000, with Ronnie McNeir then joining the group. On July 1, 2005, Benson died of lung cancer with Payton's son Roquel Payton replacing him. Levi Stubbs died on October 17, 2008.
Fakir, McNeir, Payton, and Harold "Spike" Bonhart, who replaced Peoples in 2011, are still performing together as the Four Tops. The 2016 Four Tops included Fakir as the only surviving founding member of the original group and Payton as a second-generation member.
History
Early years
All four members of the group began their careers together while they were high school students in Detroit. At the insistence of their friends, Pershing High students Levi Stubbs and Abdul "Duke" Fakir performed with Renaldo "Obie" Benson and Lawrence Payton from Northern High at a local birthday party. The quartet decided to remain together and christened themselves The Four Aims. With the help of Payton's songwriter cousin Roquel Davis, The Aims signed to Chess Records in 1956, changing their name to Four Tops to avoid confusion with The Ames Brothers. Over the next seven years, The Tops endured unsuccessful tenures at Chess, Red Top, Riverside Records and Columbia Records. Without any hit records to their name, The Tops toured frequently, developing a polished stage presence and an experienced supper club act, as well as supporting Billy Eckstine. In 1963, Berry Gordy, Jr., who had worked with Roquel Davis as a songwriter in the late-1950s, convinced The Tops to join the roster of his growing Motown record company.
Joining Motown
During their early Motown years, the Four Tops recorded jazz standards for the company's Workshop label. In addition, they filled in time by singing backup on Motown singles[2] such as The Supremes' "Run, Run, Run". The Tops also did backing vocals for Martha and the Vandellas on the 1966 hit "My Baby Loves Me".
In 1964, Motown's main songwriting/production team of Holland–Dozier–Holland created a complete instrumental track without any idea of what to do with it. They decided to craft the song as a more mainstream pop song for the Four Tops and proceeded to create "Baby I Need Your Loving" from the lyric-less instrumental track. On its mid-1964 release, "Baby I Need Your Loving" made it to #11 on the Billboard pop charts. However, the song proved to be much more popular on trend-setting radio stations in key U.S. markets and has since grown in popularity over the years to be one of the group's classic tracks. After the single's success, the Tops were pulled away from their jazz material and began recording more material in the vein of "Baby I Need Your Loving".
The first follow-up single, "Without the One You Love (Life's Not Worth While)", just missed both the pop and R&B Top 40 charts, but "Ask the Lonely", written and produced by Motown A&R head Mickey Stevenson with Ivy Hunter, was a Top 30 pop hit and a Top 10 R&B hit in early 1965. From there, the group really began to make their mark.
Success
After scoring their first #1 hit, "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)" in June 1965, the Four Tops began a long series of successful hit singles. Among the first wave of these hits were the Top 10 "It's the Same Old Song", "Something About You", "Shake Me, Wake Me (When It's Over)", and "Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever". Four Tops records often represented the epitome of the Motown Sound: simple distinctive melodies and rhymes, call-and-response lyrics, and the musical contributions of studio band, The Funk Brothers.
Holland-Dozier-Holland wrote most of Levi Stubbs' vocals in a tenor range, near the top of his range, in order to get a sense of strained urgency in his gospel preacher-inspired leads. In addition, H-D-H used additional background vocals from female background vocalists, The Andantes on many of the songs, to add a high end to the low-voiced harmony of The Tops. Ivy Hunter's "Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever" was one of a few exceptions.
August 1966 brought the release of the Four Tops' all-time biggest hit and one of the most popular Motown songs ever. "Reach Out I'll Be There" hit #1 on the U.S. pop and R&B charts[2] and UK chart and soon became The Tops' signature song. It was almost immediately followed by the similar-sounding "Standing in the Shadows of Love"; its depiction of heartbreak reflecting the opposite of the optimism in "Reach Out". It was another Top 10 hit for the Tops.
The Top 10 U.S. hit "Bernadette" centered around a man's all-consuming obsession with his lover,[2] continued the Four Tops' successful run into April 1967, followed by the Top 20 hits "7-Rooms of Gloom", and "You Keep Running Away". By now, The Tops were the most successful male Motown act in the United Kingdom (in the United States, they were second to The Temptations), and began experimenting with more mainstream pop hits. They scored hits with their versions of Tim Hardin's "If I Were a Carpenter" in late 1967 (mid-1968 in the U.S.) and the Left Banke's "Walk Away Renée" in early 1968. These singles and the original "I'm In a Different World" were their last hits produced by Holland-Dozier-Holland, who left Motown in 1967 after disputes with Berry Gordy over royalties and ownership of company shares.
Late Motown period
Without Holland-Dozier-Holland, the hits became less frequent. The group worked with a wide array of Motown producers during the late 1960s, including Ivy Hunter, Nickolas Ashford & Valerie Simpson, Norman Whitfield and Johnny Bristol, without significant chart success.
Their first major hit in a long time came in the form of 1970's "It's All in the Game", a pop Top 30/R&B Top Ten hit produced by Frank Wilson. Wilson and the Tops began working on a number of innovative tracks and albums together, echoing Whitfield's psychedelic soul work with The Temptations. Their 1970 album Still Waters Run Deep was a forerunner of the concept album. It also served as an inspiration for Marvin Gaye's 1971 classic album What's Going On, the title track of which was co-written by the Tops' Obie Benson.
In addition to their own albums, the Tops were paired with The Supremes, who had just replaced lead singer Diana Ross with Jean Terrell, for a series of albums billed under the joint title The Magnificent Seven: The Magnificent Seven in 1970, and The Return of the Magnificent Seven and Dynamite! in 1971. Whilst the albums themselves did not perform really well on the charts, The Magnificent Seven featured a Top 20 version of Ike & Tina Turner's "River Deep - Mountain High", produced by Ashford & Simpson.
The 1971 single "A Simple Game" featured backing vocals from members of The Moody Blues. The song did not fare well on the U.S. charts, but reached number three on the UK charts.
ABC Records and Casablanca Records
Motown as a company began to change during the early 1970s. Older acts such as Martha and the Vandellas and The Marvelettes were slowly moved aside or dropped to focus on newer acts, such as Michael Jackson and The Jackson 5, Rare Earth, and the now-solo Diana Ross. In addition, the company moved its operations from Detroit to Los Angeles, California, where Berry Gordy planned to break into the motion picture and television industries. In 1972, it was announced that the entire company would move west and that all its artists had to move as well. Many of the older Motown acts, already neglected by the label, opted to stay in Detroit, including The Funk Brothers studio backing band, Martha Reeves, and the Four Tops.
The Tops departed Motown for ABC-Dunhill, where they were assigned to writer-producers Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter and the label's head of A&R, Steve Barri as producer, with The Tops' own Lawrence Payton later also serving as a producer and writer. He also took over lead vocal duties on several tracks.
The group's first release on the label, "Keeper of the Castle" was their first pop Top 10 hit since "Bernadette" in 1967. Follow-ups included the million-selling "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)", also a top 10 pop hit and their third R&B number 1, and the Top 20 hit, "Are You Man Enough", (from the movie "Shaft in Africa"). "Sweet Understanding Love"; "Midnight Flower"; and "One Chain Don't Make No Prison" all reached the R&B Top 10 between 1972 and 1974. Two ABC/Dunhill singles, 1974's "I Just Can't Get You Out of My Mind" and 1975's "Seven Lonely Nights" have become popular tunes in the southeast Beach/Shag Club Dance circuit.
After the release of "Catfish" (a top 10 R&B hit) in 1976, the major hits started to dry up and the Tops left ABC after an album recorded in Philadelphia with the MFSB musicians resulted in only minor chart success in 1978. The group disappeared from the recording scene until the early 1980s. Signing a deal with Casablanca Records, the Tops made a comeback in 1981 with the #1 R&B hit "When She Was My Girl". Produced by David Wolfert, it just missed the Billboard pop Top 10, peaking at #11. The group also scored a UK Top 10 hit with the song and had another hit there with the follow-up, "Don't Walk Away".
Return to Motown
By 1983, The Tops had rejoined Motown, where their former ABC-Dunhill producer, Steve Barri was vice-president of A&R. They were featured on the company's television special Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever, taking part in one of the highlights of the show - a battle-of-the-bands between The Tops and The Temptations, patterned after similar competitions Berry Gordy had staged during the 1960s. Levi Stubbs and Temptation Otis Williams decided the Temptations/Tops battle would be a good one to take on the road and both groups began semi-regular joint tours.
The first of The Tops' albums under their new Motown contract was Back Where I Belong. A whole side of the album was produced by the Holland-Dozier-Holland, including the R&B Top 40 single, "I Just Can't Walk Away". Only one more Tops album would be released by Motown, Magic in 1985. The lead single from that album, "Sexy Ways", was almost a Top 20 R&B hit, peaking at #21 on the Soul Charts in mid-1985. In July of that year, the group performed at the Live Aid concert, singing three of their hit songs. The album Hot Nights was completed in 1986, but was then cancelled, as the group and the Motown label began to disagree over marketing and musical direction. The following year, the Four Tops decided to leave for Arista Records, buying back several masters they had recorded for Hot Nights. It's not clear how many songs from Hot Nights were used on Indestructible, but the 2001 box set, Fourever includes the title track (previously released as a single), Red Hot Love and The Four of Us (previously released outside the U.S. on a CD single of "Loco in Acapulco"), as well as Indestructible.
The title track of 1988's Indestructible was the group's final Top 40 hit, reaching No. 35. It was also featured in the 1988 science-fiction cop film, Alien Nation. Another track, "Loco in Acapulco", written and produced by British pop musician Phil Collins and former Motown composer-producer Lamont Dozier, climbed into the UK Top 10 and made #7 in early 1989. The Arista contract provided an opportunity to pair Levi Stubbs with fellow Arista artist, another legendary R&B vocalist from Detroit, Aretha Franklin, who was at the height of her own 1980s hit streak. This pairing resulted in the song "If Ever A Love There Was", which became a popular R&B and Adult Contemporary hit, as well as being featured on the soundtrack of the motion picture I'm Gonna Git You Sucka.
In December 1988, the Tops had been scheduled to board Pan Am Flight 103 to return to the U.S. for Christmas after completing their European tour. However, they were late getting out of a recording session and overslept after a performance at Top of the Pops, causing them to miss the ill-fated flight which crashed in Lockerbie, Scotland, after a terrorist bomb was detonated on board.[3][4] They left London however using a later British Airways flight.
In addition to their own recordings, the Four Tops also worked in the fields of television and motion pictures. The group as a whole performed a song for the 1982 film Grease 2, and Levi Stubbs provided the vocals for the man-eating plant Audrey II in the 1986 musical film, Little Shop of Horrors; and the voice of the evil Mother Brain on the Nintendo-based NBC Saturday morning cartoon Captain N: The Game Master from 1989 to 1991.
Later years
From the late 1980s, the Four Tops focused on touring and live performances. They recorded only one album, returning again to Motown for 1995's Christmas Here with You. On June 20, 1997, 59-year-old Lawrence Payton died as a result of liver cancer, after singing for 44 years with the Four Tops who, unlike many Motown groups, never had a single lineup change until then. At first, Levi Stubbs, Obie Benson, and Duke Fakir toured as a trio called The Tops. In 1998, they recruited former Temptation Theo Peoples to restore the group to a quartet. By the turn of the century, Stubbs had become ill from cancer; Ronnie McNeir was recruited to fill the Lawrence Payton position and Peoples stepped into Stubbs' shoes as lead singer. Stubbs later died on October 17, 2008 at his home in Detroit.
The group was featured in several television specials during this time, including Motown 45, and several by PBS, including a 50th anniversary concert dedicated to the group (available on DVD). The concert turned out to be bittersweet; it featured a brief appearance of the wheelchair-bound Levi Stubbs, and a memorial to Lawrence Payton, announced by Obie Benson. Benson appeared on one more PBS special and died on July 1, 2005, from lung cancer. The final PBS special, titled Motown: The Early Years, featured a message of Benson's passing following the credits. Lawrence Payton's son Roquel (real name Lawrence Payton, Jr.) replaced Benson as the new bass (Roquel could be seen in the pledge break interviews of Motown: The Early Years). Theo Peoples also left the Tops to form his own group and was replaced by Harold 'Spike' Bonhart as lead singer.
The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, and into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1999. In 2004, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked them #79 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[5]
The Four Tops Career Awards
The Four Tops have won many awards during their long and distinguished career, including the following:
- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (1990)[6]
- Vocal Group Hall of Fame (1999)[7]
- Hollywood Walk of Fame (1997)[8][9]
- Grammy Hall of Fame (Reach Out I'll Be There-1998)[10]
- Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (2009-51st Annual Grammy Awards)[11]
- Rhythm and Blues Foundation Pioneer Award (1997)[12]
- Billboard magazine Top 100 Artists of All Time(#77)[13]
- R&B Music Hall of Fame Induction (2013)[14]
- 100 Greatest Artists of All Time (#79-Rolling Stone Magazine)
After similar releases in the Motown "Definitive DVD" series on The Miracles, The Temptations, The Supremes, and Marvin Gaye, The Four Tops' Motown Definitive DVD, Reach Out, was finally released on November 11, 2008.
The Four Tops received The Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award as part of the 51st Annual Grammy Awards.[16][17]
Speaking in January 2010 to noted UK soul writer Pete Lewis of the award-winning Blues & Soul, Fakir confirmed plans for the "new" Four Tops to release a new album, while revealing his personal feelings about the current line-up: "To me the new group is like an extension of the family, because we've all been very close for so many years... Which makes it easier for ME, because I truly miss Lawrence, "Obie" AND Levi - I'd be lying if I said I didn't - and not one of them could EVER be replaced. But, you know, these new guys do perform well enough for the people to still enjoy the shows and still enjoy the music. So for me, it kinda makes it bittersweet. Because, at the end of the day, the legacy is still going on and I'm very pleased that it IS!"[18]
The Four Tops sang the National Anthem before the start of game 5 for the 2011 ALCS between the Texas Rangers & Detroit Tigers on October 13, 2011 in Detroit, MI. When singing the last line of "The Star Spangled Banner", "...and the home of the brave", they quickly sang the words "Ain't No country Like the One I Got", before singing the last word, "brave". The Four Tops were honored with an induction into the R&B Music Hall of Fame at the Inaugural ceremony held at Cleveland State University's Waetejen Auditorium on Saturday August 17, 2013.
Discography
Billboard Hot 100 US and UK singles
The following singles reached the top thirty of the singles charts.
Year | Title | Peak chart positions | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US | US R&B |
US AC |
UK[19] | |||
1964 | "Baby I Need Your Loving" | 11 | 4 | — | — | |
"Without the One You Love (Life's Not Worth While)" | 43 | 17 | — | — | ||
1965 | "Ask the Lonely" | 24 | 9 | — | — | |
"I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" | 1 | 1 | — | 10 | ||
"It's the Same Old Song" | 5 | 2 | — | 34 | ||
"Something About You" | 19 | 9 | — | — | ||
1966 | "Shake Me, Wake Me (When It's Over)" | 18 | 5 | — | — | |
"Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever" | 45 | 12 | — | 21 | ||
"Reach Out I'll Be There" | 1 | 1 | — | 1 | ||
"Standing in the Shadows of Love" | 6 | 2 | — | 6 | ||
1967 | "Bernadette" | 4 | 3 | — | 8 | |
"7-Rooms of Gloom" | 14 | 10 | — | 12 | ||
"You Keep Running Away" | 19 | 7 | — | 26 | ||
"If I Were a Carpenter" | 20 | 17 | — | 7 | ||
1968 | "Walk Away Renée" | 14 | 15 | — | 3 | |
"Yesterday's Dreams" | 49 | 31 | — | 23 | ||
"I'm in a Different World" | 51 | 23 | — | 27 | ||
1969 | "What Is a Man" | 53 | — | — | 16 | |
"Do What You Gotta Do" | — | — | — | 11 | ||
"Don't Let Him Take Your Love from Me" | 45 | 25 | — | — | ||
1970 | "Still Water (Love)" | 11 | 4 | — | 10 | |
"It's All in the Game" | 24 | 6 | 39 | 5 | ||
1971 | "River Deep – Mountain High" (The Supremes & Four Tops) |
14 | 7 | — | 11 | |
"Just Seven Numbers (Can Straighten Out My Life)" | 40 | 9 | — | 36 | ||
"You Gotta Have Love in Your Heart" (The Supremes & Four Tops) |
55 | 41 | — | 25 | ||
"In These Changing Times" | 70 | 28 | — | — | ||
"MacArthur Park (part 2)" | 38 | 27 | — | — | ||
1972 | "A Simple Game" | 90 | 34 | — | 3 | |
"(It's the Way) Nature Planned It" | 53 | 8 | — | — | ||
"Keeper of the Castle" | 10 | 7 | — | 18 | ||
1973 | "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)" | 4 | 2 | 14 | — | |
"Are You Man Enough" | 15 | 2 | — | — | ||
"Sweet Understanding Love" | 33 | 10 | 41 | 29 | ||
1974 | "I Just Can't Get You Out of My Mind" | 62 | 18 | — | — | |
"One Chain Don't Make No Prison" | 41 | 3 | — | — | ||
"Midnight Flower" | 55 | 5 | — | — | ||
1975 | "Seven Lonely Nights" | 71 | 13 | — | — | |
"We Gotta All Stick Together" | 97 | 17 | — | — | ||
1976 | "Catfish" | 71 | 7 | — | — | |
1977 | "Feel Free" | — | 29 | — | — | |
1981 | "When She Was My Girl" | 11 | 1 | 9 | 3 | |
"Don't Walk Away" | — | — | — | 16 | ||
1983 | "I Believe in You and Me" | — | 40 | — | — | |
"I Just Can't Walk Away" | 71 | 36 | 18 | — | ||
1985 | "Sexy Ways" | — | 21 | — | — | |
1988 | "Reach Out I'll Be There '88" | — | — | — | 11 | |
"Indestructible" (Four Tops & Smokey Robinson) |
35 | 57 | 20 | 30 | ||
"Loco in Acapulco" | — | — | — | 7 | ||
"If Ever a Love There Was" (Aretha Franklin & the Four Tops) |
— | 31 | 26 | — |
Albums
- Motown releases
- 1964: Four Tops (US #63; UK #2)
- 1965: Four Tops' Second Album (US #20)
- 1966: Four Tops Live! (US #17; UK #4)
- 1966: On Top (US #32; UK #9)
- 1967: Four Tops' Hits (US #4; UK #1)
- 1967: Reach Out (US #11; UK #6)
- 1967: Four Tops On Broadway (US #79)
- 1968: Yesterday's Dreams (US #91)
- 1969: The Four Tops Now (US #74)
- 1969: Soul Spin (US #163)
- 1970: Still Waters Run Deep (US #21)
- 1970: Changing Times (US #109)
- 1970: The Magnificent 7 (with The Supremes) (US #113; UK #6)
- 1971: The Return of the Magnificent Seven (with The Supremes) (US #154)
- 1971: Dynamite (with the Supremes) (US #160)
- 1971: Mac Arthur Park
- 1972: Nature Planned It (US #50)
- 1973: The Best of the 4 Tops (US #103)
- ABC releases
- 1972: Keeper of the Castle (US #33)
- 1973: Main Street People (US #66)
- 1974: Meeting of the Minds (US #118)
- 1974: Live & in Concert (US #92)
- 1975: Night Lights Harmony (US #148)
- 1976: Catfish (US #124)
- 1977: The Show Must Go On
- 1978: At the Top
- Casablanca releases
- 1981: Tonight! (US #37)
- 1982: One More Mountain
- Motown releases
- 1983: Back Where I Belong
- 1985: Magic (US #140)
- 1986: Hot Nights (unreleased)
- Arista releases
- 1988: Indestructible (US #149)
- Motown releases
- 1995: Christmas Here with You
- Prism Leisure releases
- 2000: The Four Tops Collection (recorded live at the MGM grand 1996)
DVDs
- The Four Tops: Live at the MGM Grand: 40th Anniversary Special (1996)
- The Four Tops: The Four Tops (semi- documentary /concert rehearsal- recorded live for French TV, 1971) 2004.
- The Four Tops: From the Heart: The 50th Anniversary Concert (2006)
- The Four Tops: Reach Out: Definitive Performances 1965-1973 (2008, Motown/Universal)
See also
References
- ↑ Obituary: Levi Stubbs, The Guardian, October 17 2008
- 1 2 3 Show 50 - The Soul Reformation: Phase three, soul music at the summit. [Part 6] : UNT Digital Library
- ↑ "Silver State News Service: Lockerbie Anniversary". Silver State News.
- ↑ "'The Frost Blog: Lockerbie Tragedy". The Frost Blog.
- ↑ "The Immortals: The First Fifty". Rolling Stone Issue 946. Rolling Stone.
- ↑ The Four Tops Biography | The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. Rockhall.com. Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ The Four Tops - Inductees - The Vocal Group Hall of Fame Foundation. Vocalgroup.org. Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ The Four Tops | Hollywood Walk of Fame. Walkoffame.com. Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ Gallery | Hollywood Walk of Fame recipients | Photo 38 | accessatlanta.com. Projects.accessatlanta.com. Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ List of Grammy Hall of Fame Award recipients Q–Z - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. En.wikipedia.org. Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ Four Tops to receive a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award | The Detroit News. detroitnews.com (2008-12-22). Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ Rhythm & Blues Foundation - Preserving America’s Soul. Rhythm-n-blues.org. Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ Billboard Hot 100 All-Time Top Artists list. Listal.com (2008-09-12). Retrieved on 2012-11-10.
- ↑ R&B Music Hall of Fame - Inaugural Induction Ceremony at Waetejen Auditorium, Cleveland Ohio. www.wksu.org. Retrieved on 2013-03-09.
- ↑ 100 Greatest Artists: The Four Tops. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 2012-12-28.
- ↑ Entertainment | Four Tops to get lifetime Grammy. BBC News (2008-12-22). Retrieved on 2012-05-13.
- ↑ Ann, By. (2008-12-22) Grammys To Honor Autry, Four Tops, Martin. Billboard.biz. Retrieved on 2012-05-13.
- ↑ Abdul "Duke" Fakir / The Four Tops interview by Pete Lewis, Blues & Soul, February 2010
- ↑ Official UK Charts - FOUR TOPS
External links
- Four Tops at the Internet Movie Database
- Four Tops at the Internet Broadway Database
- Vocal Group Hall of Fame page on the Four Tops
- Levi Stubbs/The Four Tops interview by Pete Lewis, 'Blues & Soul' October 1992 (republished November 2008)
- History of Rock article
- The Four Tops on Myspace
- The Four Tops discography at MusicBrainz
- Four Tops, The Ed Sullivan Show
- Ronnie McNeir 2012 Interview at Soulinterviews.com.