As one third of a legendary songwriting and production partnership, Dozier produced a slew of indelible hits that expressed the joy and frustration of a whole generation

Lamont Dozier, Motown songwriter, dies aged 81 – news

Lamont Dozier was not a man much given to discussing the mystical art of songwriting and inspiration. You might have thought he would be. There’s certainly something extraordinary about the sheer quality of the songs he wrote with Brian and Eddie Holland in the 60s and early 70s: Baby Love, Nowhere to Run, Stop! In the Name of Love, Reach Out I’ll Be There, Heatwave, I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch), Band of Gold, You Can’t Hurry Love, You Keep Me Hangin On and Bernadette among them – a catalogue that meant Holland-Dozier-Holland stood out even amid the riches of songwriting and production talent assembled at Motown. There’s a fair argument for calling this collection of songs the greatest in the history of pop.

And it wasn’t just that these songs were hits – they were the kind of hits that became indelibly imprinted on the brain of anyone with even a passing interest in pop music. But Dozier took a very prosaic attitude to it all, presenting himself not as the genius he clearly was but as a man who’d simply worked hard, “banging on that piano”. “There’s no such thing as writer’s block,” he contended a few years before his death. “That’s just being lazy. That’s just something you put in your own head. ‘I don’t feel it today’ – that’s bullshit.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Foreign control of North Sea oil licences threatens UK’s net zero goal

Study warns regulator must take action as private equity firms and state-backed…

Taiwan vice-president says ‘don’t be afraid’ to fight authoritarianism in New York speech

William Lai issues global appeal during US stopover after China denounces him…

‘There is no noise’: inside the controversial Bhasan Char refugee camp – a photo essay

Amid concern from charities and NGOs, Bangladesh is relocating Rohinghya refugees to…

The Guardian view on reforms to disability benefits: exacerbating misery | Editorial

Scrapping the work capability assessment is welcome, but the government’s proposed alternative…