Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ambassador­s for Motown sound seek more in hometown Detroit

- BY JEFF KAROUB

DETROIT — From the auditorium of Detroit’s main library on a recent weeknight emerged the sound of Motown: Spirited takes of tunes that sprung from a studio just a few miles away and made their way around the world.

Some of Detroit’s best singers and musicians breathed new life into beloved songs more than a half-century old: “Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours.” “Dancing in the Street.” “Stop! In the Name of Love.” “Papa Was a Rolling Stone.”

They still beguile audiences across the globe, but the music of Stevie Wonder, Martha Reeves, the Supremes and Temptation­s doesn’t get heard regularly and reliably in the city of its birth. Joan Belgrave, one of the voices belting out Motown classics on the library stage, is out to change that as the label nears its 60th anniversar­y early next year.

“There’s no place that’s dedicated to that genre. And this is Detroit,” said Belgrave, wife of the late jazz trumpeting great and Motown player Marcus Belgrave. “People come here [and] they go to the Motown Museum. And then what?”

Sure, you can catch a whiff of Hitsville U.S.A. here and there in Detroit. Classic Motown singers and groups — some of which still boast an original member or two — certainly “can’t forget the Motor City,” to quote a Reeves and the Vandellas hit, on a tour. Other artists might throw a Motown song or two into their set lists. Further, there are tribute bands and even a local DJ who spins records from the label and era. To top it off, the Motown Museum plans a major expansion and upgrade that includes a performanc­e space.

Still, Belgrave said it’s not enough for a city with such a sonic lineage and legacy.

“Marcus and I would go to New Orleans, Preservati­on Hall ,” she said. “It’s just a little bitty place. But it’s a place designated for that place’s music — traditiona­l New Orleans music. Why don’t we have a place like that in Detroit?”

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