Dayton Daily News

Lamont Dozier wrote hits with heart and soul

- By Greg Braxton

Lamont Dozier was in his downstairs home studio, singing “My World Is Empty Without You,” the classic Diana Ross and the Supremes hit he had composed with his Motown partners Eddie and Brian Holland. He was in mid-song when the unexpected happened.

The legendary songwriter’s voice cracked and he became choked up. Although he had written the song and had sung it himself hundreds of times, he became overcome, so much so that he couldn’t finish.

“The song was just pouring out of me, and then all of a sudden the emotion took over,” Dozier explained during a 1999 interview in his spacious home. “It was overwhelmi­ng, and I had to regroup. All these memories just rushed in, of the people and friends who are no longer with us. Marvin Gaye. (The late Supreme) Florence Ballard. Some of the Temptation­s . ... I just had to have the engineer stop the tape.”

At the time, Dozier — who died Monday at the age of 81 — was deep in recording his album “Reflection­s Of...” Released in 2004, it put Dozier’s own personal stamp on the iconic R&B songs that he and the Holland brothers had written for Gaye, the Supremes, the Four Tops, the Temptation­s, Martha Reeves & the Vandellas and other top Motown artists. The trio was at the center of turning the Motown label into a cultural juggernaut that would revolution­ize American pop music.

And although Dozier in the late 1990s was decades removed from the heyday of Motown and had parted ways with his partners, the eruption of emotion in the making of the project demonstrat­ed his ongoing personal connection with songs such as “Baby Love,” “Where Did Our Love Go,” “Baby I Need Your Loving,” “You Can’t Hurry Love,” “Reach Out, I’ll Be There,” “How Sweet It Is (to Be Loved by You),” “Stop! In the Name of Love,” “Love Is Like an Itching in My Heart,” “Heat Wave,” “Nowhere to Run,” “Bernadette,” “It’s the Same Old Song” and many other classics.

For people growing up in the ’60s and ’70s, it is impossible to imagine growing up without those tunes pouring out of our transistor radios or watching kids dance to them on “American Bandstand” and other teen shows. Those songs were essentials, transformi­ng those Motown artists into internatio­nal superstars and national heroes. But it was the craft and genius of the songwritin­g that made Dozier into one of my heroes.

The power and universal vibrancy of those songs also resonates with today’s musicians.

Providing hummable and dancing illustrati­ons of the exhilarati­on of love was central to the Holland-Dozier-Holland oeuvre. But their uncanny ability to lay bare the devastatio­n of heartbreak and romantic breakups while giving it earworm hooks was their superpower.

“Let me get over you the way you’ve gotten over me,” Ross begs in “You Keep Me Hangin’ On,” punctuatin­g her hurt with a plea: “Go on, get out, get out of my life and let me sleep at night.” The cut is even deeper in the psychedeli­c-flavored hit “Reflection­s”: “In you I put all my faith and trust. Right before my eyes, my world has turned to dust.”

The power of Dozier’s songwritin­g carried into his solo career, where he recorded several albums beginning with his 1973 debut album “Out Here on My Own.”

He was the writer and producer in 1988 of “Two Hearts,” the smash hit for Phil Collins that appeared in the 1988 movie “Buster,” which won a Grammy and Golden Globe and received an Oscar nomination.

It was that brilliance of Dozier and his accomplish­ments that led me to his large house in Encino in 1999. He was one of several legendary songwriter­s involved in “Shake, Rattle & Roll,” a CBS miniseries that used the evolution of rock ‘n’ roll and the civil rights movement as a backdrop for the love story of a young couple during the 1950s and ’60s.

At the time, he was still embroiled in a bitter and long-standing legal fight with Motown and the company’s founder, Berry Gordy Jr. Dozier and the Hollands maintained they were cheated out of hundreds of millions of dollars because they had not been paid a significan­t royalty rate for the songs, which had been endlessly repackaged in boxed sets and other compilatio­ns. Attorneys for Gordy and Motown called the lawsuits and charges a “farce” and part of a “vindictive campaign of harassment.”

Said Dozier: “It’s been very costly and painful. But I can’t blame the music. A lot of people would have gotten bitter, but I will continue to do the music. It’s a gift from God, and it will always live.”

He had met resistance from major labels who showed more interest in his older work than new material. But he had no interest in being a nostalgia act. He was determined to lay claim to his legacy while also moving forward with new creative endeavors.

I was then stunned when Dozier closed his eyes and starting singing in a voice that sounded as if his heart were breaking: “Baby love, my baby love, I need you, oh, how I need you.” It sounded as if his heart was breaking. Opening his eyes, he smiled and launched into a tempo closer to the Supremes rendition: “Babylove, my Babylove ….”

 ?? IMAGES/TNS KEVIN WINTER/GETTY ?? Songwriter and singer Lamont Dozier — who died on Monday — speaking during the 51st Annual Grammy awards pre-telecast show held at the Staples Center on Feb. 8, 2009, in Los Angeles, California.
IMAGES/TNS KEVIN WINTER/GETTY Songwriter and singer Lamont Dozier — who died on Monday — speaking during the 51st Annual Grammy awards pre-telecast show held at the Staples Center on Feb. 8, 2009, in Los Angeles, California.

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