Don't Look Back (The Temptations song) explained

Don't Look Back
Type:single
Artist:The Temptations
Album:The Temptin' Temptations
A-Side:My Baby
Released:September 30, 1965
(1st pressing)
October 30, 1965
(2nd pressing)
Recorded:Hitsville USA (Studio A); May 5, May 10 and May 12, 1965
Genre:Soul
Length:2:50
Label:Gordy
G 7047
Producer:Smokey Robinson
Prev Title:Since I Lost My Baby
Prev Year:1965
My Baby
Title2:Don't Look Back
Next Title:Get Ready
Next Year:1966

"Don't Look Back" is a 1965 song recorded by The Temptations for the Gordy (Motown) label. The flip side to their Top 20 hit "My Baby", "Don't Look Back" broke out and became a hit among the R&B audience on its own, reaching #14 on the R&B charts.

Considered one of original lead singer Paul Williams' showcases, "Don't Look Back" was regularly employed as the closing number for Temptations live performances. Although the original flip side, "My Baby", was initially more popular with pop audiences at the time, over the decades, "Don't Look Back" has proven to be the far more popular and enduring tune. It was also performed by the group on The Ed Sullivan Show. There are no known cover versions of "My Baby".

Background

Written by Miracles members Smokey Robinson and Ronald White, (who also co-wrote the group's #1 Pop smash, "My Girl") the previous year, "Don't Look Back" is a reassurance to the tentative that finding true love is worth the heartbreak and failed relationships it takes to reach it. As the song's narrator, Paul Williams, promises his lover, in his trademark gritty tone:

If you just put your hand in mine

We're gonna leave all your troubles behind

keep on walkin' and don't look back.

Smokey Robinson, the song's producer, specifically assigned Paul Williams to sing lead on the song. Although Williams had been the group's original lead singer during its formative years, his role had by 1965 been eclipsed by David Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks, who had both sung lead on Temptations hit singles. As such, Williams was often overlooked for leads, even on album tracks and B-sides, prompting him to complain, "shit, y'know, I can sing too!"

"Don't Look Back" was originally this single's A-side, but was passed over by the nation's DJs in favor of the Ruffin-led "My Baby", which had a much bigger pop success than this song, and placed on the B-side.[1] The song nevertheless was promoted as if it were an A-side and would be the only B-side to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 for the group (but missed the Top 40 as it peaked at #83).

Although the song's relatively modest initial chart success prevented Paul Williams from getting any more leads on Temptations singles releases, the fact is that "Don't Look Back" became a huge belated hit, because his dynamic performance of the song on the Temptations Live! LP received huge airplay by R&B DeeJays nationwide, and propelled sales of the album into the Top 10 of the Billboard pop album chart. Both sides of the single would receive a second pressing and the tracks remixed, with the following statements added on: "Taken from the album #G 914 The Temptin' Temptations." With the second printing, the sides were reversed, making "My Baby" the A-side, while "Don't Look Back", the original A-side, was relegated to B-side status.[2]

Cash Box described the song as a "catchy, rhythmic ode about a twosome who seem aptly suited to each other."[3]

"Don't Look Back" was more often performed at Temptations live shows than "My Baby". On the 1967 Temptations Live! album, the women in the audience can be heard demanding that the group perform the song, which they proceeded to do. Paul Williams, who developed many of The Temptations' dance steps, developed a routine for the live shows that had him following the song's advice to "keep on walkin'" and performing a strut across the stage, to the delight of the audience. As befitting an intended "A" side, "Don't Look Back" was conceived by Motown Records as an elaborate and dynamic closing number for the Temptations.

As Paul Williams' specialty number, "Don't Look Back" was retired from The Temptations' repertoire after Williams, suffering from complications of sickle-cell disease and alcoholism, left the group in 1971. The group performed the song at their induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a tribute to Williams, along with Daryl Hall and John Oates, who announced the induction.[4]

Credits and personnel

Chart history

Chart (1965)Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Chart83
U.S. Billboard R&B Singles14

Peter Tosh and Mick Jagger version

(You Gotta Walk And) Don't Look Back
Cover:You-got-to-walk-dont-look-back-peter-tosh.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Peter Tosh with Mick Jagger
Album:Bush Doctor
B-Side:Soon Come
Released:1978
Genre:Reggae
Label:EMI

Peter Tosh scored a hit in 1978 with a reggae version of the song, sharing vocals with Mick Jagger. That version bore the modified title "(You Gotta Walk And) Don't Look Back".[5] The song hit #1 in the Netherlands, #2 in Belgium,[6] #20 in Australia,[7] and #81 in the US.[8] The song was also featured on the 2007 album Putumayo Presents World Hits starring Jagger and Tosh. This album also contains songs like E'mma from Touré Kunda, 7 Seconds from Youssou N'Dour & Neneh Cherry, "Watermelon Man" from Mongo Santamaría, Oye Como Va From Santana, etc.

The track appears also on Peter Tosh 1978 album Bush Doctor with credited Mick Jagger vocals. The pair played the song together that year on an episode of Saturday Night Live and a couple of times during Tosh's opening performance on the Rolling Stones US Tour 1978. The Rolling Stones rehearsed it for that tour and played it once in Chicago 2002.

Tosh had previously recorded the song with The Wailers in ska style in 1966.

Dirk De Smet version

Walk and Don't Look Back
Cover:Walk-and-don't-look-back-dirk-de-smet.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Dirk De Smet
Released:2008
Genre:R&B
Label:Ariola / Sony Music(for distribution)

Dirk De Smet, the winner of the second series of the Belgian edition of X Factor musical competition made a remake of the song under the title "Walk and Don't Look Back" being his debut release after the win. It reached #4 on the Flemish Ultratop Belgian Singles Chart in 2008.[9]

Other Cover Versions

Don't Look Back has also been covered by Johnny Nash, The Persuasions,Bobby Womack, Teena Marie, Al Green and many others.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Ain't Too Proud To Beg : The Troubled Lives and Enduring Soul of The Temptations by Mark Ribowsky (2010) Pgs. 144–145
  2. Ain't Too Proud To Beg : The Troubled Lives and Enduring Soul of The Temptations by Mark Ribowsky (2010) Pgs. 144–145
  3. CashBox Record Reviews . October 16, 1965 . 10 . 2022-01-12 . Cash Box.
  4. Web site: YouTube . . 2016-09-29.
  5. Joel Whitburn, Top Pop Singles 1955-1999 (Menomonee Falls, WI: Record Research, 2000), 658.
  6. Web site: Peter Tosh with Mick Jagger - (You Gotta Walk) Don't Look Back - ultratop.be. www.ultratop.be.
  7. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 311.
  8. Book: Whitburn, Joel . Joel Whitburn

    . Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles, 14th Edition: 1955-2012 . Joel Whitburn . 2013 . Record Research . 852.

  9. Web site: https://www.ultratop.be/nl/song/83ef2/Dirk-[BE-Walk-And-Don't-Look-Back Dirk [BE] - Walk And Don't Look Back |website=Ultratop.be |access-date=2016-09-29].