Biography
In 1958, in Detroit, Michigan, Billy Gordon, Billy Hoggs,
Joe Billingslea and Billy Rollins formed a quartet named
The Blenders. After a short period of playing together,
the group decided to replace Billy Rollins with a better
quality singer named Leroy Fair. In 1960, the late Hubert
Johnson, a cousin of the late Jackie Wilson, joined the
group, making it a quintet. After a visit to a recording
studio called "Flick and Contour Records", the
group "borrowed" part of the name and changed
its name to THE CONTOURS.
In Fall 1960, with some encouragement from Jackie Wilson,
Berry Gordy, Jr, signed the group to a recording contract
with Motown. In January 1961, they released "Whole
Lotta Woman" b/w "Come On And Be Mine".
The record did not have much success. Shortly afterward,
there was some disappointing news for Leroy Fair. Despite
his great voice, Leroy couldn't handle the required choreography,
and the group (to steal the words of the song to come)
broke his heart, cause he couldn't dance. The group replaced
him twice before eventually finding Sylvester Potts as
a replacement for Leroy Fair. This group recorded, "The
Stretch" b/w "Funny" which didn't fare
much better than the first effort. However, for THE CONTOURS,
the third time would become the charm!
In 1962, Gordy created a new label for Motown Records
called the Gordy label and signed THE CONTOURS as its
first group. In the summer of 1962, the group recorded
Berry Gordy Jr's, "Do You Love Me," resulting
in the group's (and label's) first hit. Within two weeks
of its release, the song roared to #2 on the Billboard
Hot 100, taking the #1 spot on the R&B charts and
#3 on the pop charts. It remained on the charts for five
months. The song was the Gordy label's first million-seller,
and it still holds the record as Motown's fastest rising
hit of all time.
In 1963, the group charted another hit, sending "Shake
Sherry" to the #21 position on the R&B charts
(#43 pop). In 1964, they charted "Can You Do It"
at #41 R&B. Still in 1964, they recorded a ballad
entitled "The Day When She Needed Me". However,
by the time this song was released, THE CONTOURS would
undergo a major restructuring.
The group had irreconcilable creative differences with
Motown. At a 1964 meeting with Berry Gordy, Jr., Billy
Hoggs, Joe Billingslea and Sylvester Potts announced they
were quitting. A week later Hubert Johnson also resigned,
leaving Billy Gordon as the only original member of the
group. Motown reconstructed the group as a quartet, adding
Council Gay, Jerry Green and Alvin English. The reconstituted
group recorded and released "Can You Jerk Like Me??"
On the flip side was "The Day When She Needed Me"
by the earlier members of THE CONTOURS. Both songs charted
in 1965 (#15 R&B and #37 R&B/#47 pop respectively).
The reconstituted group also charted "First I Look
At the Purse" (#12 R&B/#57 pop, 1965).
After less than a year, in early 1965 Sylvester Potts
returned to the group replacing Alvin English. However,
almost immediately afterwards, the only remaining original
member, Billy Gordon, quit and was replaced by Joe Stubbs
(former lead singer of the Falcons and brother of the
Four Tops' Levi Stubbs). This group charted "Just
a Little Misunderstanding" (#18 R&B/#85 pop,
1966). Joe Stubbs quit and was replaced by Dennis Edwards
(who would later replace David Ruffin in The Temptations).
This iteration of THE CONTOURS charted "It's So Hard
Being a Loser" (#35 R&B/#79 pop, 1967). After
their contract with Motown expired, THE CONTOURS disbanded.
About 1971, original member Joe Billingslea revived the
group, playing a few dates here and there. By 1981, the
group consisted of Joe Billingslea, former Contour Council
Gay, Arthur Hinson, Martin 'Beanie' Upshire and C. Autry
'Breeze' Hatcher. THE CONTOURS began to play a lot more
dates. In 1984, Arthur Hinson left the group and was replaced
by and current member R. Charles Davis. A week later,
Council Gay left and Sylvester Potts returned to the group.
In 1987, Hatcher left the group and Arthur Hinson returned.
That same year, "Do You Love Me" was included
in the movie, "Dirty Dancing", starring Patrick
Swayze and Jennifer Grey. This revived the song and it
returned to the pop charts in July 1988 for eight weeks,
peaking at #11. As certified by the Recording
Industry Association Of America, "More Dirty
Dancing (1987 Film Additional Soundtrack)" (which
included "Do You Love Me") went multi-platinum
at level 4.0.
The movie soundtrack spawned a "Dirty Dancing Concert
Tour", which featured THE CONTOURS and other artists
including Bill Medley, Eric Carmen, Ronnie Spector, Merry
Clayton and a set of dancers from the movie. A week before
the tour was to start, Beanie Upshire was replaced by
Darrel Nunlee. This version of THE CONTOURS played the
ten-month "Dirty Dancing Tour," entertaining
over two million fans in eight countries. The "Dirty
Dancing Tour" was Performance's 1998 Variety Act
of the Year. The tour also gave birth to a live CD release.
THE CONTOURS contributed "Get Ready", "Higher
and Higher", "Cry to Me" and "Do You
Love Me" to the 1989 release "Dirty Dancing
Live In Concert". In September 1998, THE CONTOURS
released a CD, "Great Dirty Dancing Hits", sprinkled
with several of their hits as well as hits of other artists.
In 1990, Arthur Hinson left the group and THE CONTOURS
continued as a quartet until 1993 when Darell Nunlee left
and Gary Grier and Al Chisholm were added taking the group
back to a five-man form. This configuration of THE CONTOURS
existed until early 2004, when Sylvester Potts quit. He
was replaced by Dupree Sims. Sims left and in 2006, Odell
Jones was added to bring the group to its current configuration.
In July 1999, yet another Dirty Dancing CD, "Dirty
Dancing: More Dirty Dancing [Original Recording Remastered]"
which included "Do You Love Me" was released.
In all, re-released version contributed to ten million
new copies of the song, "Do You Love Me." It's
fair to say that Dirty Dancing has been good to THE CONTOURS.
On July 20, 1989, THE CONTOURS were inducted into the
Rock 'n' Roll Walk of Fame outside Royal Oak's Metropolitan
Musicafe in Royal Oak, Michigan. They also received the
Smokey Robinson Heroes And Legends Award in 2000 and have
been nominated for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They
continue to perform in the US and abroad, bringing their
energetic, versatile and entertaining show to hundreds
of thousands of fans every year throughout the world.
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