R. Dean Taylor, who gave Motown one of its top hits by a white artist, dies at 82 (2024)

TORONTO -

Standing in the shadows of Motown legends, late Canadian singer-songwriter R. Dean Taylor was the outlier.

He was shy, leaned into unusual melodies and offbeat storylines, and was one of the few white performers on the Black-owned label. And despite lending his pen as co-writer on Motown hits and soaring to the top of the U.S. charts with his own single "Indiana Wants Me," the Toronto-raised musician's legacy has largely been forgotten.

Some even call him one of Motown's most underappreciated artists.

When Taylor died Jan. 7 at his Los Angeles home at age 82, more than a year after he contracted COVID-19 and was placed in hospice care, he left behind decades of unrealized dreams that were sanded down by the entertainment industry's relentless friction.

A screenplay he once hoped to bring to Hollywood. A memoir only partially finished. So many songs that were committed to tape but never released.

Inside the Motown Museum in Detroit, there's nary a mention of his status as a chart-topper, said his widow Janee. Over the years, she's asked the curators why, but their answers never satisfy.

"He loved Motown, he felt like they were family," she said. "I think that was hurtful."

The museum's representatives did not respond to a request for comment.

Born Richard Dean Taylor in Toronto, he started performing at age 12 at local country and western shows.

By his early 20s, Taylor was playing piano and singing in Toronto bands, leading to the release of his first solo single "At the High School Dance," a rockabilly tune that matched the era.

In 1963, a friend in Detroit contacted him to share a local newspaper article about the rising label Motown Records which was only starting to churn out hits. He said he could get Taylor an audition.

A meeting with Brian Holland and Lamont Dozier -- two of the label's treasured songwriting trio Holland-Dozier-Holland -- went well and soon Taylor was brought under their wing.

"When I joined Motown, I had to learn to write," Taylor explained to Canadian journalist Larry LeBlanc in a 1972 profile written for Hit Parader magazine. "I could always write songs, but I couldn't always write good songs. The difference between a hit and a good song can be a very slight thing."

The Holland-Dozier-Holland brand is attached to some of Motown's most iconic hits, including most of the Supremes' run of 12 chart-topping singles, "Baby Love" and "You Keep Me Hangin' On" among them.

With the trio, Taylor often contributed without credit. Adam White, co-writer of the book "Motown: The Sound of Young America," said Taylor's work is woven into the Supremes' "Love Is Here and Now You're Gone" and the Four Tops' "Standing in the Shadows of Love."

"He would often be paid in cash for contributions he made to songs, rather than songwriter credit," White said.

Official credit came later on "Love Child" for the Supremes, "All I Need" for the Temptations and "I'll Turn to Stone," recorded by the Four Tops.

Eventually, Taylor proved himself a valuable asset to Motown, which opened the doors for him to pursue his own singing career. His debut 1965 single "Let's Go Somewhere," a jaunty protest song against discrimination, landed with a thud on the charts.

Other songs were eclipsed by those from bigger names. While Taylor continued writing for Motown artists, he pushed for his own solo career, with "Gotta See Jane" and "Ain't It A Sad Thing."

Both singles were minor U.S. hits with somewhat greater success in Canada and the United Kingdom, but Taylor's interest in strong linear narratives in the spirit of country music was outside the typical Motown mould.

"He was a good songwriter, capable of producing rather unusual songs with good storylines that caught people's attention," said White.

"They were rather unusual records, I mean, they were certainly unusual for Motown."

Taylor hit the jackpot in 1970 when his song "Indiana Wants Me" rose to the top of the charts. It was the first time such a feat had been accomplished by a white Motown artist and for a moment Taylor was the label's prized asset.

The momentum faded in a flash when his debut LP "I Think, Therefore I Am," released that same year, was a sales dud.

Taylor wouldn't entirely disappear at that point. His 1967 track "There's A Ghost In My House," which flopped on its initial release in North America, found a second life overseas when British DJ Ian Levine introduced the song into his sets.

That helped Taylor become one of the most prominent musicians in the region's northern soul movement of the early 1970s. Its popularity led Motown to reissue the song in 1974 which pushed it to No. 3 on the U.K. charts.

In the 1980s, Taylor attempted a return to the music industry with the launch of his own label Jane Records, his widow said, but the artists he signed never found fame.

"If nobody has a hit record then no one hears about any of that," she added.

Taylor found other routes to happiness in his later years. He was a dedicated vegan, shared a passion for dogs with his wife, and a love for old western TV shows. He collected antique novelty watches of cartoon characters -- one of his prized possessions featured silent film cowboy Tom Mix on its face.

At one point, he constructed a recording studio at his home, where he recorded for several years. That space became his bedroom when he went into hospice care last year, Janee said. And it's there the couple spent their final hours together.

"That night, I played all his songs on YouTube. We talked about our life -- I talked, he wasn't talking at that time -- and I played his music. The next morning he died at 7:30," Janee said.

"I was holding him, it was very hard."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 20, 2022.

R. Dean Taylor, who gave Motown one of its top hits by a white artist, dies at 82 (2024)

FAQs

R. Dean Taylor, who gave Motown one of its top hits by a white artist, dies at 82? ›

He built a recording studio at his home in Los Angeles, and worked on an unpublished memoir of his time at Motown. Taylor died at home on January 7, 2022, at the age of 82. He had been ill since contracting COVID-19 the previous year. At the time of his death he had been married for 52 years to his wife Janee.

Did Motown have any white artists? ›

Motown's soul roster contained the likes of Debbie Dean, Chris Clark, Kiki Dee and The Valadiers – all white artists mostly working with the standard Motown soul method – and the ethnically mixed Bobby Taylor And The Vancouvers, whose music was unimpeachably soulful and relevant to the times.

Who was the first white Motown artist to reach the top of the US charts? ›

Taylor hit the jackpot in 1970 when his song "Indiana Wants Me" rose to the top of the charts. It was the first time such a feat had been accomplished by a white Motown artist and for a moment Taylor was the label's prized asset.

What happened to R. Dean Taylor? ›

Dean Taylor, the Canadian singer-songwriter on Motown Records who hit No. 1 in 1970 with Indiana Wants Me, has died at 82. His widow Janee says her husband died at their Los Angeles home on Jan. 7, more than a year after he contracted COVID-19 and was placed in hospice care.

Who was the first white male artist signed to Motown? ›

Dean Taylor also became a hit composer in his own right and, as an artist, specialized in songs that told stories like his international smash “Indiana Wants Me,” which became a popular attraction on both sides of the Atlantic, giving Motown its first success in the growing genre of white pop-rock singer-songwriters.

Who is the only white band signed to Motown? ›

To clear up a long time false statement that Rare Earth was the only white act to ever be signed with Motown, Rare Earth was the one and only successful white band to be signed with Motown. Rare Earth was with Motown from 1968 to 1978.

Who was the first white group on Motown? ›

Nick and the Jaguars was the first white band to record for Motown, but not the first white artist to be signed to the label -- an honor which still belongs to Dean, according to Motown Junkies.

Who was the white female singer on Motown? ›

In 1960, Berry Gordy Jr. recruited her to join his new Motown record label in Detroit, and signed her to a three-year recording contract, thus becoming Motown's first white female solo recording artist. Mr. Gordy also changed her stage name to "Debbie Dean".

What does the R stand for in R. Dean Taylor? ›

White Canadian singer-songwriter R. Dean Taylor (it stands for “Richard”, if that's what you were looking to find out!)

What female Motown group never recorded their own album? ›

The Girl Groups

The Velvelettes were a group of sisters and cousins from Kalamazoo, Michigan who, while earning a few minor hits in the 60s, never recorded a full album for Motown or any of its subsidiary labels.

Who was Dean Taylor's wife? ›

At the time of his death he had been married for 52 years to his wife Janee.

Who took over after Taylor died? ›

Millard Fillmore became president upon the death of Zachary Taylor in July 1850. Born in upstate Cayuga County, New York on January 7, 1800, Fillmore as a youth endured the privations of frontier life.

Why did Dean Martin stop performing? ›

They toured together in the late 1980s, along with fellow Hollywood "Rat Pack" member Sammy Davis Jr., until Martin was forced to quit in 1988 because of a kidney condition. Davis died in 1990; Sinatra and Martin had little contact in their later lives. Martin spent his final years dining out alone every night.

Who is the white guy in Motown? ›

Motown part 2 (of 3): The white guy's story. The name of Barney Ales became a familiar one to those who took a close interest in the evolution of Motown Records in the 1960s. Ales didn't sing, or write songs, or produce sessions. He wasn't a musician or a choreographer or a voice coach.

Who is the king of Motown? ›

William “Smokey” Robinson Jr.

Who is Motown's biggest artist? ›

The Supremes were the most commercially successful Motown act and are still America's most successful vocal group with 12 No. 1 singles on the Billboard Hot 100.

Why was Motown criticized for not being black enough? ›

The basis for the argument that Motown was not “black enough” was that the sound of its music was more accessible to a wider audience, particularly white audiences, than was the sound of the southern soul.

Is Motown Records owned by whites or black people? ›

Motown played an important role in the racial integration of popular music as an African American-owned label that achieved crossover success.

Was the Motown backing band all white? ›

While most of Motown's backing musicians were African American, and many originally from Detroit, the Funk Brothers included white players as well, such as Messina (who was the featured guitarist on Soupy Sales's nighttime jazz TV show in the 1950s), Brokensha (originally from Australia), Coffey, and Pittsburgh-born ...

Was Aretha Franklin in Motown? ›

Though Aretha Franklin never signed with her hometown label Motown Records, she was childhood friends with Motown recording artist and songwriter, Smokey Robinson, and other artists on the label.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Melvina Ondricka

Last Updated:

Views: 6074

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Melvina Ondricka

Birthday: 2000-12-23

Address: Suite 382 139 Shaniqua Locks, Paulaborough, UT 90498

Phone: +636383657021

Job: Dynamic Government Specialist

Hobby: Kite flying, Watching movies, Knitting, Model building, Reading, Wood carving, Paintball

Introduction: My name is Melvina Ondricka, I am a helpful, fancy, friendly, innocent, outstanding, courageous, thoughtful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.