At their best.
At their best.
I remember seeing this the night it was originally broadcast.
Oh yeah,the temps doin it!
I love Melvin starting it off
edafan
Temptationsfan500 OMG my alltime favourite song from myalltime favourite group.
And I’ve never seen this!
Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
I’m currently on a lonely sales trip across northernEurope and this sends me to bed so happy and contented.
This is what makes our forum so great – our shared loveof our Motown artists across decades and continents.
Sleep well everyone.
This appearance aired on May 30, 1980 on NBC.
Well I've already watched this several times so told myself I wouldn't watch it again as there's no point
But I had to, lol... and I thoroughly enjoyed it... for the 57th time
Can I just say, ALL The Tempts are AMAZING on this one. Every time I listen to it my favourite performance changes I think. As Tempts fan said, Melvin absolutely rocks it... Glenn is smooth as ever... Dennis sounds like some crazy funky preacher... and Richard oh my that voice. And there’s that ultra-funky guitar... phew
Such a fantatsic song. Love it.
Is this a mix from the album? I know the 45 version was not this long.
This should have a much bigger hit and this performance would have generated higher record sales if it had been shown here in the UK. Still, we can be thankful that the song 'tempted' the group to return to Motown.
Didn't the uprising in the Liberty City section of Miami put a halt of Power's rise on the charts? I think I read somewhere [[in Otis' book?) that programmers became afraid of playing the song because of the message? If so, stupid. Power is another great Temptations protest/message song.
You know what? They said that, but I don't believe that. It was 1980 and I was around. Music was still good, but he did not have the type of heavy social consciousness messages that was out there in the 60s and early 70s. Those riots were going on without being influence by any music. That particular riot paled in comparison to what we lived through in the 1960s. It is a nice story, but I it is not true. The Liberty City riot had nothing to do with "Power" by the Temptations not rising higher on the charts. There was a lot of good music out at that time and the competition was pretty tough.
Just looked at Otis' book. He says that Power got off to a good start when released but then pop stations stopped playing the song after the Miami riots. He didn't say Power caused the riots, just that some stations on the pop side pulled it in the aftermath. He goes on to write about hard it was in the 80s for The Temptations to get their singles played on pop radio.
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