I can hear Mary and this sure sounds better than the record! Mary, Cindy and Flo were also a big part of the SOUND of the Supremes!https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eZRBTBMfaJw
I can hear Mary and this sure sounds better than the record! Mary, Cindy and Flo were also a big part of the SOUND of the Supremes!https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eZRBTBMfaJw
Great song, but whoever choreographed Mary and Cindy [[Cholly?) appears to have been as bored as Mary and Cindy look.
I agree. Perhaps having to sing ooos and ahhhs to Mama passed away while makin home made jam totally embarrassed them and they couldn't take it seriously!!
I literally can not stand this song. It was a cheap attempt to "shock" and emulate the success of "Love Child", but "Love Child" was vastly superior.
Lord knows I also hated the live version of their hits with those overblown, brassy and annoying "Las Vegas" endings.
Their recorded versions were always vastly superior to the middle of the road/sped up and over orchestrated versions they sang live.
The gowns the ladies wore in this clip were recycled for The Supremes Right On album, but then again all their old gowns were recycled and re-worn all the way up to 1977.
Hmm... interesting perfomance. None of them look very happy which is appropriate I guess, lol. I still don't really know what to make of this song... and that cringy homemade jam line... Lol
You're funny. I was around when that record was released and on the radio. No one around at the time had a real problem with it. I believe it went Top 10. It had nothing in common with "Love Child", but more so with "Runaway Child" or even "Cloud Nine"[[records about escaping your current situation). Both of which some believe were superior to "Love Child".
You sound like you are just repeating something you read somewhere.
How old were you in 1969? There was really nothing wrong with that appearance on the Hollywood Palace. The Supremes were the top of the line at the time. Who could have done it better? No one else as I recall.
Last edited by marv2; 07-23-2017 at 03:04 AM.
It charted very well in the U.S. DET It was #10 Billboard Hot 100 and #8 Billboard R&B Chart. Contrary to popular belief, it was not the sequel to "Love Child". It was just another social commentary type record that Motown release that was popular during the late 60s. I remember hearing the intro on the radio and liking it. It received quite a bit of airplay.
How is it you say that with such certainty Marv?
wiki , for one, disagrees with you:
Put me down as liking it as well then and now . It's quirky .wiki:
Inspired by the plot of Douglas Sirk's 1959 film Imitation of Life,[3] The Clan composed "I'm Livin' in Shame" as a sequel to the Supremes' number-one hit single, "Love Child." The song explores the quest of the 'love child' to shun both her impoverished childhood and her mother, and pass herself off to her friends and new husband as the daughter of a rich family. The woman's mother ends up dying without ever seeing her daughter as an adult, or ever meeting her two-year-old grandson, to the child's regret and chagrin.
According to the notes to TCMS-1969, Diana Ross was never fond of the lyrics to "I'm Livin' In Shame" [[since she stayed close to her Mom unlike the protagonist of "Shame"). Also they said that The Supremes never did the song in the their stage show [[so I guess it was only performed on TV).
Boogiedown. God nor Moses wrote what you saw on "Wiki". Whoever wrote it probably meant to say that it [["I Livin In Shame") was the follow up to "Love Child". It doesn't mean the same thing. All anyone needs to do is listen to the lyrics of both songs. They do not relate! The person who wrote that in wiki was really stretching it to make it fit! LOL! He read somewhere that the song "I'm Living in Shame" was suppose to be a continuation of the song "Love Child", but it is not if you go by lyrical content.
Oh I am sure you could make "Home made jam" in a " tenement slum", but it is highly unlikely if you've ever been in one. Too small, stove,etc,etc. The jam thing is something you usually find in rural areas, especially in the Southern U.S. Tenement slums were a feature of urban America in the 1960s and beyond. In "Living in Shame", the writer even says that she lived in a HOUSE! LOL! I digress. My point is the songs have nothing to do with one another. "Love Child" is basically about teen pregnancy and a girl begging her boyfriend to let's wait before we go all the way and suffer the consequences. "I'm Living in Shame" is about a young woman ashamed of her poor background" that she's trying to run away and hide from.
Explain to me this. Is the young woman in "Love Child" the mother or the daughter in "I'm Living in Shame"? Think hard now. LOL!~
I always liked this song. The "homemade jam" lyric is corny, but some of the other lyrics are pretty deep. The track is solid and has a good melody. I like to think of this as their forgotten hit. A top 10 hit that never gets played on the radio anymore and hardly ever mentioned.
Whether or not "Shame" was the continuation of the "Love Child" story can only be addressed by the people who wrote it. [[For the record one can make jam anywhere. It is not a difficult thing to do, nor a difficult image to conjure up of a woman living in an inner city neighborhood doing so in the 1960s.) But it doesn't take a genius to know that Motown was hoping to repeat the success of "Love Child" with another "social commentary" song. The two songs are linked. Where "Quicksand" is the "Son of 'Heat Wave'" [[as it had been nicknamed), "Shame" is most certainly the daughter of "Love Child".
My opinion of the song is that it's not a bad song, but I hate it. Probably the one Supremes A side of a single that I really can't stand to hear. I'm not surprised that it didn't equal "Love Child"'s success, but I am surprised it did as well as it did. A couple of those DRATS "flop" singles were much better than "Shame" to my ears. Surprisingly I can listen to the original unreleased [[at the time) version and think that "Shame" might have inched a little further if the label had gone with it instead of the eventual single version.
All record companies try to follow up a hit with a sound alike or something similar to the hit. It's called chasing a formula. Those songs to do not have anything in common with one another even though they were written by the same people! Enough people liked "I'm Living In Shame" [[including Berry Gordy) to drive it into the Top 10.
PS, You can spit anywhere too, but you would have been hard press to find a woman making jam in a tenement apartment. You would have to grow your own food, fruits etc to can them and that was not possible in tenement slums! Hence, NO HOMEMADE JAM! LOL!!! There is just no physical room/space for that. Must have been a luxury tenement slum. LOL!!!
Last edited by marv2; 07-23-2017 at 08:11 PM.
True. In our family of six, my mom made home made jam in the small four room apartment that we lived in. When my parents were able to buy their own home [[thanks to my dad working two jobs) my mom continued to make home made jam and lots of other things from scratch.
Today, moms work outside the home and everyone does take out
A bunch of grown ups argueing over where and how and what space you need to make homemade jam. LOLOLOL.
Mmm hmmm. And the emoji at the end of my statement with the tongue sticking out was supposed to convey to the overly sensitive that I was joking. Although to be fair, the term "there's no accounting for taste" simply means that one can not explain why one person digs something while someone else can't stand it. I'm surprised the song was a hit and you countered with a lot of people liking it, including Berry Gordy. In actuality my comment about preferences that you reposted works in conjunction with my "no accounting for taste" comment, not against it. So in the end I'm glad that you brought it up. There is no accounting for why you apparently like this crappy song, while I abhor it.
Oh my... wow... this thread...
I didn't realise the process of making homemade jam could be so controversial... LOL
It is when you try to take it from the rural areas to an urban tenement. LOL! You see if you are going to try making homemade jam in the city, you have to go buy the fruits, the stuff that jells it, the jars, tops etc. If you have money to spend on all of that, you might as well by jar of Smuckers! LOL!!!!! Y'all kill me! LOL!
My mom use to can and in the 60's to be exact. Use old jars from food already purchased and canning fruit and jams would last all winter into the next summer whereas one jar from the grocery would be gone in about a week. Fresh fruit was cheap then and still is today, just bought a bushel of bananas for $1.21 and they will probably be have rotten by the middle of the week. If I canned them they could last until next summer. Those are short lessons from the hood.
I may be in the minority but i always liked ILIS and it does still get the occasional play on UK radio. I heard it on Ken Bruce's radio 2 show a few months back.
Whoever said that Diana did not like the song is correct. I asked her to consider it for inclusion in the Return To Love tour. Her response was short and to the point!!
You may be right but the photos I have say they were shot in 1970.
Marv, you are correct: ILIS was a follow-up that Berry wanted to be similar - not a sequel - which it cannot be since the characters are not the same.
Marv, you are wrong: Most people who can and make jam do not grow their own.
ILIS, was a weak top ten being there just one week. It was released with two platinum singles on the charts by DR&TS, so, naturally radio was all over it. Once sales did not meet airplay, it died a quick death.
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