When a song comes on the p-pod shuffle, I sometimes need to get up and find out who it is (even though everything on the p-pod comes from my own collection). When Stoned Love came on this morning I had no such need. Clearly a Motown song (that drum/tambourine combo alone instantly recalls a few hundred other Motown songs), clearly a Supremes' song, clearly a sixties song.
Stoned Love comes from 1970 but reeks of the sixties.
In so many ways the song and its history (the groups last top ten hit in America) sums up that decade as well as anything does.
The whole story of the song is suitably barking mad:
- unusually, the lead vocal is NOT sung by Diana Ross (take a bow Jean Terrell)
- the actual name of the song was NOT Stoned Love - it was Stone Love (listen carefully to the song) but mislabelled on release, unfortunately giving the song unwarranted drug connotations
- there are over 30 musicians on the song PLUS the Funk Brothers (Motown's legendary house band)
- as a plea for universal love and peace it is unusual subject matter for The Supremes
- the song appears in the 1994 movie Forrest Gump as a cipher to the sixties
- the song was written by Kenny Thomas but his writing credit is listed as "Yennek Samoht"; his name spelled backwards (with an extra "e" to aid pronunciation)
The song itself is fabulous. Those harmonies as the Supremes sing the words 'Stone Love' could only have ever come from that combination of voices (there are strong echoes of Diana Ross in the vocal delivery even though she was not on it).
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