"The Bells" is a 1970 single recorded by
The Originals for
Motown Records' Soul label, produced by
Marvin Gaye and co-written by Gaye, his wife
Anna Gordy Gaye, Iris Gordy, and
Elgie Stover.
History
The Originals version
Shortly after the release of the Originals' first hit, "
Baby I'm For Real", Motown issued this similarly-produced record, which was also a Marvin Gaye production. Gaye had proved skeptics at the label wrong by producing a hit song for another act. Both "Baby I'm For Real" and "The Bells" set the precedent for Gaye's 1971 landmark album,
What's Going On.
Primarily functioning as background session singers at Motown during much of the 1960s, The Originals would continue to provide background vocals for Gaye until 1973.
"The Bells" peaked at number twelve on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the
United States, and reached number four on the
Hot Black Singles chart. It would remain the most successful single of the group's career, the rest of which included several more Gaye-produced R&B hits and the
Freddie Perren-produced dance single, "Down to Love Town".
Laura Nyro version
On her 1971 album,
Gonna Take a Miracle, singer-songwriter
Laura Nyro performed a version of "The Bells" with backing vocals by
Patti LaBelle and her group
Labelle.
Color Me Badd version
Two decades later, 1990s R&B band
Color Me Badd covered the song on their 1994 album,
Time and Chance. Much like
After 7's cover...
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