The Temptations Wish It Would Rain

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The Temptations Wish It Would Rain
The Temptations Wish It Would Rain cover
Studio album by The Temptations
Released April 29, 1968
Recorded 1967 - 1968
Genre Soul
Length N/A
Label Gordy
GS 927
Producer(s) Norman Whitfield, Smokey Robinson
Professional reviews
The Temptations chronology
The Temptations in a Mellow Mood
(1967)
The Temptations Wish It Would Rain
(1968)
Diana Ross & the Supremes Join the Temptations
(1968)


The Temptations Wish It Would Rain is a 1968 album by The Temptations for the Gordy (Motown) label. It was the final release from the group's "Classic-5" era, during which David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, Melvin Franklin, and Otis Williams constituted the Temptations' lineup.

Wish It Would Rain also marks the last Temptations solo album to focus on the classic "Motown Sound", and the last to feature production from Smokey Robinson.

Contents

Included on Wish It Would Rain are the hit singles "I Wish It Would Rain" and "I Could Never Love Another (After Loving You)", both featuring David Ruffin on lead and co-written by Motown writer Roger Penzabene, who committed suicide on New Years Eve 1967 because of the breakup described in these two songs. "I Wish It Would Rain's" b-side, "I Truly, Truly Believe", is a rare solo showcase for Temptations bass singer Melvin Franklin.

The third single, "Please Return Your Love to Me", features Eddie Kendricks on lead, and was released in July after Ruffin's departure. "Please Return Your Love to Me's " b-side, "How Could I Forget", is not included here, because it was newly recorded on June 29 to accompany the a-side. "How Could I Forget" controversially features the actual sounds of a horse being slaughtered.

Ruffin himself did not sing "How Can I Forget" because, by late June, he was no longer a Temptation. The group had already been dealing with Ruffin's ego clashes and his desire for special treatment for at least two years, and warded off his desire to have the name of the group changed to "David Ruffin & the Temptations". After Ruffin failed to show up for a series of engagements in Cleveland, Ohio that month (instead going to visit his then-girlfriend Gail Martin --daughter of Dean Martin -- and see her open her own musical show), Otis Williams and the other Temptations decided Ruffin had gone too far and fired him.

Dennis Edwards was brought in as Ruffin's replacement, amidst cries of "Where's David?" from the crowds at live shows, and David Ruffin's attempts to jump onstage and steal the microphone from Edwards during the shows. After the Temptations enlisted extra bodyguards to prevent Ruffin from attending and disrupting their shows, Edwards was officially introduced as the Temptations' new lead singer on July 9, 1968 at a live show in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.

Edwards would make his on-record debut with the next Temptations album, Diana Ross & the Supremes Join the Temptations. Starting with the group's next solo studio album, also titled Cloud Nine, producer Norman Whitfield began edging the group towards a Sly & the Family Stone-eque (dubbed "psychedelic soul", using Edwards' gruffer voice as the centerpiece for several psychedelic-based hit singles and albums.

  1. "I Could Never Love Another (After Loving You)" (Penzabene, Strong, Whitfield)
  2. "Cindy" (Robinson)
  3. "I Wish It Would Rain" (Penzabene, Strong, Whitfield)
  4. "Please Return Your Love to Me" (Strong, Whitfield)
  5. "Fan the Flame" (Cleveland, Johnson, Robinson)
  6. "He Who Picks a Rose" (Holland, Smiley, Whitfield)
  7. "Why Did You Leave Me Darling" (Dean, Richards)
  8. "I Truly, Truly Believe" (Gordy, Gordy, Story)
  9. "This Is My Beloved" (Ashford, Simpson)
  10. "Gonna Give Her All the Love I've Got" (Strong, Whitfield)
  11. "I've Passed This Way Before" (Dean, Weatherspoon)
  12. "No Man Can Love Her Like I Do" (Holland, Kendricks)

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