Farewell My Love

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Farewell_My_Love an entity of type: Thing

"Farewell My Love" is a 1963 single by The Temptations for the Gordy (Motown) label. It was the last single that was written and produced by Motown president Berry Gordy for well over a decade, and the last released during the period of the "Original 5" lineup (before member Elbridge "Al" Bryant was fired). It is also noted as the group's last single to miss the Billboard pop chart's Top 40 until 1971's "" (and the last to not make it on any U.S. music charts for the next 23 years). Up until now the group was jokingly referred to at this time as the "Hitless Temptations" by the Motown staff, much like their "sister" group, The Supremes, were called the "no-hit Supremes". However, their next single, the Smokey Robinson-produced "The Way You Do the Things You Do", would reach the Top 20 of t rdf:langString
rdf:langString Farewell My Love
rdf:langString Farewell My Love
rdf:langString Farewell My Love
rdf:langString May I Have This Dance
xsd:integer 23028375
xsd:integer 1123771368
rdf:langString May I Have This Dance
rdf:langString (G 7020)
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xsd:integer 1964
xsd:integer 1963
rdf:langString Berry Gordy, Jr.
rdf:langString Norman Whitfield
rdf:langString Smokey Robinson
xsd:gMonthDay --05-25 --11-02
xsd:date 1963-06-25
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString Norman Whitfield
rdf:langString "Farewell My Love" is a 1963 single by The Temptations for the Gordy (Motown) label. It was the last single that was written and produced by Motown president Berry Gordy for well over a decade, and the last released during the period of the "Original 5" lineup (before member Elbridge "Al" Bryant was fired). It is also noted as the group's last single to miss the Billboard pop chart's Top 40 until 1971's "" (and the last to not make it on any U.S. music charts for the next 23 years). Up until now the group was jokingly referred to at this time as the "Hitless Temptations" by the Motown staff, much like their "sister" group, The Supremes, were called the "no-hit Supremes". However, their next single, the Smokey Robinson-produced "The Way You Do the Things You Do", would reach the Top 20 of the U.S. pop chart, breaking the group's streak of being "hitless".
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xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6655
xsd:date 1963-05-25
xsd:date 1963-06-25
xsd:double 169.0

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