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Baby, Baby Don't Cry

"Baby, Baby Don't Cry"
Single by Smokey Robinson & the Miracles
from the album Time Out for Smokey Robinson & the Miracles
B-side "Your Mother's Only Daughter"
Released December 12, 1968
Format 7" single
Recorded Hitsville USA (Studio A): 1968
Genre Soul/pop
Length 3:55 (7")
Label Tamla
T 54178
Writer(s) Smokey Robinson
Al Cleveland
Terry Johnson
Producer(s) Smokey Robinson
Warren Moore
Terry Johnson
Smokey Robinson & the Miracles singles chronology
"Special Occasion"
(1968)
"Baby, Baby Don't Cry"
(1968)
"Here I Go Again"/
"Doggone Right"
(1969)

"Baby, Baby Don't Cry", released in December 1968, is a single recorded by The Miracles for Motown Records' Tamla label. The composition was written by Miracles lead singer Smokey Robinson, Motown staff writers Al Cleveland and Terry Johnson, a former member of The Flamingos. Robinson, Johnson, and Miracles member Warren "Pete" Moore were the song's producers.

"Baby Baby Don't Cry" was a top 10 pop hit for The Miracles, peaking at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, and at a Top 10 R&B hit as well,peaking as number three on Billboard's R&B singles chart.It sold over one million copies, and has inspired cover versions by Gerald Wilson and His Orchestra, and Projekt. The song is noted for Smokey's spoken recitation at the beginning as well as before the second verse. The spoken lines are: "Nothing so blue as a heart in pain/Nothing so sad as a tear in vain", and "You trusted him and gave him your love/A love he proved unworthy of". The song uses an extended bridge that repeats the minor and diminished chords before going up half a step for the final repeated Choruses.

Although not given writing credit on this particular tune, Miracle Marv Tarplin's outstanding guitar work plays an important role in this song,his gentle but effective riffs being evident from the song's beginning,giving a "raindrop" effect reminiscent of someone crying (the song's main theme).

The Miracles performed this song on a 1969 Telecast of The Mike Douglas Show, a performance that was re-broadcast many years later on VH-1. The success of this song ended a period of relatively mediocre chart action for The Miracles during 1968, and set the stage for their biggest hit ever with Smokey as lead singer, 1970's multi-million selling #1 hit The Tears of a Clown.


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