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Touch (Supremes album)

Touch
Supremes-touch.jpg
Studio album by The Supremes
Released June 1971
Recorded 1970–71
Genre Soul, pop, R&B
Length 32:59
Label Motown
Producer Frank Wilson
The Supremes chronology
The Return of the Magnificent 7
(1971)The Return of the Magnificent 71971
Touch
(1971)
Dynamite
(with Four Tops)
(1971)Dynamite1971
Singles from Touch
  1. "Nathan Jones"
    Released: April 15, 1971
  2. "Touch"
    Released: September 7, 1971
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars
Rolling Stone (favorable)

Touch is the twenty-third studio album by The Supremes, released in the summer of 1971 on the Motown label. It was the third and final LP under the supervision of Frank Wilson, who had been the group's main producer since 1970, when Jean Terrell joined as lead singer. The album also marked the first Motown contributions by composer-producer Leonard Caston, Jr. and writer-lyricist Kathleen Wakefield: "Nathan Jones", a hit single sung by all three members, which was later recorded by Bananarama, and "Love It Came to Me This Time".

The album included contributions by several Motown artists and staff writers: "Here Comes the Sunrise" by actor-composer Clifton Davis (who had written "Never Can Say Goodbye" for The Jackson 5); Billy Page's "Johnny Raven" (recorded by Kiki Dee in her 1970 Motown album), and "Have I Lost You" by Pam Sawyer and Gloria Jones. Wilson also recorded Jean Terrell's vocals to the backing track of a cover of Laura Nyro's "Time and Love" that Bones Howe had produced for Diana Ross, but that was shelved and remained unreleased until 2002.

The other tracks were written by Sawyer and Wilson, including the opening and closing numbers, "This Is the Story" and "It's So Hard for Me to Say Goodbye"; "Happy (Is a Bumpy Road)", released as flip side of "Nathan Jones"; and the album title track, "Touch", the first charting Supremes single to feature lead vocals by both Terrell and founding member Mary Wilson. The song missed the US top 40, peaking at #71, and it was later recorded by The Jackson 5.


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