Tag Archives: Joe Billingslea

“Do You Love Me?”
1962 & 1988

2003 album cover showing The Contours. Click for CD.
2003 album cover showing The Contours. Click for CD.
      It was early summer 1962.  Berry Gordy, Jr., of Motown Records was in a swivet. He was itching to record a new piece of music he was sure would be a hit record. The name of the song was “Do You Love Me?,” a jumpy dance tune that Gordy thought would be perfect for The Temptations, a new singing group destined to become one of Motown’s top performers.

At the time, however, the Temptations had no hit records. But Gordy believed his new song would be just the ticket to send them on their way. So on that day he was on a frantic search to find the group to record the song. But the Temptations couldn’t be found; they were out working a gospel review. 

As it happened that day, Gordy ran into another group of Motown artists in the hallways of his studio; a group called The Contours, the group that finally recorded the song.

     “Do You Love Me?” became a major 1962 hit single for The Contours on Motown’s “Gordy” record label, with Berry Gordy writing and producing the song.  The Contours then consisted of singers Billy Gordon, Hubert Johnson, Billy Hoggs, Joe Billingslea, Sylvester Potts, and guitarist Hugh Davis.  The group had recorded and released two previous singles — “Whole Lotta’ Woman” and “The Stretch” — but neither had charted.  In fact, the Contours were then in danger of being dropped from the label, until that afternoon when fate smiled upon them.

Original Gordy record label 45 rpm recording of 'Do You Love Me?,' first issued in June 1962. Click for digital.
Original Gordy record label 45 rpm recording of 'Do You Love Me?,' first issued in June 1962. Click for digital.
      “Do You Love Me?,” released in late June 1962, peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard pop singles chart, and was No. 1 on the Billboard R&B singles chart.  An album titled, Do You Love Me? (Now That I Can Dance), was also released in October 1962 — the first album ever released on the Gordy Records label.  The single sold over 1 million copies and the album had respectable sales as well.  


Music Player
“Do You Love Me?”


     “Do You Love Me?” was also covered in the U.K. by a group named Brian Poole and the Tremeloes and went No. 1 there for three weeks in October 1963.  The Dave Clark Five also did a version of the song in 1964 that went to No. 11 in the U.S.  The Contours, meanwhile, became a headlining act for Motown and were part of the first Motor Town Revue tour. Although no other Top 40 hits materialized for the Contours on the pop charts, they did turn out several other successful dance tunes that rose into the R&B Top 40, including, “Shake Sherry”(1962), “First I Look at The Purse” (1965), and “Just A Little Misunderstanding” (1966), among others.  By 1967, the group’s seven-year contract with Motown had expired.  A year later, after the Contours’ lead singer Dennis Edwards was asked to replace the departed David Ruffin of The Temptations, The Contours disbanded.


Dirty Dancing

Cover of 1988's 'More Dirty Dancing' CD, which includes the Contours' original 1962 hit song 'Do You Love Me?,' which hit the 'Billboard Hot 100' for a second time in 1988. Click for CD.
Cover of 1988's 'More Dirty Dancing' CD, which includes the Contours' original 1962 hit song 'Do You Love Me?,' which hit the 'Billboard Hot 100' for a second time in 1988. Click for CD.
      But then, more than 25 years later, lightning struck again. In 1987 came the movie, Dirty Dancing, starring Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey, which included a memorable dance scene backed by the Contours’ original “Do You Love Me?” song.  The film’s soundtrack of 1960s music became wildly successful, and was soon issued in multiple editions, most of which include “Do You Love Me?”.  In fact, in 1988, with the release of a follow-up soundtrack album entitled More Dirty Dancing, “Do You Love Me?” became a pop hit for a second time.  By July 1988 the song, which was also re-issued as a single, peaked at No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100.  It remained on the chart for eight weeks.  The Contours — by then comprised of Joe Billingslea and three new members — joined other 1960s stars, including Ronnie Spector of The Ronettes, Bill Medley of the Righteous Brothers and others, on a “Dirty Dancing Tour.”  That tour ran for ten-months, entertaining over two million fans in eight countries.  Two subsequent CDs — 1989 Dirty Dancing Live In Concert and 1998’s Great Dirty Dancing Hits — also included “Do You Love Me” and other Contours songs, as well as those of other artists.  Dirty Dancing soundtracks have sold more than 30 million units worldwide.  As the Contours put it on their web site, “Dirty Dancing has been very good to [us].”  In recent years, the surviving and replenished Contours have continued to perform in the U.S. and abroad.

Janelle Monáe in 2016 Super Bowl ad for Pepsi, dances to “Do You Love Me?” in 1960s segment of the ad. Click for her CD.
Janelle Monáe in 2016 Super Bowl ad for Pepsi, dances to “Do You Love Me?” in 1960s segment of the ad. Click for her CD.
Meanwhile, on the web, the Contours’ “Do You Love Me?” has shown up in a range of uses as background music — from Disney animations to one creative Happy Feet adaptation (formerly posted on YouTube, but since taken down). Another popular song from the Dirty Dancing film that had it origins in the 1950s is Mickey & Sylvia’s “Love is Strange,” also profiled at this website.

In 2016, pop sensation Janelle Monáe was featured in a Super Bowl TV ad for Pepsi in which she dances her way through a couple of decades of music history, beginning with the Contours’ “Do You Love Me” track, then to Madonna’s “Express Yourself,” and finally to Monáe’s own present-day act touting Pepsi – shown drinking a bit of the cola as she goes. It’s one of a continuing line of Pepsi ads over the last 20 years using pop stars and pop music to promote their sugar water – from Britney Spears and Madonna to Michael Jackson and Bob Dylan, among others. For additional stories on music and/or film, please see the “Annals of Music” category page or the “Film & Hollywood” page.

Thanks for visiting – and if you like what you find here, please make a donation to help support the research, writing and continued publication of this website. Thank you. —Jack Doyle

Please Support
this Website

Donate Now

Thank You

__________________________________

Date Posted:   28 July 2008
Last Update:   18 April 2020
Comments to:  jdoyle@pophistorydig.com

Article Citation:
Jack Doyle, “Do You Love Me?, 1962 & 1988,”
PopHistoryDig.com, July 28, 2008.

_____________________________




Sources, Links & Additional Information

Cover of The Contours: Essential Collection. Click for CD.
Cover of The Contours: Essential Collection. Click for CD.

“The Contours,” in Holly George-Warren and Patricia Romanowski (eds), The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, Rolling Stone Press, New York, 3rd Edition, 2001, p. 206.

“The Contours,” “Do You Love Me”, and “Do You Love Me (Now That I Can Dance)”, Wikipedia. org.

“The Contours, 20th Century Masters: Millen-nium Collection,” Amapedia.Amazon.com.

For more detail on the history of The Contours see Joe Billingslea & The Contours.

Zoe Camp, “Janelle Monáe Dances in Super Bowl Pepsi Commercial; Watch Her Dress like Madonna,” Pitchfork.com, February 4, 2016.

Maura Judkis, “Janelle Monae Dances Her Way Through the Years in Pepsi’s 2016 Super Bowl Ad,” WashingtonPost.com, February 7, 2016.

Jack Doyle, “Madonna’s Pepsi Ad, 1989”(history of controversy around Madonna’s music & TV ad), PopHistoryDig.com, April 26, 2008.

Jack Doyle, “Pepsi’s Madonna Video: TV Ad: 1989,” PopHistoryDig.com, November 16, 2010.

____________________________________

Return to Home Page.