# \\
The Miracles {#the-miracles .reader-title}
::: {.credits .reader-credits}
Contributors to Wikimedia projects
:::
::: meta-data
::: {.reader-estimated-time l10n-args="{\"range\":\"50–64\",\"rangePlural\":\"other\"}" l10n-id="about-reader-estimated-read-time" dir="ltr"}
50--64 minutes
:::
:::
------------------------------------------------------------------------
::: content
::: {.moz-reader-content .reader-show-element}
::: {#readability-page-1 .page}
::: {#mw-content-text dir="ltr" lang="en"}
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| The Miracles | |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| {file-width="1920" | |
| file-height="2048" height="267" | |
| width="250"} | |
| | |
| <div> | |
| | |
| The Miracles in 1962.\ | |
| Clockwise from top left: Bobby | |
| Rogers, Marv Tarplin, Ronnie | |
| White, Claudette Robinson, and | |
| Smokey Robinson. Not pictured: | |
| Pete Moore. | |
| | |
| </div> | |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Background information | |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Also known as | <div> |
| | |
| | - - The Five Chimes (1955) |
| | - The Matadors (1955--1957) |
| | - Smokey Robinson & The |
| | Miracles (1965--1972) |
| | - The New Miracles |
| | (1980--1983) |
| | |
| | </div> |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Origin | Detroit, Michigan, United States |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Genres | <div> |
| | |
| | - R&B |
| | - doo-wop |
| | - rock and roll |
| | - soul |
| | - funk |
| | - disco |
| | |
| | </div> |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Years active | <div> |
| | |
| | - 1955--1983 |
| | - 1993--2011 |
| | |
| | </div> |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Labels | <div> |
| | |
| | - End |
| | - Chess |
| | - Tamla |
| | - Columbia |
| | |
| | </div> |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| \ | |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Past members | <div> |
| | |
| | - Ronnie White |
| | - Warren \"Pete\" Moore |
| | - Smokey Robinson |
| | - Clarence Dawson |
| | - James Grice |
| | - Emerson \"Sonny\" Rogers |
| | - Bobby Rogers |
| | - Claudette Rogers Robinson |
| | - Marv Tarplin |
| | - Billy Griffin |
| | - Donald \"Don\" Griffin |
| | - Carl Cotton |
| | - David \"Dave\" Finley |
| | - Sidney Justin |
| | - Tee Turner |
| | - Mark Scott |
| | |
| | </div> |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
'The Miracles' (later known as 'Smokey Robinson and the Miracles'
from 1965 to 1972) were an American vocal group formed in Detroit,
Michigan in 1955. They were the first successful recording act for
Motown Records and are considered one of the most important and most
influential groups in the history of pop, soul, rhythm and blues and
rock and roll music.^\[1\]\[2\]\[3\]^ The group\'s international fame in
the 1960s, alongside other Motown acts, led to a greater acceptance of
R&B and pop music in the U.S., with the group being considered
influential and important in the development of modern popular
music.^\[4\]^
The group was formed as The Five Chimes and changed their name first to
the Matadors, and then after adding Claudette, to the Miracles in 1958,
by which time their lineup consisted of Smokey Robinson, Claudette
Rogers (later Robinson), Bobby Rogers, Warren \"Pete\" Moore, Marv
Tarplin, and Ronnie White. Referred to as Motown\'s \"soul
supergroup\",^\[5\]\[6\]^ the Miracles recorded more than 50 chart hits,
including 26 Top 40 pop hits, 16 of which reached the *Billboard* Hot
100 Top 20, seven Top 10 singles, and a number-one single (1967\'s \"The
Tears of a Clown\") while the Robinsons and Tarplin were members.
Following the departure of Tarplin and the Robinsons, the rest of the
group continued with singer Billy Griffin and manager Martin Pichinson,
who helped rebuild the Miracles. They scored two final Top 20 singles,
\"Do It Baby\" (1974) and \"Love Machine\" (1975), a second No. 1 hit,
which topped the charts before the group departed for Columbia Records
in 1977. Recording as a quintet at Columbia with Billy\'s brother Donald
Griffin replacing Marv Tarplin, after a few releases, they disbanded in
1978. The group have won numerous music industry awards, including four
songs inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, several BMI and ASCAP
Songwriters\' Awards, and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
On the R&B charts, the Miracles scored 26 Top 10 *Billboard* R&B hits,
with four R&B No. 1\'s, and 11 U.S. R&B Top 10 Albums, including two No.
1\'s. Bobby Rogers and Ronald White revived the group as a touring
ensemble sporadically during the 1980s and again in the 1990s. Following
White\'s death in 1995, Rogers continued to tour with different members
until he was forced into retirement due to health issues in 2011, dying
less than two years later. In 1987, Smokey Robinson was inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a solo artist, and much controversy
ensued over the Miracles\' omission from the Hall. The Miracles were
finally inducted into the Hall of Fame by lead singer Robinson in 2012.
<div>
# # Initial career and success {#Initial_career_and_success}
\[edit\]
</div>
The group that later became the Miracles was formed in 1955 by five
teenage friends from Detroit, Michigan, under the name the Five
Chimes.^\[7\]^ Three of the founding members, Smokey Robinson, Warren
\"Pete\" Moore, and Ronnie White, had been singing together since they
each were around the age of eleven.^\[7\]^ The group, influenced by acts
such as Billy Ward and His Dominoes and Nolan Strong & the Diablos,
featured Clarence Dawson and James Grice in the original lineup.^\[7\]^
All of the group\'s original members attended Northern High School in
Detroit.^\[7\]^ After Dawson quit the group and Grice dropped out to get
married, they were replaced by Emerson \"Sonny\" Rogers and his cousin
Bobby and changed their name to the Matadors.^\[8\]^ Coincidentally,
both Smokey Robinson and Bobby Rogers were born in the same hospital on
the same date (February 19, 1940), despite not actually meeting each
other until they were fifteen.^\[7\]\[9\]^ In 1957, Sonny Rogers left to
join the United States Army and Claudette Rogers, his sister, who had
been singing with the sister group the Matadorettes, joined them shortly
afterwards, and in 1958, the group became the Miracles.^\[8\]^ Following
two years of courtship, Smokey and Claudette married in November 1959.
The group\'s extensive work with Berry Gordy and Tamla Records gave the
parent label Motown Record Corporation its first million-selling hit
record with the 1960 *Grammy Hall of Fame* smash, \"Shop Around\", and
further established themselves as one of Motown\'s top acts with the hit
singles \"You\'ve Really Got a Hold on Me\", \"What\'s So Good About
Goodbye\", \"Way Over There\", \"I\'ll Try Something New\", \"Mickey\'s
Monkey\", \"Going to a Go-Go\", \"(Come \'Round Here) I\'m the One You
Need\", \"The Love I Saw in You Was Just a Mirage\", \"If You Can
Want\", \"More Love\", \"I Don\'t Blame You at All\", \"Ooo Baby Baby\",
the multi-award-winning \"The Tracks of My Tears\", \"My Girl Has
Gone\", \"Special Occasion\", \"I Second That Emotion\", \"Baby Baby
Don\'t Cry\", the number-one Pop smashes \"The Tears of a Clown\" and
\"Love Machine\", \"Do It Baby\", and \"That\'s What Love Is Made Of\",
among numerous other hits.
The group auditioned for Brunswick Records in front of Alonzo Tucker (an
original member of the Midnighters who had since left the group to join
Jackie Wilson\'s management team),^\[10\]\[11\]^ Nat Tarnopol (Jackie
Wilson\'s manager) and one of the label\'s staff songwriters, Berry
Gordy, who remained quiet during the audition.^\[12\]^ Tucker was
unimpressed by the audition, stating that because there was the Platters
that \"there couldn\'t be two groups in America like that with a woman
in the group.\"^\[12\]^ After the Tarnopol and Tucker rejection, Gordy
followed them and soon agreed to work with the group after discovering
Robinson\'s notebook full of songs he had written and having been
impressed with Robinson\'s singing voice.^\[12\]\[13\]^
Gordy recorded their first single, \"Got a Job\", an answer song to the
Silhouettes\' \"Get a Job\" in January 1958.^\[13\]\[8\]^ Gordy shortly
thereafter struck a deal with George Goldner\'s End Records to
distribute the single.^\[8\]^ Before the song was released, the group
changed their name to the Miracles, taking it from the moniker
\"Miracletones\", with the \"\'Tones\" taken out.^\[8\]^ This first
Miracles\' single became a Top 10 National R&B Hit, peaking at No. 5,
although it missed the Pop Hot 100. After earning only \$3.19 for his
production success, Gordy was told by Robinson to form his own label,
which Gordy did, forming Tamla Records in 1959.^\[13\]\[14\]^ One of the
Miracles\' first Tamla singles, the ballad \"Bad Girl\", became the
Miracles\' first song to chart on the *Billboard* Hot 100 Pop chart that
October when it was licensed to and issued nationally by Chess
Records.^\[12\]^ The next Miracles song, \"It\", was credited to \"Ron &
Bill\", in a duet between White and Robinson, and was released on Tamla
and nationally picked by Chess subsidiary Argo Records.^\[15\]^
Following a dismal reception at the Apollo Theater in 1959, Robinson
recruited guitarist Marv Tarplin to join them on a few touring dates
after Tarplin played with the Primettes (later the Supremes), with
Tarplin officially joining the Miracles shortly afterwards.^\[15\]^ The
addition of Tarplin was the final element in making the Miracles\'
\"classic lineup\" complete.^\[16\]^
In 1960, the Miracles again reached the charts with \"Way Over There\",
their second national Pop hit, which Robinson wrote and based on the
Isley Brothers\' \"Shout\".^\[15\]^ Later that year, the Miracles
released \"Shop Around\", backed with \"Who\'s Lovin\' You\", which
became the group\'s first smash hit, reaching No. 1 on the R&B charts,
No. 2 on the *Billboard Hot 100*, and No. 1 on the *Cash Box Magazine
\"Top 100\"* Pop Chart, and was the first Motown single to sell a
million copies. Both sides of this record became classics, and standards
for R&B and rock musicians alike for several decades afterwards.
As a result of this success, the Miracles became the first Motown act to
appear on Dick Clark\'s \"American Bandstand\" on December 27,
1960.^\[17\]^ The Miracles had modest success with their next few
singles, including \"Ain\'t It Baby\", \"Mighty Good Lovin\'\",
\"Brokenhearted\" and \"Everybody\'s Gotta Pay Some Dues\", as 1961
continued. During this early period, the group suffered some problems as
Robinson caught Asian Flu and had to be bedded for a month,^\[18\]^
leaving wife Claudette Robinson to lead the Miracles on tour until he
recovered. Claudette herself had her share of problems, having suffered
her first miscarriage that occurred after a car accident and Pete Moore
was drafted to serve in the United States Army.^\[18\]\[19\]^ The
group\'s next charted successes included \"What\'s So Good About
Goodbye\", and the string-laden \"I\'ll Try Something New\".^\[20\]^
The Miracles have been awarded many top music industry honors over the
years. In 1997, the group received the Pioneer Award at the Rhythm and
Blues Foundation for their musical achievements.^\[21\]^ Four years
later, in 2001, they were inducted to the Vocal Group Hall of
Fame.^\[22\]^ In 2004, they were ranked No. 32 on the *Rolling Stone*
magazine\'s list of The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time, retaining that
same position seven years later, in 2011.^\[23\]^ Four of their hit
songs were inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame (The most of any Motown
group). In 2009, the group received a star on the Hollywood Walk of
Fame. Throughout their careers, the Miracles were also enshrined with
honors for their songwriting by both BMI and ASCAP.^\[24\]\[25\]^ In
2008, *Billboard* listed them at No. 61 on their 100 most successful
Billboard artists ever list.^\[26\]^
{.moz-reader-block-img
file-width="817" file-height="656" height="201" width="250"}
The group reached the Top 10 again with \"You\'ve Really Got a Hold on
Me\" (another Grammy Hall of Fame-inducted hit) in 1962, featuring lead
vocals by Smokey Robinson and Bobby Rogers. (This song actually began
life as the \"B\" side to the group\'s *intended* \"A\" side, \"Happy
Landing\", but the nation\'s Dee Jays flipped the song over, because
they liked \"Hold on Me\" better). The Miracles hit the Top 10 still a
third time the following year with the exciting
Holland-Dozier-Holland-written-and-produced song \"Mickey\'s Monkey\".
The group\'s exciting live performances were so well received, they were
often referred to as \"The Showstoppers\".^\[27\]\[28\]^ The Miracles\'
success paved the way for all future Motown stars, and, as Motown\'s
first group, they would serve as the prototype for all other Motown
groups to follow. The Miracles had become a national sensation, and
their success catapulted them to the position of Motown\'s top-selling
act, making them headliners at the nationwide Motortown Revue package
touring shows, which showcased Motown artists, and that started around
late 1962.
The Miracles were also the first Motown act to receive coaching and
instruction from famed choreographer Cholly Atkins, who had previously
worked with Little Anthony & the Imperials, the Cadillacs, and future
Motown act Gladys Knight & the Pips. (Bobby Rogers, the Miracles\' best
dancer, did choreography for the group prior to Atkins\'
arrival).^\[29\]\[30\]^ Through his association with the Miracles,
Atkins came into Motown at their insistence, and soon became the
official in-house choreographer for *all* of the company\'s acts,
including the Temptations, the Marvelettes, the Four Tops, the Contours,
Martha & the Vandellas, and the Supremes.^\[31\]\[32\]^
In addition to penning their own material, Miracles Robinson, White,
Rogers, Tarplin, and Moore wrote for many of their labelmates as well.
Motown hits written, but not recorded, by members of the Miracles
include songs for the Temptations (\"The Way You Do The Things You Do\",
\"My Girl\", \"Don\'t Look Back\", \"Since I Lost My Baby\", \"It\'s
Growing\", \"Get Ready\", \"My Baby\"), Mary Wells (\"My Guy\", \"The
One Who Really Loves You\", \"What Love Has Joined Together\", \"Two
Lovers\"), Marvin Gaye (\"I\'ll Be Doggone\", \"Ain\'t That Peculiar\",
\"One More Heartache\"), the Marvelettes (\"Don\'t Mess With Bill\",
\"My Baby Must Be a Magician\", \"The Hunter Gets Captured by the
Game\"), The Contours (\"First I Look at the Purse\"), and Brenda
Holloway (\"When I\'m Gone\"). Unlike other Motown artists, whose songs
were written for them by staff songwriters, the Miracles were one of the
few Motown acts that composed their own songs, adding to the group\'s
already impressive reputation.^\[33\]^
Around 1964, Smokey Robinson became Motown\'s vice president, while the
other members of the Miracles also began to work staff jobs with the
company. Smokey and Claudette Robinson made plans to begin a family, but
the rough life of touring caused Claudette to have several miscarriages.
In early 1964, Claudette decided to retire from the road and remain at
home in Detroit after another miscarriage, her sixth. From this point
on, Claudette did not tour with the Miracles or appear in any official
group photographs or on television, although she remained as a
non-touring member of the Miracles, and continued to sing backup with
the group in the studio until 1972.^\[34\]\[35\]\[36\]^
After Claudette Robinson\'s departure, the remaining Miracles appeared
on *the T.A.M.I. Show*, a landmark 1964 concert film released by
American International Pictures^\[37\]^ that included performances by
numerous popular rock and roll and R&B musicians from the United States
and England, filmed and recorded live at the Santa Monica Civic
Auditorium on October 28 and 29, 1964.^\[38\]^ This film had theatrical
release in theatres across the United States, and also included
performances by fellow Motown artists the Supremes and Marvin Gaye,
along with Chuck Berry, Lesley Gore, the Beach Boys, the Rolling Stones,
and James Brown and the Famous Flames. The Miracles\' performance was
one of the show\'s highlights, called \"athletically electrifying\" by
critics.^\[39\]\[40\]\[41\]^ Miracles chart hit singles that year
included \"That\'s What Love Is Made Of\" and \"I Like It Like That\".
In early 1965, the group released Motown Records\' first double album,
*The Miracles Greatest Hits from the Beginning*, which was a success on
*Billboard\'s* Pop and R&B Album Charts. Also in 1965, the Miracles
released their landmark Top 10 album, *Going to a Go-Go*, under the new
group name of *Smokey Robinson and the Miracles*. This album launched
four Top 20 singles into the *Billboard* Hot 100, including the landmark
million-selling *Grammy Hall of Fame* single, \"The Tracks of My
Tears\", \"Ooo Baby Baby\", \"Going to a Go-Go\" and \"My Girl Has
Gone\", all of which became Top 10 R&B hit singles as well. During this
period, their music had also made its way abroad, influencing several
British groups along the way.^\[42\]\[43\]^ The effects of this
influence soon became even more pronounced when the Beatles, the
Hollies, the Zombies, the Who, and the Rolling Stones all began
recording covers of Miracles hits. Members of the Beatles, in
particular, publicly stated that the music of the Miracles had greatly
influenced their own.^\[43\]^
Around this time, the group had begun performing in nightclubs and other
high-profile venues after years on the Chitlin\' Circuit. According to
an *Ebony* article on the group, the group began grossing \$150,000 a
year due to royalties and personal investments.^\[44\]^ They also were
making between \$100,000 and \$250,000 for nightly shows.^\[44\]^ In
addition, the Miracles appeared on many of the popular variety
television programs of the period, including *The Ed Sullivan Show*,
*Shindig!*, *Hullabaloo*, *American Bandstand*, *Where The Action Is*,
*The Mike Douglas Show*, *The Andy Williams Show*,*Teen Town*,*Hollywood
A Go-Go*, *Upbeat*, and Britain\'s *Ready Steady Go!*. The Miracles\'
success continued with several hits including \"(Come \'Round Here) I\'m
the One You Need\", \"More Love\", \"Special Occasion\", \"If You Can
Want\", and the Top 10 hit \"I Second That Emotion\". Around this time,
the group was starting to be billed as *Smokey Robinson and the
Miracles* on several of their albums. The name change did not appear on
their singles until the release of \"The Love I Saw in You Was Just a
Mirage\", a Top 20 hit released in 1967. On that song\'s flipside was
the tune \"Come Spy with Me\". The Miracles sang the original theme to
the 1967 20th Century Fox film of the same name.^\[45\]\[46\]\[47\]^
The year 1968 brought a second \"greatest hits\" collection, *The
Miracles Greatest Hits, Vol. 2*, which was the group\'s second Top 10
album, which featured the most popular singles from their successful
*Going to a Go-Go*, *Away We A Go-Go* and *Make It Happen* albums of the
1965--67 period. Also in 1968, the group released their hit album
*Special Occasion* which spawned three Top 40 singles, including the
smash \"If You Can Want\", which the group performed on their first
appearance on CBS\' *The Ed Sullivan Show*, at the time considered
television\'s top talent and entertainment showcase.
{.moz-reader-block-img
file-width="999" file-height="816" height="204" width="250"}
However, due to constant changes in the music industry and Motown, by
1969, Smokey Robinson sought to leave the Miracles and the stage, to
settle for continued work as Motown\'s vice president as well as become
more of a family man to his wife Claudette and their children. The year
1969 had brought a second *Ed Sullivan Show* appearance for the group,
singing their then-current singles \"Doggone Right\", and their hit
cover of Dion\'s \"Abraham, Martin and John\".^\[48\]^ Robinson\'s
departure plans however, were thwarted after the group\'s 1969 song
\"Baby Baby Don\'t Cry\" hit the *Billboard* Pop Top 10, and when the
Miracles\' 1967 song, \"The Tears of a Clown\",(their *fourth Grammy
Hall of Fame-*inducted hit) was released as a single in 1970, it became
a number-one hit in the UK. It was subsequently released in the U.S.,
where it duplicated its UK success, reaching No. 1 on the 'Billboard*
Hot 100 Pop Chart* and selling over 3 million copies.^\[49\]^ As a
result, the Miracles became hotter than ever, and Robinson decided to
stay with the group for another two years. In 1970, the group were given
their own ABC television special, *The Smokey Robinson Show*, which
starred the Miracles, with guest stars the Supremes, the Temptations,
Stevie Wonder, and Fran Jeffries.^\[50\]\[51\]\[52\]^ In 1971, they
scored one more Top 20 hit with 1971\'s \"I Don\'t Blame You at
All\".^\[53\]^ In 1972, Robinson made good on his promise to leave the
Miracles, starting a six-month tour which ended in July 1972 at
Washington, D.C., later introducing Billy Griffin as his official
replacement. This series of final live Miracles concerts with Robinson
was released by Motown on the double album *Smokey Robinson & The
Miracles: 1957--1972* (Tamla TS320). About that final tour, Miracle Pete
Moore stated: \"We had 12 farewell engagements playing to sold-out
houses. It was amazing.\"^\[54\]^ Also released that year was the
group\'s last studio album with Smokey, *Flying High Together*, with its
lead single \"We\'ve Come Too Far to End It Now\" reaching the
*Billboard* R&B Top 10 (their 23rd visit to the Top 10 of that chart).
After Smokey\'s retirement, Billy Griffin was introduced to national
television audiences on NBC\'s *The Midnight Special*, on an episode
guest-starring the Miracles and hosted by Smokey Robinson, broadcast on
July 13, 1973.^\[55\]\[56\]^ Within a year afterwards, Marv Tarplin also
decided to leave the group and continued working with Robinson on his
solo material, while Claudette, who had essentially retired from the
Miracles\' live performances in 1963, permanently left the Miracles when
her husband Smokey did, retiring from recording with them as well.
In 1973, the Miracles, with Griffin, re-emerged with the critically
acclaimed album, *Renaissance* -- their first without Smokey Robinson on
lead vocals, which included the Marvin Gaye composition, \"I Love You
Secretly\", \"What Is a Heart Good For\" (the intended first
single),^\[57\]\[58\]^ and the charting single,\"Don\'t Let It End (Til
You Let It Begin)\". The following year, in 1974, after releasing the
much-covered single \"Give Me Just Another Day\", the group had their
first Top 20 hit in three years with the million-selling funk song, \"Do
It Baby\".^\[59\]\[60\]^ This was followed by the Top 10 R&B hit,
\"Don\'t-Cha Love It\".^\[61\]^ Late that following year, the group
recorded the disco smash, \"Love Machine\", which came off their
self-written-and-produced hit album, *City of Angels*. \"Love Machine\"
reached number-one on the Hot 100 in early 1976, the Miracles\' first
since \"Tears of a Clown\", and later sold over 4.5 million
copies.^\[62\]^ The Miracles, who had long been written off by the music
industry, had proven that they could have big hits *without* Robinson.
Despite this success, however, in 1976, the Miracles\' relationship with
Motown imploded during contract renewals after their contract with the
label had expired.^\[63\]^ When Motown, then going through a contract
issue with Stevie Wonder, advised the group to wait \"six months\" to
discuss a new contract, the group took on an offer to sign with Columbia
Records, signing with them in 1977.^\[63\]^ By this point, Billy
Griffin\'s brother Donald, who had begun providing guitar on Miracles
studio recordings shortly after Marv Tarplin\'s departure, had
officially joined the group on lead guitar. The group immediately had
problems after signing with Columbia, starting with the release of their
first Columbia single, \"Spy For Brotherhood\". Expecting controversy
from the single as well as possible threats from the FBI, Columbia
pulled the song from the airwaves.^\[64\]\[65\]^ The group failed to
have a hit during their short Columbia run and in 1978, Pete Moore
decided to retire from the road while Billy Griffin wanted to return to
his solo career, leading the group to disband.^\[63\]^
In 1980, Ronnie White and Bobby Rogers decided to carry on with the
Miracles as a touring unit replacing Pete Moore and Billy Griffin with
Dave Finley and Carl Cotton, which carried on for three years as \"The
New Miracles\".^\[63\]^ This version of the Miracles was short-lived
though after White decided to retire from show business following the
death of his wife Earlyn, who died from breast cancer in 1983,
disbanding the group again. Around this same time, most of the original
Miracles including Smokey Robinson and Claudette Robinson as well as
Pete Moore, Marv Tarplin, and Bobby Rogers reunited to perform a medley
of their songs on the 1983 NBC television special, *Motown 25:
Yesterday, Today, Forever*. Ron White was attending his wife Earlyn\'s
funeral around this time, and did not participate in the reunion.
Following his exit from the Miracles, Smokey Robinson enjoyed a
successful solo career; in 1979, he and Tarplin co-wrote his signature
hit, \"Cruisin\'\". Following his reunion with the original Miracles on
*Motown 25*, Robinson became dependent on cocaine, which affected his
life and career. He broke the addiction in the late 1980s and revived
his singing career, with the Grammy-winning Top 10 hit single, \"Just to
See Her\".^\[66\]\[67\]^ In 1986, Smokey\'s marriage with Claudette
Robinson ended in divorce while Bobby\'s marriage to Marvelettes member
Wanda Young ended in 1975. After the release of a 35th anniversary
commemorative compilation album in 1993, Ronnie White and Bobby Rogers
decided to regroup the Miracles yet again, with Dave Finley returning to
the fold and Sidney Justin, a former NFL player and former member of
Shalamar, as lead singer. Rogers replaced Justin with Mark Scott, who
toured the world as lead singer of the group. Both Justin and
Scott^\[68\]^ lead separate Miracles groups.
Two years later, Ronnie White died from a longtime bout with leukemia,
leaving the remaining Miracles as a trio until Tee Turner joined the
group in 2001.
Following White\'s death in 1995, Rogers continued to tour with
different members. In 2009, the group received a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame with Bobby Rogers, Berry Gordy, Smokey Robinson, Stevie
Wonder, Pete Moore, Claudette Robinson, and Billy Griffin in
attendance.^\[69\]\[70\]^ Following another PBS appearance, Rogers was
forced into retirement due to health issues, dying less than two years
later.^\[62\]^ Bobby Rogers died in March 2013, two weeks after his 73rd
birthday. Pete Moore died on November 19, 2017, his 79th
birthday.^\[71\]^ Former members Carl Cotton, Marv Tarplin and Donald
Griffin are also deceased (in 2003, 2011, and 2015
respectively).^\[72\]\[73\]\[74\]^
<div>
# []{#Accolades.2C_awards_and_honors}Accolades, awards and honors {#Accolades,_awards_and_honors}
\[edit\]
</div>
During their tenure, the Miracles were awarded several times for their
songwriting work from both the BMI and ASCAP songwriting and licensing
organizations.^\[24\]\[25\]^ In 1997, the Miracles were honored by the
Rhythm and Blues Foundation with the Pioneer Award for their
contributions to music.^\[21\]^ In 2001, the group was inducted to the
Vocal Group Hall of Fame.^\[22\]^ Three years later, the Miracles were
included in *Rolling Stone\'s* list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All
Time at No. 32, still holding to that position in a revised 2011
edition, making the Miracles the *highest-ranking* Motown group on the
*Rolling Stone* listing. In both editions, they were immortalized by
rock musician Bob Seger, who grew up a Miracles fan.^\[23\]^ In 2006,
Woodbridge Estates, an exclusive residential development in Detroit,
named their community park \"Miracles Park\" and one of its streets
\"Miracles Boulevard\", in recognition of the legendary Motown group\'s
importance to the city, and as a tribute to their many accomplishments
in the music industry.^\[24\]\[75\]^ In June 2006, the Miracles were
voted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends Hall of Fame.^\[76\]^
In 2009, all the known members of the group (including Billy Griffin)
were honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, attended by
Berry Gordy and Stevie Wonder, who thanked the Miracles (in particular
Ronnie White, who had brought the then 11-year-old to Motown\'s
studios), for discovering him.^\[77\]^ Wonder stated: \"Were it not for
the Miracles, there would not be a Stevie Wonder\".^\[78\]^ Gordy added
that without the Miracles, \"Motown would not be the Motown that it is
today.\"^\[79\]\[80\]^ Also in 2009, Motown released a special two-CD
compilation: *The Miracles -- Depend on Me: The Early Albums*, a
collection consisting of the group\'s first five albums. In 2011, the
Miracles were inducted to the Doo-Wop Hall of Fame.^\[81\]^ That same
year, *Goldmine* magazine named them as one of the 10 greatest doo-wop
groups of all time.^\[82\]^
In 2015, the Miracles were inducted into The National Rhythm & Blues
Hall of Fame in Detroit, Michigan.^\[83\]^ On their website, it is
stated that the Miracles\' exclusion from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
was \"outrageous\", pointing out Robinson\'s solo induction went against
its own rules. Robinson had only spent 14 years as a solo performer, and
his name was not in front of the group\'s until 1967. It further stated
the Miracles were \"the heartbeat of Motown in the 1960s, one of the
best vocal groups ever formed and owners of some of the greatest records
Rock has ever produced.\"^\[84\]^ It was also stated that with the
Miracles\' induction, the Hall of Fame \"remedied its most shameful
chapter and the biggest miracle is it took this long to do it.\"
In May 2016, The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences paid
tribute to the Miracles with a special year-long career retrospective of
the group at The Grammy Museum in Los Angeles entitled \"Legends of
Motown: Celebrating the Miracles\", highlighting their groundbreaking
history and accomplishments as Motown\'s first recording artists, with
appearances by original Miracles Claudette Rogers-Robinson and Pete
Moore. The Miracles are four-time Grammy Hall of Fame inductees. At this
special showing, as an expression of her gratitude, Ms Robinson stated:
\"It is my honor to be recognized by the GRAMMY Museum\'s Legends of
Motown series. I am very grateful that the GRAMMY Museum has provided a
platform for fans to experience the history of the Miracles and include
items from my private collection to be displayed. The Miracles along
with Mr. Berry Gordy and Motown have become a part of musical history
that changed the landscape of popular music, soul and R&B to foster
positive and progressive race relations in America and around the world.
Thank you for the amazing opportunity.\"^\[85\]\[86\]\[87\]\[88\]^
In a tribute to Motown\'s first group, Martha Reeves of Martha and the
Vandellas stated: \"In Liverpool they have a statue of the Beatles.
Someplace in Detroit there should be a statue of (Smokey Robinson and)
the Miracles.\"^\[89\]^
<div>
# # []{#The_1987_Rock_.26_Roll_Hall_of_Fame_Controversy_and_2012_induction}The 1987 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Controversy and 2012 induction {#The_1987_Rock_&_Roll_Hall_of_Fame_Controversy_and_2012_induction}
\[edit\]
</div>
In 1987, former Miracles lead singer Smokey Robinson was inducted to the
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a solo artist, without his fellow Miracles,
which Robinson expressed deep regret and disappointment that his
group-mates were not inducted with him.^\[90\]\[91\]\[92\]\[93\]^ This
solo induction triggered shockwaves and cries of protest throughout the
music industry.^\[94\]\[95\]\[96\]\[97\]^ In an article in the oldies
music magazine *Goldmine*, editor Phil Marder stated: \"How did Smokey
Robinson get inducted without (the rest of) the Miracles?\"
\"Robinson certainly deserves solo induction due to his songwriting,
producing, solo career and his contributions in many official capacities
in Motown\'s front office. But if the Supremes got in with Diana Ross
and the Vandellas made it in with Martha Reeves and the three other
\[Four\] Tops made it in with Levi Stubbs, how could the Miracles, who
were much more important, not get in with Smokey?\"^\[94\]^
Miracles bass singer Pete Moore told the *Cleveland Plain Dealer*: \"It
was a slap in the face, very disappointing. We are the premier group of
Motown. We were there before there even *was* a Motown. We set the pace
for all the other artists to come after us. We were a little older, and
the other artists looked up to us. How could we not be in there?\" Moore
later stated, \"When Terry Stewart \[Rock Hall president and CEO\]
called and told me we were to be inducted, he was apologetic,\" Moore
said. \"He said it should have been done years ago, everybody knew it.
He said they received many, many calls over the years from angry
(Miracles) fans.\"^\[62\]^
Robinson had told *Billboard* that he had been lobbying for the Miracles
since his own induction, \"making calls and signing petitions and
everything, because they really deserve it.\" Though some felt Robinson
should have been included as an inductee with the other Miracles,
Robinson said: \"I don\'t really even care about that. I\'m already in
there. I don\'t understand why it was, like, a task to get the Miracles
in there. We were one of the hottest and most prolific groups in the
world at that time, so I don\'t understand the hesitancy.\"^\[98\]^
Claudette Robinson stated, \"When I spoke to (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
& Museum President and CEO) Terry Stewart, he said he got no less than
900 e-mails per *day* saying the Miracles should be inducted, and why
aren\'t they? I was surprised by that. I would think five or 10, but he
said that amount, so it\'s a lot of people that were really pulling for
us. You have to be thankful and grateful for that.\"^\[98\]^ However,
before this decision, Miracle Marv Tarplin died in September 2011 at the
age of 70, just months before the induction ceremony.^\[99\]^
The Miracles were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as part
of the class of 2012 along with five other groups whose leader had been
inducted as a solo artist.^\[100\]^ Upon their induction, Claudette
Robinson told *Billboard*: \"I didn\'t think it would happen in my
lifetime. For the longest time so many people have put in their comments
and tried so hard for us to be inducted, and there was always a reason
we weren\'t. So I was a little shocked when they called and said it
would happen.\"^\[101\]^ Robinson was selected as the induction speaker
for the Miracles and the other five groups.^\[101\]^ The inducted
members were original members Claudette Rogers-Robinson, Pete Moore,
Bobby Rogers, Ronnie White (posthumously), and Marv Tarplin
(posthumously).^\[102\]\[103\]^
The Miracles and their music have had worldwide impact, influencing
scores of artists of many different musical genres around the globe. The
original lineup of the group has consistently been revered by several
critics in major rock and music magazines and have received numerous
honors and awards for their contributions to the music industry. One of
their most honored songs, \"The Tracks of My Tears\", was included in
the United States Library of Congress\' National Recording Registry
because of its \"culturally, historically and aesthetically
significance\" in 2008. It was also chosen as one of the *Top 10 Best
Songs of All Time* by a panel of 20 top industry songwriters and
producers including Hal David, Paul McCartney, Brian Wilson, Jerry
Leiber, and others as reported to Britain\'s *Mojo* music
magazine,^\[104\]^ and was also winner of \"The Award of Merit\" from
The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) for
the song\'s writers, Miracles members Pete Moore, Marv Tarplin and
Smokey Robinson.^\[24\]^ In addition, \"The Tracks of My Tears\" has
been ranked by the Recording Industry Association of America and The
National Endowment for the Arts at No. 127 in its list of the *Songs of
the Century* -- the 365 Greatest Songs of the 20th Century.^\[105\]^ And
in 2021,*Rolling Stone Magazine* selected The Miracles\'\"The Tracks of
My Tears\"as \"The Greatest Motown Song of All Time.\"^\[106\]^ Their
hit-filled 1965 album, *Going to a Go-Go* is listed on *Rolling Stone*
Magazine\'s list of *\"The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time\"*.^\[107\]^
Four of the group\'s songs were inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame
including \"You Really Got a Hold on Me\", \"Tears of a Clown\", \"Shop
Around\" and \"Tracks of My Tears\". In addition, \"You Really Got a
Hold on Me\", \"Going to a Go-Go\", \"Shop Around\" and \"Tracks of My
Tears\" were inducted to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as part of their
list of The 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll.^\[108\]^ In addition,
The Miracles hit --- "The Tracks of My Tears," has been selected by the
National Recording Preservation Board for the United States Library of
Congress' National Recording Registry, which honors and preserves
culturally, historically and aesthetically significant American
recordings.^\[109\]^ The group was also ranked No. 61 on VH-1\'s 100
Greatest Rock Stars of All Time in 1998 while also ranking at No. 71 on
*Billboard*\'s 100 Greatest Artists of All Time in 2008.They have also
been inducted into the *Hit Parade Hall of Fame* as of
2014.^\[110\]\[111\]^ and the R&B Music Hall of Fame in 2015.
Commenting to *Rolling Stone Magazine*, Bob Seger said: \"I used to go
to the Motown Revues, and the Miracles *always* closed the show. They
were *that* good, and *everybody* knew it.\"^\[23\]^ Producer Quincy
Jones called the group the \"Beethovens of The 20th Century\" due to
their songwriting talents.^\[112\]^ In addition, the Miracles have been
regarded as the *most covered act* in Motown\'s roster and have
influenced numerous artists worldwide in the last 50
years.^\[113\]\[114\]^
The success of the Miracles actually launched the Motown Records label,
and, according to Motown Records founder, Berry Gordy, without the
Miracles, the Motown Record Corporation would not have been
possible.^\[115\]\[116\]^
<div>
# Cover versions and influence {#Cover_versions_and_influence}
\[edit\]
</div>
<div>
# Awards and achievements {#Awards_and_achievements}
\[edit\]
</div>
Classic lineup
- Ronald \"Ronnie\" White [(1955--1978, 1980--1983, 1993--1995; died
1995)]{.small}
- Robert \"Bobby\" Rogers [(1955--1978, 1980--1983, 1993--2011; died
2013)]{.small}
- Warren \"Pete\" Moore [(1955--1978; died 2017)]{.small}
- William \"Smokey\" Robinson, Jr. [(1955--1972, 1983)]{.small}
- Claudette Rogers Robinson [(1957--1972, 1983; occasional appearances
between 1993 and 2011)]{.small}
- Marv Tarplin -- guitar [(1958--1973; died 2011)]{.small}
'The Miracles'
- *Hi\... We\'re the Miracles* (1961)
- *Cookin\' with the Miracles* (1961)
- *I\'ll Try Something New* (1962)
- *The Fabulous Miracles* (1963)
- *The Miracles Doin\' Mickey\'s Monkey* (1963)
- *I Like It Like That* (1964)
'Smokey Robinson & the Miracles'
- *Going to a Go-Go* (1965)
- *Away We a Go-Go* (1966)
- *Make It Happen* (1967) [(Reissued in 1970 as *The Tears of a
Clown*)]{.small}
- *Special Occasion* (1968)
- *Time Out for Smokey Robinson & The Miracles* (1969)
- *Four in Blue* (1969)
- *What Love Has\...Joined Together* (1970)
- *A Pocket Full of Miracles* (1970)
- *The Season for Miracles* (1970)
- *One Dozen Roses* (1971)
- *Flying High Together* (1972)
'The Miracles'
- *Renaissance* (1973)
- *Do It Baby* (1974)
- *Don\'t Cha Love It* (1975)
- *City of Angels* (1975)
- *The Power of Music* (1976)
- *Love Crazy* (1977)
- *The Miracles* (1978)
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
- Banks, Lacy J. (October 1971). \"The Miracle of the Miracles\".
*Ebony*. Vol. 26, no. 12. Johnson Publishing
Company.[]{title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ebony&rft.atitle=The+Miracle+of+the+Miracles&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=12&rft.date=1971-10&rft.aulast=Banks&rft.aufirst=Lacy+J.&rft_id=https%3A%2F%2Fbooks.google.com%2Fbooks%3Fid%3DntwDAAAAMBAJ%26pg%3DPA164&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AThe+Miracles"}
- Dahl, Bill (February 28, 2011). *Motown: The Golden Years: More than
100 photographs*. Krause Publications.
ISBN 978-0-87349-286-7.[]{title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Motown%3A+The+Golden+Years%3A+More+than+100+photographs&rft.pub=Krause+Publications&rft.date=2011-02-28&rft.isbn=978-0-87349-286-7&rft.aulast=Dahl&rft.aufirst=Bill&rft_id=https%3A%2F%2Fbooks.google.com%2Fbooks%3Fid%3D8JRHnCMUVb8C%26q%3DGladys%2BKnight%2B%2526%2BThe%2BPips%2BNeither%2BOne%2BOf%2BUs%26pg%3DPA101&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AThe+Miracles"}
- Gulla, Bob (2008). *Icons of R&B and soul: an encyclopedia of the
artists who revolutionized rhythm*. Vol. 2. Westport, Conn:
Greenwood Press.
ISBN 978-0-313-34046-8.[]{title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Icons+of+R%26B+and+soul%3A+an+encyclopedia+of+the+artists+who+revolutionized+rhythm&rft.place=Westport%2C+Conn&rft.pub=Greenwood+Press&rft.date=2008&rft.isbn=978-0-313-34046-8&rft.aulast=Gulla&rft.aufirst=Bob&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AThe+Miracles"}
- Ryan, Jack (2012). *Recollections, the Detroit Years: The Motown
Sound by the People who Made it*. Glendower Media.
ISBN 978-0-914303-04-6.[]{title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Recollections%2C+the+Detroit+Years%3A+The+Motown+Sound+by+the+People+who+Made+it&rft.pub=Glendower+Media&rft.date=2012&rft.isbn=978-0-914303-04-6&rft.aulast=Ryan&rft.aufirst=Jack&rft_id=https%3A%2F%2Fbooks.google.com%2Fbooks%3Fid%3DPpjh-zm74wsC&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AThe+Miracles"}
- Smokey Robinson in-depth interview by Pete Lewis, \'Blues & Soul\'
December 1992 (reprinted February 2009)
:::
:::
:::
:::