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Saturday, February 3, 2018

Dennis Edwards, Temptations Lead Vocalist, Dies at 74


Dennis Edwards, Temptations Lead Vocalist, Dies at 74


Dennis Edwards and the Temptations at Motown 25










Dennis Edwards, who joined the top Motown act the Temptations to take lead vocals on some of the group’s most memorable latter-day hits such as “Just My Imagination,” died Friday in Chicago of undisclosed causes. He was 74.

In 1968, Edwards stepped in to replace founding lead singer David Ruffin in “the Temps.” While Ruffin had specialized largely in smoother romantic balladry, the gospel-trained Edwards sported a grittier style, and he left a distinctive mark on the unit’s work as both lead vocalist and in the ensemble harmonies.

His arrival in the Temptations coincided with the increasingly expansive and experimental “psychedelic soul” productions helmed by Norman Whitfield, who also co-wrote many of their biggest chart hits, many of which featured pointed social or political content.

Edwards essayed a solo career, and his 1984 Motown single “Don’t Look Any Further,” a duet with Siedah Garrett, reached No. 2 on the R&B charts in 1984. But he remained best known as a member of the Temptations; after a split with the act in 1977, he returned for a short second tour of duty in 1987.

After a wrangle with founding member Otis Williams, he toured during the ‘90s under the rubric the Temptations Review featuring Dennis Edwards.
In 1989, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Temptations.

Edwards was born Feb. 3, 1943 in Fairfield, Ala. His father was a minister, and he grew up singing in the church. He moved with his family to Detroit in the early ‘50s.
As a teen, Edwards sang gospel, but, like Sam Cooke and many other prominent gospel performers, he turned to rhythm & blues. He briefly led his own group, Dennis Edwards and the Fireballs. In 1966, after a stint in the military, he joined Motown on retainer in a utility role, and worked briefly with the Contours.

David Ruffin’s escalating drug problems and egomania created tension within the Temptations, and in 1968 Williams and Eddie Kendricks brought Edwards into the act, while Ruffin exited for a solo career.

Edwards’ presence toughened the group’s vocal sound, and his presence helped loft Whitfield’s ingenious, densely produced records – which reflected the influence of Sly & the Family Stone and other rock-leaning soul acts of the day – to the pinnacle of both the pop and R&B charts.

His years of prominence with the group coincided with the Temps’ biggest pop albums: “Cloud Nine” (No. 4, 1969), “Puzzle People” (No. 5, 1969), “Psychedelic Shack” (No. 9, 1970), “All Directions” (No. 2, 1972) and “Masterpiece” (No. 7, 1973). All of those titles hit No. 1 on the R&B albums charts.

Increasingly poor inter-group relations led Williams to fire Edwards, but, after a decade of solo work, he returned to the unit in 1987 after his replacement Ali Woodson’s departure. A second termination came within a year. Edwards’ plans to record with former Temps members Ruffin and Kendricks crashed after Ruffin’s death from a drug overdose in 1991.


Edwards is survived by a daughter from his brief marriage to Ruth Pointer of the Pointer Sisters





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Tuesday, January 23, 2018

National Television Awards, NTAs 2018 – Nominees, predictions & winners


National Television Awards, NTAs 2018 – Nominees, predictions & winners


Click here for updates on winners https://www.nationaltvawards.com

The National Television Awards 2018: who will win – and who should


The British public are going to give their verdict on the last 12 months of TV, so will hardy perennials like Ant & Dec be weeded out? Here are our predictions

The British public: give them a vote and you can rely on them to return a solid, sensible result. That’s the ethos behind The National Television Awards, the only gong show of its kind decided entirely by viewer opinion. So who’s going to go home with the top prizes from tonight’s celebratory ceremony at London’s O2 Arena? Our form guide for the nominated programmes and performers most likely to win is below, along with – heretical saboteurs that we are – some suggestions for what the TV electorate should have chosen instead…

CHALLENGE SHOW

Will win: I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!
Should win: Love Island
Defending champ I’m a Celebrity ought to have too much for the competition here, with series 17 memorable for a compelling and even moving narrative centring on alleged bullying victim Iain Lee. The glossy, muscly, steaming dark horse is Love Island: ITV2’s deceptively wholesome sex olympics fully penetrated the national conversation last summer.
Also nominated: The Great British Bake Off, MasterChef

CRIME DRAMA

Will win: Broadchurch
Should win: Line of Duty
Line of Duty feels like a critically acclaimed, Guardian-y show, of the kind that normally gets trampled and spat on at the NTAs – but the move to BBC1, the ten million viewers for the finale and the fact that season four was insanely exciting give it a shot. It doesn’t have the fanbase to beat a resurgent Broadchurch, though. Sherlock is nommed but has never won an NTA: it airs in January, so a whole 12 months later, everyone’s either forgotten it or is still trying.
Also nominated: Little Boy Blue

TALENT SHOW

Will win: Strictly Come Dancing
Should win: Strictly Come Dancing
Increasingly this category is a sparkly shoe-in for Strictly, since Simon Cowell’s ITV showcases both imploded some time ago: this year’s Britain’s Got Talent was notable mainly for the state-of-the-nation moment when an eight-year-old comedian came on and said something misogynist, while The X Factor finally slid completely into tone-deaf irrelevance.
Also nominated: The Voice UK

DRAMA
Will win: Doctor Foster
Should win: Doctor Foster
The NTAs love a category shake-up, and a rejig’s left this one wide open. Of course Drama isn’t a new category, but with no Period Drama this time round, Call the Midwife is here to face off against last year’s surprise Drama winner, Casualty. Panting in the shadows with a sharpened hairbrush up its sleeve is Doctor Foster, a previous winner (of New Drama, which it obviously couldn’t win again even if that category still existed, which it doesn’t – hope you’re keeping up with this) that caused even more theorising, gossiping and live-tweeting in 2017 with its triumphantly doolally second season.
Also nominated: Liar, Game of Thrones

TV PRESENTER

Will win: Ant & Dec
Should win: Ant & Dec
It simply isn’t the NTAs if Ant & Dec don’t win – the only ceremony for the past 18 years when they’ve not had to do their humble-surprise routine was 2009, when they narrowly missed out due to the NTAs not taking place. (ITV had run out of money.) Unless the voting public take a harsh view of Ant McPartlin’s heavily tabloid-documented personal woes, which seems unlikely, up the pair toddle again.
Also nominated: Phillip Schofield, Bradley Walsh, Holly Willoughby

FACTUAL ENTERTAINMENT

Will win: Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy
Should win: Ambulance
An epochal fight between us down there and them up there: regular winner Gogglebox, which long since lost the element of surprise its citizen critics used to have, is under fire. Princes William and Harry are currently popular with the proletariat thanks to their inspirational children and/or lady-friends, and they melted even republican hearts back in July with a one-off, warmly emotional memoir of life as Princess Di’s sons. Just imagine, though, if Ambulance – BBC2’s heartbreaking portrait of NHS heroes – roared up and won. No chance.
Also nominated: Paul O’Grady: For the Love of Dogs

DRAMA PERFORMANCE

Will win: Suranne Jones (Doctor Foster)
Should win: Suranne Jones (Doctor Foster)
Jones has form over course and distance: in 2016 she won this category against David Tennant’s turn in Broadchurch, which earns him another nom now, and even the mighty Sheridan Smith, who’s also here again. This time Smith gets a nod for The Moorside, a stronger vehicle than 2016’s Black Work. On the other hand, her unwatchably oozy song-and-chat showcase Sheridan ought to have caused instant disqualification, if not deportation. Suranne it is.
Also nominated: Tom Hardy – Taboo, Jenna Coleman – Victoria

THE BRUCE FORSYTH ENTERTAINMENT AWARD

Will win: All Round to Mrs Brown’s
Should win: Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway
The Entertainment category has cutely been renamed after the late Sir Brucie, but for rune-readers the interest is in two NTA titans suddenly landing in the same pool: All Round to Mrs Brown’s, the variety showcase that made the original Mrs Brown’s Boys look slick and cerebral, qualifies here and might topple the ordinarily invincible Saturday Night Takeaway. As always, Celebrity Juice is in the running, but is as likely to win as it is to feature a special round on Valerie Solanas.
Also nominated: The Graham Norton Show

SERIAL DRAMA

Will win: Emmerdale
Should win: Emmerdale
Last year Emmerdale shocked some, but not all, observers by finally edging out the big two soaps. There’s no reason why it can’t defend its title: it’s had another strong, solid year, and its digitally engaged fans will vote just as keenly. Meanwhile, Coronation Street and EastEnders have both overreached, with the too-horrible Pat Phelan storyline and the too-crap New Year heist respectively.
Also nominated: Hollyoaks

COMEDY

Will win: Peter Kay’s Car Share
Should win: Peter Kay’s Car Share
Often a depressingly weak category at the NTAs, and this year is no exception. Thank goodness for Peter Kay, whose sublimely romantic sitcom should make it two wins out of two with its second season. Rival nominees The Big Bang Theory and (2011 winner) Benidorm have been bridesmaids here for years – it would be weird if either of them beat Kay this time.
Also nominated: Still Open All Hours

DAYTIME

Will win: The Chase
Should win: This Morning
A weird one, in that if the NTAs had only just started you might assume This Morning would walk it. Yet The Chase is going for its third win in succession and, after a year in which none of the nominees made a particular impact, it might do it again. Last time This Morning had the consolation of the Live Magazine Show category, which might as well have been renamed Best Show Called This Morning, but that’s gone now.
Also nominated: Loose Women, The Jeremy Kyle Show

TV JUDGE

Will win: David Walliams
Should win: Paul Hollywood
The 2017 super-heavyweight champion Mary Berry doesn’t qualify because she didn’t do the Channel 4 version of Bake Off. Paul Hollywood did, and it would be nice for the new GBBO to win something after it so graciously coped with a tricky change of personnel and channel. But were NTA voters backing Berry because they love Bake Off, or because they love Mary? If it was the latter, David Walliamsmight sneak up behind Paul Hollywood and surprise him.

Also nominated: Simon Cowell, will.i.am