Who Did It Better

The Supremes OR The Jackson 5?

The Supremes The Supremes 1965

Stop! In the Name of Love

Written by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier, Eddie Holland

Stop! In the name of love
Before you break my heart

What's this song about ↓

an ultimatum dressed as a pop song. The Supremes recorded it as a Holland-Dozier-Holland classic, with Diana Ross delivering the kind of ultimatum that only works when it comes from someone who knows she will be obeyed. Stop! In the name of love. he has discovered that her lover has been unfaithful, and she is giving him one last chance to tell the truth. a masterclass in pop structure, building tension through the verses and releasing it in a chorus that is as catchy as it is confrontational.

That same ultimatum gets a youthful injection from the Jackson 5 in their 1970 version. Where the Supremes' original is all grown-woman authority ... Diana's voice carrying the weight of experience, the arrangement polished and professional ... the Jackson 5 version is delivered by a teenager who has not yet learned what infidelity even means. Michael's voice is high and pure, the arrangement brighter and faster, the urgency of the song transformed from a relationship crisis into playground drama. The song loses none of its power. It just means something different coming from a voice that has never had to deliver an ultimatum for real. Where Diana was issuing a warning, Michael is performing a warning he has seen in movies, and the innocence of the performance is its own kind of charm.

The Jackson 5 The Jackson 5 1970

Variation A — side column

The Supremes 1965
The Jackson 5 1970

I already know

Play me a sample

The Supremes The Jackson 5

I need to be convinced

Variation B — left & right edges

The Supremes 1965

I already know

Play me a sample

The Supremes The Jackson 5

I need to be convinced

The Jackson 5 1970

Variation C — filled color-coded buttons

The Supremes 1965
The Jackson 5 1970

I already know

Play me a sample

The Supremes The Jackson 5

I need to be convinced

The Sunday Drop
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Who Did It Better

The Supremes OR The Jackson 5?

The Supremes The Supremes 1965
The Jackson 5 The Jackson 5 1970

Stop! In the Name of Love

Written by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier, Eddie Holland

Stop! In the name of love
Before you break my heart

What's this song about ↓

an ultimatum dressed as a pop song. The Supremes recorded it as a Holland-Dozier-Holland classic, with Diana Ross delivering the kind of ultimatum that only works when it comes from someone who knows she will be obeyed. Stop! In the name of love. he has discovered that her lover has been unfaithful, and she is giving him one last chance to tell the truth. a masterclass in pop structure, building tension through the verses and releasing it in a chorus that is as catchy as it is confrontational.

That same ultimatum gets a youthful injection from the Jackson 5 in their 1970 version. Where the Supremes' original is all grown-woman authority ... Diana's voice carrying the weight of experience, the arrangement polished and professional ... the Jackson 5 version is delivered by a teenager who has not yet learned what infidelity even means. Michael's voice is high and pure, the arrangement brighter and faster, the urgency of the song transformed from a relationship crisis into playground drama. The song loses none of its power. It just means something different coming from a voice that has never had to deliver an ultimatum for real. Where Diana was issuing a warning, Michael is performing a warning he has seen in movies, and the innocence of the performance is its own kind of charm.

Variation A — side column

The Supremes 1965
The Jackson 5 1970

I already know

Play me a sample

The Supremes The Jackson 5

I need to be convinced

Variation B — left & right edges

The Supremes 1965

I already know

Play me a sample

The Supremes The Jackson 5

I need to be convinced

The Jackson 5 1970

Variation C — filled color-coded buttons

The Supremes 1965
The Jackson 5 1970

I already know

Play me a sample

The Supremes The Jackson 5

I need to be convinced

The Sunday Drop
One song. One story. Every Sunday.

No algorithms. No trending sections. Just a song someone loved and the story behind it. Delivered Sunday morning.

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

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