Ron Tyson

Soul Singer

Ron Tyson was born in Pennsylvania on February 8th, 1948 and is the Soul Singer. At the age of 76, Ron Tyson biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

Date of Birth
February 8, 1948
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Pennsylvania
Age
76 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aquarius
Profession
Musician, Singer, Songwriter
Ron Tyson Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Ron Tyson Life

The Temptations is an American vocal band that released a number of hit singles and albums with Motown Records in the 1960s and 1970s.

Norman Whitfield's career, which began with the top ten hit single "Cloud Nine" in October 1968, pioneered psychedelic soul, and was instrumental in the evolution of R&B and soul music.

The band members are known for their choreography, recognizable harmonies, and dress style.

The Temptations are one of the most popular music groups, with five male vocalists and dancers (except for brief periods of fewer or more members).

The founding members of two Detroit vocal groups, Otis Williams, Elbridge "Al" Bryant, and Melvin Franklin of Otis Williams & the Distants, as well as Eddie Kendricks and Paul Williams of the Primes, were among the founding members.

Bryant was replaced by David Ruffin (1964), "Ain't Too Proud to Start" (1966), and "I Wish It Would Rain" (1967).

Dennis Edwards replaced Ruffin in 1968, with whom the company continued to hit hits such as "Cloud Nine" (1969) and "Ball of Confusion) (1970).

Since Kendricks and Paul Williams' departures from the company in 1971, the company's lineup has shifted often.

Later members of the company included singers like Richard Street, Damon Harris, Ron Tyson, and Ali-Ollie Woodson, with whom the group achieved a late-period hit in 1984 with "Treat Her Like a Lady." The Temptations recorded four Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles and fourteen R&B number-one singles over the course of their careers.

Their music has been nominated for three Grammy Awards.

The Temptations were the first Motown recording act to win a Grammy Award in 1969 - for "Cloud Nine" - and received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2013.

In 1989, six of the Temptations (Edwards, Franklin, Kendricks, Ruffin, Otis Williams, and Paul Williams) were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's Top Songs of Rock and Roll include "My Girl," "Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)," and "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone."

On Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 Greatest Artists of all time, the Temptations were ranked No. 68. The Temptations stay in the lineup as of 2018, although Otis Williams' founder Otis Williams is still on display (Williams has the right to the Temptations name).

Early years

Members of the Distants were familiar with the Primes because both groups appeared in the same talent shows and performed at the same public venues. The Prime Ministers were regarded as the more polished and vocally stronger group of the two groups. However, the Primes disbanded in 1960 after Kell Osborne left California. Following the band's dissolution, Eddie Kendricks and Paul Williams returned to Alabama. Otis Williams, who desperately needed two more people for an audition for Gordy's label, was offered a lead singer job in Kendricks' new group, which would also include fellow Distants members Franklin and Bryant, while visiting relatives in Detroit. Kendricks was clear that he could travel with Paul Williams. Otis Williams was able to attend the new company, and Kendricks and Paul Williams followed him back to Detroit to join the new group.

The original names for Otis Williams, Melvin Franklin, Elbridge "Al" Bryant, Eddie Kendricks, and Paul Williams were the Elgins, not the Elgins. The group auditioned for Motown in March 1961 under that name. Berry Gordy decided to pledge the Motown imprint, Miracle, after being impressed with some of the members after session work. However, Gordy discovered another group by the name of Elgins before signing. On the steps of the Hitsville, U.S.A. studio, the corporation began to smear ideas for a new name. The Temptations' current moniker was based on a suggestion from Miracle Records employee Billy Mitchell, songwriter Mickey Stevenson, and group members Otis Williams and Paul Williams. The "Elgins" name appeared at Motown in 1965, when Gordy renamed a quartet known as the Elgins.

Before Gordy closed the band down and reassigned the band to his new imprint, Gordy Records, the Temptations' first two singles, "Oh Mother of Mine" and "Check Yourself," with Paul Williams on lead, were released on Miracle. Eddie Kendricks took the lead on the Temptations' first charted single, "You're My) Dream Come True," which debuted at number 22 on the R&B chart in 1962. The Temptations debuted in the Motortown Revue later this year. The corporation made eight recordings between 1961 and 1963, without much success.

During this early period, Paul Williams and Eddie Kendricks split the leads, with Al Bryant, Otis Williams, and Melvin Franklin occasionally leading the way on a song titled "Isn't She Pretty." For a brief period, the group was almost compelled to the Pirates, and under the name "Mind Over Matter" and "I Will Love You Till I Die." Eventually, the brand and the company decided against it. The Temptations' "Do You Love Me" was supposed to be one of the Temptations' hit songs. Gordy produced a version for the Contours when he couldn't get a hold of the company. The Temptations began in 1963 as a producer and writer. The Paul Williams-led "I Want a Love I Can See" was Robinson's first work with the company. Despite the fact that the album didn't chart, it did eventually become a hit live performance spot for the band, and especially for Paul Williams in general. Due to a lack of hits, some called the group "the Hitless Temptations."

David Ruffin, who wanted to join the group at the time, began following the group around as he aspired to join them. Ruffin appeared onstage and impressed the audience with his vocal talent and dancing skills at a local Detroit show. Al Bryant had grown dissatisfied with the company's inability and became restless and uncooperative, preferring the routine of his day job as a milkman over the rigors of rehearsal and performing. Bryant was dismissed from the company after two altercations onstage at a Christmas performance following an incident in which he struck Paul with a beer bottle during a tense dispute earlier this year. As a result, David Ruffin was hired as his replacement in January 1964. Despite the fact that Ruffin's brother Jimmy was also considered for the position, David was chosen after his appearance with them in 1963.

Bryant continued to perform in a variety of local organizations and died in Flagler County, Florida, of liver cirrhosis at the age of 36.

The Temptations of the time included Otis Williams, Melvin Franklin, Paul Williams, Eddie Kendricks, and David Ruffin; the group's success resulted in what would later be described as the "Classic Five" line in later years. Smokey Robinson and Miracles bandmate Bobby Rogers co-wrote and produced "The Way You Do the Things You Do" in January 1964 with Eddie Kendricks as the Temptations' first Top 20 hit in the country in April.

"The Way You Do The Things You Do" and several pre-David Ruffin singles were mixed into the company's first album, Meet the Temptations, which was released in early 1964. Kendricks led the next two Tempetations singles in 1964, "Girl (Why You Wanna Make Me Blue)," as well as "I'll Be In Suspicion" and its B-side "The Girl's Alright with Me," as well as "I'll Be In Jail." However, producer Smokey Robinson saw promise in David Ruffin's "mellow and gruff" voice, and hoped that if he could write the right song for his lead, the group might have a Top-ten hit.

Robinson and Ronnie White, a member of Motown's Motortown Revue, wrote "My Girl," the Temptations' fall 1965 album "With Ruffin singing his first lead vocal for the group. The song was released as a single on December 21, 1964, and it became the first number one pop hit for the Temptations in March 1965. It's still their most popular song to this day, despite 50 years and multiple chart top hits.

Ruffin took the lead on the next three singles, "It's Growing," "Since I Lost My Baby," and "My Baby," which were all in the top 20 in 1965, after the success of "My Girl." The B-side to "My Baby," "Don't Look Back," featured a stirring lead from Paul Williams, and was a sleeper hit on the R&B charts and a gold medal for vocal group playlists.

Norman Whitfield had hoped to write for the company, but Berry Gordy promised him that if Robinson's "Get Ready," with Eddie Kendricks on lead, did not chart in the Top 20, Whitfield would produce the next song. As the next single, "Get Ready" finally missed its mark, and Gordy's "Ain't Too Proud to Start" took the lead. On the Billboard charts, "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" lead, with Whitfield becoming the Temptations' new main producer. He began to drag the group away from the ballad-based productions that had been discussed by Robinson and toward a harder-edged and brass-heavy soul with a tinged appearance reminiscent of James Brown.

Whitfield's nearly all singles produced before 1968 featured David Ruffin, including "I Know" and "I'm Losing You" and the early 1967 hit "(Loneliness Made Me Realize) You're What I Need" on lead, as shown by the R&B. Several other notable singles from the period include "All I Want," produced by Frank Wilson, a Whitfield protégé, and "You're My Everything," which Kendricks and Ruffin share lead. Studio albums from the "Classic Five" period, rather than Meet the Temptations (1965), The Temptin's (1965) The Temptin's Ready (1966) and The Temptations Wish It Would Rain (1968).

Norman Whitfield's various songwriting associates included Roger Penzabene, Edward Holland, Jr., and Temptations road show manager Cornelius Grant during this period. Barrett Strong, who performed the first time at Motown in 1959, "Money (That's What I Want)" began to work with Whitfield and Penzabene on Temptations content after Eddie Holland left Motown with the rest of the Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting/production team in 1967. "I Wish It Would Rain" and "I Could Never Love Another" were two of Whitfield-Strong-Penzabene's collaborations, which followed Roger Penzabene's suicide in December 1967. Barrett Strong became Norman Whitfield's sole collaborator.

From early 1964 to mid 1968, the Temptations went from unknown hopefuls to international stars, and as a result, appeared on television shows including American Bandstand, The Ed Sullivan Show, and The Hollywood Palace. The group also began to be a pop standards album (The Temptations in a Mellow Mood, 1967), which culminated in performances at the historic Copacabana in New York City as well as dates at other similar supper clubs. The Temptations were elected honorary members of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity outside of music.

David Ruffin had begun seeking special care as lead singer, riding his bike and from gigs with his then-girlfriend, Tammi Terrell, rather than the group limousine used by the other four Temptations. Ruffin's behavior gradually irritated and infuriated the other participants. Ruffin, Motown's decision to rechristen the Supremes as Diana Ross & the Supremes, Martha Reeves & the Vandellas, as Martha Reeves & the Vandellas, felt entitled to the same care, and requested that his group be renamed as well as David Ruffin & the Temptations. Ruffin sparked controversy with Berry Gordy by requesting an accounting of the company's earnings; Motown partially obliged the Temptations to retain an outside accounting company; but Motown did not have complete access to the documents from the Temptations' boss, International Talent Management, Inc., a Motown subsidiary.

Some of Ruffin's actions were attributed to the fact that by this time Ruffin had started using cocaine regularly, causing him to become more involved in the company and forcing him to miss a number of group meetings, rehearsals, and concerts. Ruffin needed to be replaced, according to the majority of the team. Ruffin later cancelled a June 1968 appearance at a Cleveland supper club in order to attend a show by his new girlfriend, Barbara Gail Martin (daughter of Dean Martin), who decided he had crossed the line. The other four Temptations had legal records, until Ruffin was dismissed on June 27, 1968. Dennis Edwards, a musician who performed for the Contours who Eddie Kendricks and Otis Williams had already been considered a potential Ruffin replacement, was hired to replace Ruffin.

Edwards and Ruffin were good friends, and Ruffin went along with the guard's change and encouraged Edwards at first. On Sunday, Edwards made his official debut with the Temptations in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, leaping onstage, taking the microphone from Edwards, singing lead on "Ain't Too Proud to Beg," and then disappearing as quickly as he had appeared. During Ruffin's tour tour in July, the company repeated this act several times. Despite the fact that Ruffin was still being screened out, he continued to find ways to sneak into the venue and leap onto stage as the group performed one of the songs he had once lead on.

After several of these performances, Otis Williams and Temptations road manager Don Foster retorted, a remorseful Ruffin's pleas to be allowed back into the story prompted the other Temptations to do so, Dennis Edwards relived it in a story told many times. When in Gaithersburg, Maryland, Otis Williams told the then-new Edwards that the company would lay him off and rehire Ruffin. However, Ruffin's if he didn't turn up on time the next night for his "return" work, the company carried on Edwards and stopped worrying about rehiring Ruffin.

Ruffin left his attempts to destabilize the Temptations' performances and instead flocked to the Motown headquarters in Detroit. He sued Motown in October 1968, requesting a release from the brand, but Motown refused to prohibit the singer from leaving the court. Ruffin had to remain with Motown as a solo artist until the end of his deal, according to the deal.

Live at the Copa, Edwards' first album with the Temptations, was released at the Copacabana nightclub. In 1968, the Temptations unveiled the first of a series of collaborations with Diana Ross & the Supremes. The results included two studio albums, including 1968's Diana Ross & the Supremes, as well as Edward Edwards' first studio recordings with the group and "I'm Gonna Make You Love Me" and "Together," two hits singles from the group. TCB (aired December 9, 1968) and G.I.T. were also on display, as a joint tour and two NBC television specials. On Broadway (on Broadway since November 12, 1969) (live on November 12, 1969).

Dennis Edwards' appointment to the Temptations coincided with the debut of a new sound for the group by producer Norman Whitfield, and Whitfield began supplying psychedelic-based content for the Temptations in the fall of 1968, mainly from the sounds of funk bands Sly & the Family Stone and Funkadelic. This latest version, which debuted with the Top 10 hit single "Cloud Nine" in October 1968, was a marked departure from the David Ruffin-era ballads. The instrumentation was funkier, the beat was hard-driving, and the five Temptations traded lead vocals, similar to Sly & the Family Stones. The group's flagship Cloud Nine LP, "Cloud Nine," received the Best R&B Vocal Group Performance of 1969, the group's first Grammy Award for Best R&B Vocal Group Performance.

The blending of Motown music and psychedelic rock sounds resulted in the creation of a new subgenre of music titled psychedelic soul, as well as in Diana Ross and the Supremes' "Reflections"), Marvin Gaye's version of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine"), Marvin Gaye's version of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," and Friends of Distinction. More Temptations soul singles followed in 1969 and 1970 (among those "Runaway Child, Running Wild") (a number one R&B hit), "I Can't Get Next to You"), "Ball of Confusion"), but the formula began to wear thin when "Ungena Za Ulimwengu (Unite the World)" dropped to number 33 on the fall of 1970. Puzzle People (1969) and Psychedelic Shack (1970), two of the company's other notable albums from this period, include Puzzle People (1969) and Psychedelic Shack (1970). The original version of "War" is included in the Psychedelic Shack, which was later made popular by Edwin Starr.

Because of the stress of touring and personal problems, Paul Williams, who suffered from sickle-cell disease, fell into depression. He had an active case of alcoholism by the late 1960s. According to Otis Williams, he began to drink heavily, but it was impossible to take. As his physical and mental health began to decline, it made performing more difficult. Williams began traveling with oxygen tanks, while the other four Tempetations made vain attempts to raid and drain his alcohol stashes.

Richard Street, lead singer of Motown's Monitors and a former Distant, was hired by Otis Williams in late 1969 as a backup substitute for Williams. Williams performed and lip-synced on stage to parts sung live by Street into an offstage mic behind a curtain in most shows, save for his solo numbers. Street was often substituted for Williams on stage during other performances and much of the second half of 1970, but he was too ill to continue.

After David Ruffin's dismissal, Eddie Kendricks' job was sacked, and Paul Williams' health began to fail. He used to pick fights with Otis Williams and Melvin Franklin, which were often violent, but in addition, he liked the ballad stuff from the previous days and was dissatisfied with the group's psychedelic soul music. Kendricks revived his acquaintance with Ruffin, who begged him not to go solo. He no longer felt involved in Otis Williams's management of the organization, and was also convinced that Motown's handling of the Temptations' finances was fraudulent, cheating the group out of money. Despite the other members' vehement opposition, Kendricks, the only member of Ruffin's friendship, has also stated that Ruffin should be reintegrated into the organization.

Kendricks campaigned for the Temptations to go on "strike" in 1970, no shows, no recordings – until Berry Gordy and the Motown staff were keen to discuss all company finances with independent accountants. This belief was strongly opposed by Otis Williams and Franklin, and the fact that Kendricks, Otis Williams, and Franklin fought grew out of this disagreement. Following a Copacabana performance in November 1970, Kendricks was forced to leave in between shows and not return after a final confrontation between the three guys, causing them to walk out in between shows and not return. Both Kendricks and Williams then confirmed that Kendricks would leave the company. Kendricks later revealed that he was considering leaving as early as 1965, but that he stayed with the Temptations and unsuccessfully attempted to record a solo album without leaving the organization.

Kendricks and Paul Williams performed lead vocals on "Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me), the group's final single. The Sky's the Limit LP and the original album version of "Smiling Faces Sometimes" were released as a single in January 1971, and the song began to climb the US pop singles chart, peaking at number 1 two months later. Kendricks had negotiated his release from the company and signed a solo agreement with Motown's Tamla brand by the time "Just My Imagination" topped the charts.

The Temptations had originally recruited Ricky Owens from the Los Angeles-based vocal group The Vibrations to replace Kendricks. However, Owens only appeared on two dates with the company before being suspended for misusing the words in his solo numbers due to boredom. The Temptations were without a fifth member for several weeks of 1971's spring. Owens, on the other hand, returned to the Vibrations and died in Los Angeles, California, on December 6, 1996, at the age of 57.

Whitfield, as a replacement single, re-recorded "It's Summer" as the B-side to "Ball of Confusion). Originally, "Smiling Faces Sometimes" was released as a single for the Undisputed Truth, instead of a Top 5 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1971. In addition, "It's Summer" peaked at number 51 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it the first Temptations single to fall from the top 40 since "Farewell My Love" eight years ago.

Paul Williams resigned from the Temptations in May after his doctor announced a few weeks later that he could not continue working due to medical reasons. Williams assumed Williams' position as an advisor and choreographer, though Williams continued to be paid one-fifth of the company's income (Street was paid on salary for the first eighteen months of his tenure). Williams continued to perform, but he appeared on two sides in 1973 for his first solo single. However, Williams died in Detroit at the age of 34 from a bullet wound, and the Wayne County coroner declared his death a suicide on August 17, 1973.

The Temptations found a permanent replacement for the first tenor position in twenty-year-old Baltimore native Damon Harris in May 1971. Otis Williams, Edwards, Franklin, Street, and Harris went on to record and perform, and Norman Whitfield kept getting hits for them. "Remember How You Are" (1971), a letter from the Temptations to David Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks, and "Take a Look Around" (1972). During this period, the band performed with Quiet Elegance as their back-up singers. Lois Reeves, Martha Reeves' sister, appeared in Quiet Elegance, as well as Frankie Gearing and Millie Vaney-Scott.

"Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" was released in late 1972, Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong's magnum opus written by Norman Whitfield and produced by Whitfield. Whitfield, a three-minute record that was originally written and produced for The Undisputed Truth, jumped on the somber tune and created a sprawling, dramatic 12-minute version for the Temptations, a forerunner of the extended single that would soon be popular in bars and discothèques. An edited seven-minute version was released as a single and became one of the most hit singles in music history: it debuted at number one on the pop charts and at number 5 on the R&B charts, and at number five on the R&B charts. The Temptations' second Grammy Award for Best R&B Performance by a Group was won in 1973. "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" was named in "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone." Whitfield and arranger/conductor Paul Riser received the B&B Instrumental Achievement Award for the B-side's instrumental interpretation, while Whitfield and Barrett Strong received the Best R&B Songwriting Grammy for Best R&B Instrumental Performance, and Best R&B Song received the Best R&B Instrumental Performance honor.

Whitfield stopped being employed with Barrett Strong and began writing the Temptations' stuff on his own after "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone." Whitfield's popularity inspired him to produce more elongated, operatic pieces, including the Top 10 hit "Masterpiece" (1973) and several of the tracks on the resulting Masterpiece album. Tensions developed between Whitfield and the company, who found Whitfield arrogant and difficult to work with. Citing his habitual tardiness, his emphasis on the instrumental tracks at the expense of their vocals on several of his albums, as other areas of conflict, the group attempted to change producers. Otis Williams protested Whitfield's and the Temptations' instuitive sales to Berry Gordy; as a result, the company was reassigned to Jeffrey Bowen, co-producer of the 1967 In a Mellow Mood album.

The final Norman Whitfield-produced Temptations album, 1990, was released in December 1973 and featured the Top 30 single "Let Your Hair Down." Whitfield and Willie Hutch were taken into Whitfield Records in 1975, shortly after recording their 1976 smash "Car Wash" with Willie Hutch and Willie Hutch.

The Temptations' debut on Bowen's first album was titled "A Song for You" (featuring the Commodores as the instrumentalists), and "Shakey Ground" (featuring instrumentation by Parliament-Funkadelic's Eddie Hazel and Billy Bass Nelson). The group's last Top 40 Pop hit, "Glasshouse," was also included in the group's final Top 40 Pop hit. During the recording of A Song for You, Damon Harris was fired from the company as a result of poor leadership and work ethic, and his replacement was Glenn Leonard, a former Unific.

A variety of producers, including Bowen, Brian Holland, James Anthony Carmichael, and even the Temptations themselves, attempted to produce hits for the next three LPs, House Party (November 1975), Wings of Love (March 1976), and The Temptations Do the Temptations Do the Temptations (August 1976). None of these albums were as popular as A Song for You, though none of their related singles made it into the Billboard charts.

Bowen pushed Dennis Edwards further into the front of the group as time progressed. On Wings of Love, Edwards' vocals were more prominent than the other Temptations' backing vocals. According to Otis Williams, this was hurting the company, accused Motown of inattention, and cited this as the reason for the company's decreasing sales and success. Edwards was fired from the company in 1976, and the team's new lead Louis Price left Motown for Atlantic Records after The Temptations were documented.

However, at Atlantic, success continued to elude the group. Their two albums, Hear to Tempt You (1977), and Bare Back (1978), along with their related singles, had no more success in Atlantic than their last two singles at Motown. As a result, Atlantic dropped the firm from its service in 1979, and the Temptations met with Smokey Robinson and Berry Gordy, who resigned the company to Motown in 1980.

Several lineup changes were made on the return to Motown. Louis Price left the company and joined the Drifters. Dennis Edwards, who had failed during his three-year absence from the company, has re-signed to the lineup after struggling to establish a solo career. Berry Gordy co-wrote and produced "Power," the Temptations' first single under new circumstances. "Power," a tribute to the band of the same name, debuted on the R&B charts at number 11 but fell to number 40 in the Top 40. Two years of under-performing singles and albums followed, including an eponymous album by Philadelphia-based designer Thom Bell, before Motown began planning a Temptations reunion tour in 1982.

Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin have agreed to reunite the band for the upcoming tour and the new album, appropriately titled Reunion. Rick James, a Motown funk musician who had previously used the Temptations as backup vocalists on his 1981 hit "Super Freak" and whom Franklin referred to as his nephew, wrote, produced, and guested on the Reunion album's lead single, "Standing on the Top." Ruffin, Kendricks, and Edwards were seen on lead charts, with Ruffin, Kendricks and Edwards trading back and forth on lead.

Although the ensuing Reunion Tour with all seven Temptations (Ruffin, Kendricks, Otis Williams, Otis Williams, Franklin, Edwards, Richard Street, and Glenn Leonard) was a thrilling affair, Kendricks' voice weakened after decades of chain smoking, Ruffin, Benjamin, Moses, Matthew, and Glenn Leonard) was causing a few problems, and new group members Dennis Edwards and Glenn Leonard were causing a lot of Ruffin and Kendricks were dismissed from the Reunion tour, and the pair began touring and performing together as a team.

Surface Thrills, Derek Adams's first album, featured a drastic change in the group's sound by including elements of then-current rock. Glenn Leonard was let go and replaced by Ron Tyson, who worked with the Philadelphia groups the Ethics and Love Committee, following its publication. Tyson co-wrote several songs on the album Hear to Tempt You during the Temptations' tenure at Atlantic, and he co-wrote several songs on the record Hear to Tempt You.

The Temptations' releases were no longer popular on the pop charts by this time, though some singles did make it to the R&B Top 20. "Love on My Mind Tonight," a single from Surface Thrills, is ranked at number 17.

Franklin, Williams, Street, Tyson, Tyson, and Edwards' line was short-lived. On Motown 25 and released the direct to video version of The Temptations: Live in Concert (filmed at Harrah's Atlantic City) Back to Basics, which came out later in 1983, was Ron Tyson's first album to feature him. On the US R&B chart, "Sail Away", a returning Norman Whitfield and starring Ron Tyson's first lead vocal, debuted at number 13.

Ali-Ollie Woodson, a then-relatively unknown singer/guitarist, was also included on one track, "Stop the World Right Here (I Wanna Get Off). Woodson was a Detroit native who had been a potential replacement for Dennis Edwards back in 1977. Edwards (who also had a share of lead vocals on the Back to Basics album in 1984) was shot in 1984 for missing rehearsals or being hungover. He then embarked on his second solo career, scoring a hit with the 1984 film "Don't Look Any Further," a duet with Siedah Garrett.

Woodson has officially joined the company, taking Edwards' place at this time. Woodson's first lead on a single was 1984's "Live Like a Lady," co-written by himself and Otis Williams, and co-produced by former Earth, Wind & Fire members Al McKay and Ralph Johnson. The single was their best on R&B radio since 1975, debuting at number two on the R&B charts and just missing the top 40 at number 48. The group had more success with "Do You Really Love Your Baby," a number 14 R&B hit co-written by soul singer Luther Vandross, and "Lady Soul," the group's third top-ten R&B hit of the decade, with 1985's "Do You Really Love Your Baby."

Ali Woodson remained with the Temptations until 1987, when he was dismissed for persistent lateness. Dennis Edwards, who had just returned from exile, was recalled. During Edwards' third tenure, Together Again, was released in late 1987. Otis Williams' autobiography, Temptations, was co-written with Patricia Romanowski chronicling the group's early years as Prime Ministers/Distants and focusing on Williams and Melvin Franklin's lives. (In 2002, an updated version of the novel was published.) They collaborated on a theme song for the children's educational movement series, Kids in Motion, which was created by Greg & Steve together.

Edwards was dismissed from the company for the third time in late 1988, with Woodson rejoining the lineup. The Temptations' album Special, which contained the soulful singles "Special" and "Soul to Soul," was released in 1989. The Temptations were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on January 18, 1989. Edwards, Franklin, Franklin, Otis Williams, David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks (now known as "Eddie Kendrick"), and Paul Williams, who died shortly, were honoured at the gala. The majority of the Temptations, present and former, expressed no ill feelings against one another, although Otis Williams stated that Kendricks were reluctant to speak with him at the funeral. The Temptations' induction ceremony concluded with a performance of Paul Williams' signature song, Don't Look Back, dedicated to his memory.

After reuniting at the induction ceremony and much to Otis Williams' chagrin, Ruffin, and Kendrick, Kendricks, former lead of The Temptations, Ruffin, Kendricks and Edwards, the Temptations' former lead plans have been planned to tour and record as Ruffin, Kendricks and Edwards, former Leads. The tour was actually successful, but after 50-year-old David Ruffin died in Philadelphia after a cocaine overdose on June 1, 1991, it was cancelled. Soon after, Kendricks was diagnosed with lung cancer, he continued to perform until his death on October 5, 1992 in his hometown Birmingham.

Richard Street was unable to perform in 1992 after undergoing emergency surgery to remove kidneystones. Otis Williams, who was totally unaware of Street's surgery, called him out vehemently about his absence. Williams was deemed unfeeling by the streets, and as a result, he left the company in 1993 after twenty-two years. Theo Peoples, a native of St. Louis, was his replacement.

Melvin Franklin began missing performances due to poor health, and Ray Davis, the former bass man of Parliament-Funkadelic, began touring as a fill-in in 1993. Franklin died as a result of a brain seizure at the age of 52 in 1995, and Davis was named as his replacement. The group produced For Lovers Only, an album of pop standards containing two tracks from Melvin Franklin's time before his death.

Nonetheless, this collection was not long, as Davis was diagnosed with lung cancer and died shortly after finishing the album. Davis died of respiratory disease and lung cancer complications in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on the evening of Tuesday, July 5, 2005.

For a brief period, the band remained as a quartet until recruiting bass Harry McGilberry, a former member of the Futures. Lead Ali-Ollie Woodson was fired from McGilberry's job shortly after; he had two bouts of throat cancer in a short time; for Lovers Only was his last contribution. Terry Weeks, a new member who had been serving as his sub, was recalled.

The Temptations' latest lineup, which included Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Theo Peoples, and newcomers Harry McGilberry and Terry Weeks, toured throughout 1997, commemorating Motown's 40th anniversary of Motown. The Temptations' Phoenix Rising, an aural arrangement of 1980s producer Narada Michael Walden, Isaias Gamboa, Claytoven Richardson, Theo People, Tony Lindsey, and Skyler Jett's first million-selling album in more than 20 years, was released later this year. The album was anchored by "Stay," a single starring Theo Peoples on lead and including a sample from "My Girl," which became a number one hit on the urban adult contemporary charts. It received rave reviews when it was announced.

People were kicked out of the company before the publication of Phoenix Rising due to drug use issues, and Barrington "Bo" Henderson took their place. In the "Stay" music video, Henderson lip-synched to Peoples' voices, and the finished album includes lead vocals on various tracks by both Henderson and Peoples.

Also in 1998, three months after the debut of Phoenix Rising earlier this year, de Passe Entertainment (run by former Motown vice president Suzanne de Passe) and Hallmark Entertainment produced The Temptations, a four-hour television miniseries based on Otis Williams' Temptations autobiography. On November 1, 1998 and November 2, 1998, the miniseries was shown in two parts on NBC, with the first part covering the company's history from 1958 to 1968, and the second part covering the years from 1968 to 1995. The miniseries was a ratings smash and was nominated for five Emmy Awards, with Allan Arkush winning for Best Direction; the show was later rerun on the VH-1 cable television network and then broadcast to VHS and DVD.

Josephine Miles, Melvin Franklin's sister Rose Franklin, David Ruffin's family, and Johnnie Mae Matthews, Otis Williams' former wives, and NBC have filed lawsuits against Williams, Motown, de Passe Entertainment, Hallmark, and NBC for various offences, including defamation.

The cases were consolidated, the lawyers were ruled in favour of the defendants, and the court upheld the decision when the plaintiffs appealed in 2001. Williams later claimed that although his book was used as the source material for the film, he had no say in how the content was distributed.

In 1999, the Temptations were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame. Their 2000 album Ear-Resistible gained the group's third Grammy Award, this one for Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance. Bo Henderson was fired from the company in 2003, triggering a wrongful termination case.

G. C. Cameron, the Spinners' leader, was recalled. Cameron, Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Harry McGilberry, and Terry Weeks were all together for a brief period of time before McGilberry was fired; his replacement was former Spaniels member Joe Herndon. McGilberry died on April 3, 2006 at the age of 56.

Legacy, the group's last Motown album, was released in 2004. The Temptations refused to be released from their Motown contract and replaced it with New Door Records, a Universal company. Reflections, the Walkers' sole album on the Rockies, was released on January 31, 2006, and includes reviews of several well-known Motown songs, including Diana Ross & the Supremes' "Reflections," Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing," and Michael Jackson's "I'll Be There." Dennis Edwards, Ali-Ollie Woodson, and David Sea (deep soul singer from Alabama, not David Ruffin) formed "The Temptations Revue, a tribute band led by Dennis Edwards.

G.C. In June 2007, Cameron left the organization to concentrate on his solo career. Bruce Williamson, who first joined the company a year earlier, was recalled. Back to Front, another collection of soul covers, was released in October 2007. Ali-Ollie Woodson, a former member of Leukemia, died on May 30, 2010.

The group unveiled their Still Here album on May 4, 2010. Still Here, "First Kiss," was chastised for including instances of using Auto-Tune technologies.

On February 9, 2013, the Temptations received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Dennis Edwards, Dennis Edwards, and David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, and Melvin Franklin attended the service to acknowledge the six Grammys given to the group for the occasion.

Damon Harris, a former Baltimore hospitalist, died of prostate cancer on February 18, 2013. Richard Street, a former member of the Las Vegas, Nevada, died of pulmonary embolism nine days later. Street was writing a book about his time with the Temptations titled Ball of Confusion: My Life as a Temptin's Temptation at the time of his death. Gary Flanigan, his co-author, completed the book in 2014; it is the second autobiography about the organization.

Both Bruce Williamson and Joe Herndon resigned from the company in late 2015. Larry Braggs, Williamson's replacement, served as the lead singer of Tower of Power from 2000 to 2013. Willie Green, who had worked with former Temptations Richard Street and Ali-Ollie Woodson, has been Herndon's replacement. Dennis Edwards died on February 1, 2018, only days before his 75th birthday. He had been fighting with meningitis before his death.

The Temptations launched All the Time, their first album since 2010, As well as their first for Universal's UMe Direct imprint.

In August 2019, a former member of G. C. Cameron was substituted for an injured Larry Braggs in shows. Braggs was no longer a member of the organization in October 2019. Mario Corbino, the group's new member, then toured as a quartet until June 19, 2020, when it was revealed that Mario Corbino was the new member of the group, replacing Larry Braggs.

Bruce Williamson, a former Temptations member, died on September 6, 2020, in COVID-19's age 49.

The Temptations released two singles, "Is It Gonna Be Yes Or No" starring Smokey Robinson and "When We Were Kings," as part of their forthcoming collection, Temptations 60. In January 2022, the album is set to be released. At a concert in Orlando, Florida, Otis Williams introduced Tony Grant as the newest member of The Temptations in December 2021. Mario Corbino was previously a member of the R&B group Az Yet and appeared in several Tyler Perry stage shows.

Jawan M.Jackson was on bass, replacing Willie Green, when the band revealed it in June 2022.

Early 1970s/funk years

The Temptations found a permanent replacement for the first tenor position in Damon Harris, a twenty-year-old Baltimore native. Edwards, Franklin, Street, and Harris all performed, and Norman Whitfield continued to produce hits for them. "Remember How You Are" (1971), a Temptations-to-Denise Hindricks message, and "Take a Look Around" (1972). The band toured with Quiet Elegance as the group's back-up singers during this period. Lois Reeves, Martha Reeves' niece, was among Quiet Elegance's co-stars, Frankie Gearing and Millie Vaney-Scott.

"Papa Was a Rollin' Stone," a magnum opus written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong and produced by Whitfield in late 1972, was released late 1972. Whitfield, who had written and produced a three-minute record for The Undisputed Truth, jumped ahead of the somber tune and created a sprawling, stunning twelve-minute version for the Temptations, a precursor to the extended single that would soon be available in bars and discothèques. An edited seven-minute version of the pop charts and ranked 5 on the R&B charts as one of the longest hit singles in music history: it debuted as a single and remained at number one on the pop charts and at number 5 on the R&B charts. "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" took their second Grammy for Best R&B Performance by a Group in 1973. Whitfield and arranger/conductor Paul Riser received the Best R&B Instrumental Performance Award for the B-side's instrumental version, while Whitfield and Barrett Strong received the Best R&B Songwriting Grammy for Best R&B Instrumental Performance, while Whitfield and Barrett Strong received the Best R&B Song award.

Whitfield, who was on "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone," stopped working with Barrett Strong and began to write the Temptations' stuff on his own. Whitfield's popularity inspired him to create more elongated, operatic works, including the Top 10 hit "Masterpiece" (1973) and several of the tracks on the resulting Masterpiece album. Tensions between Whitfield and the company grew, with Whitfield being arrogant and difficult to work with. The group attempted to change producers citing his habitual tardiness, his emphasis on the instrumental tracks at the expense of their vocals on several of his albums, and the decline in singles and albums as other sources of conflict. Otis Williams protested Whitfield's and the Temptations' lackant sales to Berry Gordy; as a result, the department was reassigned to Jeffrey Bowen, co-producer of the 1967 In a Mellow Mood album.

In December 1973, Norman Whitfield's final Temptations album, 1990, was released, and it featured the Top 30 single "Let Your Hair Down." Whitfield and Willie Hutch were spotted together in 1975 and became Whitfield Records, taking the Undisputed Truth and Willie Hutch with them, as well as Rose Royce, who appeared on "Let Your Hair Down" in 1976.

"Boys" (featuring the Commodores as the instrumentists) and "Shakey Ground" were Bowen's first LP with the Temptations in January 1975, alongside a portrait of the titular Leon Russell tune (popular among soul audiences by Donny Hathaway), and "Happy People" (featuring the Commodores as the instrumentalists) and "Shakey Ground" (featuring apparatusation by Parliament-Feta The group's final Top 40 Pop hit, "Glasshouse," was also included. Damon Harris was fired from the band during the recording of A Song for You because of his conduct and work ethic, and his replacement was Glenn Leonard, a former Unificist, from Washington, D.C. native Glenn Leonard.

A variety of producers, including Bowen, Brian Holland, James Anthony Carmichael, and even the Temptations themselves, attempted to produce hits for the next three LPs, House Party (November 1975), Wings of Love (March 1976), and The Temptations. None of these albums were as commercially as A Song for You, though none of their affiliated singles made it to the Billboard charts.

Bowen pushed Dennis Edwards further into the front of the company as time progressed. Edwards' vocals were more prominent on Wings of Love, where several tracks featured Edwards' vocals more prominently than the other Temptations' backing vocals. Otis Williams believed this was hurting the company, accused Motown of inattention, and cited this as the reason for the company's decline in sales and success. Edwards was fired from the company in 1976, and Motown was sold to Atlantic Records after they did Temptations Do the Temptations.

However, at Atlantic, triumph continued to elude the group. They released two of their Atlantic – Hear to Tempt You (1977) and Bare Back (1978), as well as their associated singles, had no success at Atlantic than their last handful of singles had at Motown. As a result, Atlantic dropped the company from its service in 1979, and the Temptations met with Smokey Robinson and Berry Gordy shortly after, who resigned the company to Motown in 1980.

Several lineup shifts occurred on the return to Motown. Louis Price left the company and joined the Drifters. Dennis Edwards, who had failed attempts at starting a solo career after being barred from the company for three years, has returned to the lineup. Berry Gordy co-wrote and produced "Power," the Temptations' first single under new circumstances. "Power," the album of the same name, debuted on the R&B charts, but it was unsuccessful to chart in the Top 40. Two years of under-performing singles and albums followed, including an eponymous album with Philadelphia-based artist Thom Bell, before Motown began planning a Temptations reunion tour in 1982.

Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin have rejoined the band for the new album, appropriately named Reunion, and the group's subsequent promotional tour. Rick James, the Motown funk singer who had previously used the Temptations as backup vocalists on his 1981 hit "Super Freak" and whom Franklin referred to as his nephew, wrote, produced, and guested on Reunion's lead single, "Standing on the Top." Ruffin, Kendricks, and Edwards were all leading on the single, which went to number six on the R&B charts, with Ruffin, Kendricks, and Edwards all bouncing back and forth on lead.

Although the ensuing Reunion Tour included all seven Temptations (Ruffin, Kendricks, Otis Williams, Franklin, Edwards, Richard Street, and Glenn Leonard) was a fruitful experience, Kendricks' voice weakened after decades of chain smoking, Ruffin, Williams, Franklin, Edwards, Richard Street, and Glenn Leonard) was a trying time, and current group members Dennis Edwards and Glenn Leonard were causing turbulence, and Ruffin and Kendricks were dismissed after the Reunion tour, and the two bands began touring and performing together as a pair.

Surface Thrills, one of the group's first albums, debuted in 1983, marking a drastic change in the group's sound by incorporating elements of then-popular rock. Glenn Leonard was let go and replaced by Ron Tyson, who worked with the Philadelphia organizations the Ethics and Love Committee, following its inception. Tyson co-wrote several songs on the album Hear to Tempt You during the Temptations' tenure at Atlantic, as a staff songwriter for the Temptations.

The Temptations' debuts were no longer popular on pop charts by this time, though some singles did remain in the R&B Top 20. "Love on My Mind Tonight," a single from Surface Thrills, debuted at number 17.

Franklin, Williams, Street, Tyson, Tyson, and Edwards' lineage was short-lived. The fivesome appeared on Motown 25 and released the direct to video The Temptations: Live in Concert (filmed in Harrah's Atlantic City) Ron Tyson was on lead on the album Back to Basics, which was released later in 1983. On the US R&B chart, "Sail Away," produced by a returning Norman Whitfield and starring Ron Tyson's first lead vocal, topped the top positions.

Ali-Ollie Woodson, a then-relatively unknown singer/pian, was also on one track, "Stop the World Right Here (I Want A Get Off). Woodson, a Detroit native, had been a potential replacement for Dennis Edwards in 1977. Edwards, on the other hand, was chastised in 1984 for missing rehearsals or being hungover. With the 1984 film "Don't Look Any Further," a duet with Siedah Garrett, he attempted his second solo career, scoring a hit.

Woodson has officially joined the organisation, taking Edwards' place at this time. Woodson's debut on a single was 1984's "Note a Lady," co-written by himself and Otis Williams, and co-produced by former Earth Wind & Fire members Al McKay and Ralph Johnson. The single was their best on R&B radio since 1975, peaking at number two on the R&B charts and just missing the top 40 at number 48. The group's third Top 10 R&B hit of the decade was achieved with "Do You Really Love Your Baby," a number 14 R&B hit co-written by soul singer Luther Vandross, and 1986's "Lady Soul," the group's third Top 10 R&B hit of the decade.

Ali Woodson was with the Temptations until 1987, when he was suspended for persistent lateness. Dennis Edwards, a returning Dennis Edwards, was sent to replace him. During Edwards' third tenure, Together Again, released in late 1987, the group released one album. Otis Williams' autobiography, Temptations, co-written with Patricia Romanowski, chronicling the company's rise from the Prime Ministers/Distants period and focusing on Williams and Melvin Franklin's lives over the next year. (In 2002, the book was published in an updated version.) They collaborated on the children's educational movement series Kids in Motion, which was created by Greg & Steve together.

Edwards was fired from the company for the third and final time in late 1988, with Woodson rejoining the lineup for the third time. The Temptations first appeared on the album Special in 1989, which contained the soulful singles "Special" and "Soul to Soul." The Temptations were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on January 18, 1989. Edwards, Franklin, Franklin, Otis Williams, David Ruffin, Eddie Kendrick, Eddie Kendrick (now known as "Eddie Kendrick"), and, sadly, Paul Williams. The bulk of the Temptations, present and former, had no ill feelings against one another, though Otis Williams reported that Kendricks refused to talk to him at the funeral. The Temptations closed their induction ceremony with a tribute to Paul Williams' signature song, Don't Look Back, dedicated to his memory.

Since reuniting at the induction ceremony and much to Otis Williams' chagrin, Ruffin, Ruffin, and Kendrick, the former leads of the Temptations, Ruffin, Kendricks and Edwards, the Temptations's chagrine has set plans to tour and record. The tour was actually cancelled, but after 50-year-old David Ruffin died in Philadelphia after a cocaine overdose on June 1, 1991, production was suspended. Soon after, Kendricks was diagnosed with lung cancer; he continued to perform until his death on October 5, 1992 in his native Birmingham.

After undergoing emergency surgery to remove kidneystones, Richard Street missed a show in 1992. Otis Williams, who was completely unaware of Street's anesthesia, yelled at him angrily over his absence. Williams was seen as uncaring, and as a result, he left the organization in 1993 after twenty-two years. Theo Peoples, a native of St. Louis, was his replacement.

Bass Melvin Franklin began missing appearances due to poor health, and Ray Davis, the former bass man of Parliament-Funkadelic, began touring as a fill-in in 1993. Franklin died after suffering a brain seizure at the age of 52 on February 23, 1995, and Davis was named his replacement. The group later finished manufacturing For Lovers Only, an album of pop standards containing two tracks performed with Melvin Franklin before his death.

However, this collection didn't last long, as Davis was diagnosed with lung cancer and left immediately after completing the album. Davis died of respiratory disease and lung cancer complications in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on the evening of Tuesday, July 5, 2005.

The group lasted as a quartet for a short time before recruiting bass Harry McGilberry, a former member of the Futures. Lead Ali-Ollie Woodson's retirement was also evidently delayed from the company, as he recovered from McGilberry's recruiting due to health problems: he had two bouts of throat cancer in a short time. Terry Weeks, a new guy who had been serving as his sub, was recalled.

The new Temptations lineup, which includes Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Theo Peoples, and newcomers Harry McGilberry and Terry Weeks, toured through 1997, which was included in the halftime show of Super Bowl XXIII, which commemorated Motown's 40th anniversary. The Temptations' Phoenix Rising, a 1980s song by 1980s producer Narada Michael Walden, Isaias Gamboa, Claytoven Richardson, Theo People, Tony Lindsey, and Skyler Jett, became the first million-selling album in more than 20 years later this year. The album was anchored by "Stay," a single starring Theo Peoples on lead and containing a sample from "My Girl," which became a top-one hit on the urban adult contemporary charts. It was received with overwhelmingly positive feedback when it was first introduced.

People were fired from the company before the company's announcement of Phoenix Rising due to heroin use, and Barrington "Bo" Henderson took over. In the "Stay" music video, Henderson lip-synched to People's vocals, and the complete album features lead vocals from both Henderson and People.

De Passe Entertainment (run by former Motown vice president Suzanne de Passe) and Hallmark Entertainment produced The Temptations, a four-hour television miniseries based on Otis Williams' memoir, three months after the introduction of Phoenix Rising earlier this year. On November 1 and November 2, 1998, the miniseries was broadcast in two parts on NBC, with the first part focusing on the organization's history from 1958 to 1968, and the second part covering the years from 1968 to 1995. The miniseries was a ratings hit and was nominated for five Emmy Awards, with Allan Arkush winning for Best Direction; the VH-1 cable television network and DVDs followed the show.

Josephine Miles, Otis Williams' former wife, Melvin Franklin's brother Rose Franklin, David Ruffin's family, and Johnnie Mae Matthews filed a lawsuit against Williams, Motown, defamation, and NBC, alleging defamation.

The litigation were consolidated, the lawyers were ruled in favour of the defendants, and the decision was upheld when the plaintiffs appealed in 2001. Williams later claimed that although his book was used as the source material for the film, he had no influence on how the information was presented.

In 1999, the Temptations were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame. Their 2000 album Ear-Resistible received its third Grammy Award, this one for Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance. Bo Henderson was fired from the company in 2003, prompting a wrongful termination lawsuit.

G. C. Cameron, the former Spinners' leader, was recalled. Cameron, Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Harry McGilberry, and Terry Weeks were all inactive for a short time before McGilberry was dismissed; his replacement was former Spaniels member Joe Herndon. McGilberry died on April 3, 2006 at the age of 56.

Legacy, the group's last Motown album, was released in 2004. The Temptations pleaded guilty to being released from their Motown contract and migrated to New Door Records, a Universal brand. Reflections, Motown's sole album with this collection, was released on January 31, 2006, and includes excerpts from Diana Ross & the Supremes' "Reflections," the Miracles' "Ooo Baby," Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's "Fit What It Is" and Jackson 5's "I'll Be There." Dennis Edwards, Ali-Ollie Woodson, and David Sea (deep soul singer from Alabama, not David Ruffin) formed The Temptations Revue, a tribute band starring Dennis Edwards.

G.C. Cameron resigned from the company in June 2007 to concentrate on his solo career. Bruce Williamson, who first joined the company a year ago, was fired. Back to Front, another collection of soul covers, was released in October 2007. Ali-Ollie Woodson, a former soldier of Leukemia, died on May 30, 2010.

The group's Still Here album was released on May 4, 2010. Still Here, "First Kiss," was chastised for having instances of using Auto-Tune techniques.

On February 9, 2013, the Temptations received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Dennis Edwards, Dennis Edwards, and David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, and Melvin Franklin attended the service to honor the six Grammys given to the group for the occasion.

Damon Harris, a former Baltimore hospital resident, died of prostate cancer on February 18, 2013. Richard Street, a former member of Las Vegas, Nevada, died of pulmonary embolism nine days later. Street was currently writing a book titled Ball of Confusion: My Life as a Temptin' Temptation at the time of his death. Gary Flanigan, his co-author, completed the book in 2014; it is the company's second autobiography.

Both Bruce Williamson and Joe Herndon resigned from the company in late 2015. Larry Braggs, Williamson's replacement, served as the lead singer of Tower of Power from 2000 to 2013. Willie Green, who had previously worked with former Temptations Richard Street and Ali-Ollie Woodson, has been Herndon's replacement. Dennis Edwards died on February 1, 2018, just days before his 75th birthday. Before his death, he had been fighting with meningitis.

The Temptations released All the Time, their first album since 2010's Still Here, as well as Universal's UMe Direct imprint.

In August 2019, G. C. Cameron was substituted for an inactive Larry Braggs in a show. Braggs was no longer a member of the club by October 2019, and that was no longer a member of the organization. They then performed as a quartet until June 19, 2020, when it was announced that Mario Corbino was the new member of the group, replacing Larry Braggs.

Bruce Williamson, a former Temptations member, died on September 6, 2020, COVID-19.

The Temptations released two singles, "Is It Gonna Be Yes Or No" starring Smokey Robinson and "When We Were Kings," as part of their forthcoming album, Temptations 60. In January 2022, the album is set to be released. At a concert in Orlando, Florida, Otis Williams introduced Tony Grant as the new member of The Temptations in December 2021. Mario Corbino was replaced by Grant, who performed with the R&B group Az Yet and appeared in many Tyler Perry stage plays.

Jawan M.Jackson was announced on bass in June 2022, replacing Willie Green.

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