1967 single by Four Tops
"7 Rooms of Gloom" is a song originally recorded by the Motown Records vocal quartet the Four Tops. It was released as a single in 1967 on the Motown label and reached #14 on the Billboard Hot 100,[1] and was a Top 10 R&B Hit, charting at #10. It was also a hit in the UK, their seventh, staying for nine weeks in the UK singles chart and reaching #12[2] and in the Netherlands where it made #23 in the Dutch Top 40.[3]
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1
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7-Rooms of Gloom
The Four Tops •
The Four Tops •
w: Holland-Dozier-Holland •
1967 /05 /02
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2:36 |
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2
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Ill Turn to Stone
The Four Tops •
The Four Tops •
w: Holland-Dozier-Holland, R. Dean Taylor •
1967 /05 /02
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2:31 |
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1
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Reach Out I`ll Be There
The Four Tops •
w: Holland–Dozier–Holland •
1967 /07 Side One
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0:00 |
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2
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Walk Away Renée
The Four Tops •
w: Michael Brown, Bob Calilli, Tony Sansone •
1967 /07 Side One
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0:00 |
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3
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7-Rooms of Gloom
The Four Tops •
w: Holland-Dozier-Holland •
1967 /07 Side One
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0:00 |
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4
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If I Were a Carpenter
The Four Tops •
w: Tim Hardin •
1967 /07 Side One
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0:00 |
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5
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Last Train to Clarksville
The Four Tops •
w: Tommy Boyce, Bobby Hart •
1967 /07 Side One
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0:00 |
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6
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I`ll Turn to Stone
The Four Tops •
w: Holland-Dozier-Holland, R. Dean Taylor •
1967 /07 Side One
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0:00 |
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7
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I`m a Believer
The Four Tops •
w: Neil Diamond •
1967 /07 Side Two
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0:00 |
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8
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Standing in the Shadows of Love
The Four Tops •
w: Holland-Dozier-Holland •
1967 /07 Side Two
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0:00 |
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9
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Bernadette
The Four Tops •
w: Holland-Dozier-Holland •
1967 /07 Side Two
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0:00 |
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10
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Cherish
The Four Tops •
w: Terry Kirkman •
1967 /07 Side Two
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0:00 |
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11
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Wonderful Baby
The Four Tops •
w: Smokey Robinson •
1967 /07 Side Two
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0:00 |
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12
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What Else Is There to Do
The Four Tops •
w: But Think About You •
1967 /07 Side Two
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0:00 |
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"7 Rooms of Gloom" | ||||
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Single by Four Tops | ||||
from the album Reach Out | ||||
B-side | "I`ll Turn to Stone" | |||
Released | May 2, 1967 | |||
Recorded | Hitsville U.S.A. (Studio A); 1967 | |||
Genre | Soul, pop | |||
Length | 2:46 | |||
Label | Motown | |||
Songwriter(s) | Holland–Dozier–Holland | |||
Producer(s) | Brian Holland Lamont Dozier | |||
Four Tops singles chronology | ||||
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1967 single by Four Tops
"7 Rooms of Gloom" is a song originally recorded by the Motown Records vocal quartet the Four Tops. It was released as a single in 1967 on the Motown label and reached #14 on the Billboard Hot 100,[1] and was a Top 10 R&B Hit, charting at #10. It was also a hit in the UK, their seventh, staying for nine weeks in the UK singles chart and reaching #12[2] and in the Netherlands where it made #23 in the Dutch Top 40.[3]
Leer másDescribed as "throbbing with dread over a racing minor key dominated arrangement"[4] it was written by Holland–Dozier–Holland. The single`s B-side was "I`ll Turn to Stone"[5] also written by Holland-Dozier-Holland with R. Dean Taylor.[6] That song made a separate chart entry, and peaked at #76 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #50 on the R&B Charts.
Cash Box called it a "thumping, fast-moving, blues-oriented rocker" that is a "real powerhouse."[7] Record World called it "Top notch wailing from the Detroit group."[8]
The song begins with Levi Stubbs doing a spoken recitation, which gets repeated twice with alterations.
In 1985, Pat Benatar covered the song on her album, Seven the Hard Way. Bruce Springsteen covered the song in his 2022 studio album, Only the Strong Survive.[9]
1967 single by Four Tops
"7 Rooms of Gloom" is a song originally recorded by the Motown Records vocal quartet the Four Tops. It was released as a single in 1967 on the Motown label and reached #14 on the Billboard Hot 100,[1] and was a Top 10 R&B Hit, charting at #10. It was also a hit in the UK, their seventh, staying for nine weeks in the UK singles chart and reaching #12[2] and in the Netherlands where it made #23 in the Dutch Top 40.[3]
Described as "throbbing with dread over a racing minor key dominated arrangement"[4] it was written by Holland–Dozier–Holland. The single`s B-side was "I`ll Turn to Stone"[5] also written by Holland-Dozier-Holland with R. Dean Taylor.[6] That song made a separate chart entry, and peaked at #76 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #50 on the R&B Charts.
Cash Box called it a "thumping, fast-moving, blues-oriented rocker" that is a "real powerhouse."[7] Record World called it "Top notch wailing from the Detroit group."[8]
The song begins with Levi Stubbs doing a spoken recitation, which gets repeated twice with alterations.
In 1985, Pat Benatar covered the song on her album, Seven the Hard Way. Bruce Springsteen covered the song in his 2022 studio album, Only the Strong Survive.[9]