Edith Wayne
Edith Wayne

Edith Wayne

Real Name: Holland-Dozier-Holland

"Edith Wayne" was a songwriting pseudonym used by Holland-Dozier-Holland because of legal battles with their former Motown boss, Berry Gordy.

Despite the fact that the Holland-Dozier-Holland name had become nearly synonymous with that of Motown, the trio sued label founder Berry Gordy in 1967 for withholding royalties and profits. HDH left the Motown stable shortly afterward, but it wouldn’t be until 1969 that their own labels would be up and running: Invictus (distributed by major label Capitol Records) and Hot Wax (distributed by prominent indie Buddah Records). A third, the short-lived, independently-distributed [l72529], would be created in 1972.

Due to the ongoing litigation between HDH and Motown, the trio was contractually forbidden to use their own names on their early releases. Production was often credited to “[l621298]” or “[a2081982],” while “Edith Wayne” was HDH’s collective songwriting pseudonym (usually credited alongside Ron Dunbar, a fellow writer/producer).

Showing 25 items
1-0 of 0
1971 - Hot Wax
VG+ / VG+ - 1 x LP, Album
PRICE Image Title Artist Genre Style Label Year Country Format Condition Comment
Sweet Replies Sweet Replies Honey Cone Funk / Soul Soul Hot Wax 1971 Australia 1 x LP, Album
Sweet Replies - Honey Cone - Funk / Soul - Soul - 1971 - Hot Wax - VG+/VG+ - 1 x LP, Album
1-0 of 0
🎵
QUEUE SONGS ON RELEASE PAGES
Ready to play
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00