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Bob Kayli is Robert L. Gordy, <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry Gordy</a>'s brother, and the youngest son of the late Bertha and Pop Gordy's children. The first Bob Kayli recording, "Everyone Was There," came out in 1958. <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry</a> leased it to Carlton Records; it sold well until Kayli made personal appearances and the public discovered he was Black. Record sales screeched to a halt and <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry</a> didn't receive any further requests for appearances. He worked at the Post Office until Motown started hitting on all cylinders. He left the government job for an entry-level position in Motown's engineering department. He didn't record again until the November 1961 single "Small Sad Sam" (b/w "Tie Me Tight"), an answer song to <a href="spotify:artist:1RaDKTFXuy0qA8YV1h9SwC">Jimmy Dean</a>'s "Big Bad John," that died upon release. When his sister Loucye died in the mid-'60s, he became head of <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Jobete+Music%22">Jobete Music</a>. Outside of Motown he was Bobby; at Motown he was Robert L., the no-nonsense brother of <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry Gordy, Jr.</a> ~ Andrew Hamilton

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