“I’d hear pieces of records,” Willis says. “I had no idea what it was until I heard it on the radio and would recognize the pieces — ‘Ooh, that’s the base- line I heard!’ If I didn’t grow up in Detroit, I probably wouldn’t be a songwriter. “I loved Marvin Gaye, the Supremes, the Temptations. When Motown came along, if you weren’t black, I didn’t have time for you, musically. If it came out of Motown, I was all over it. And there were a lot of other labels, too. These song- writers — Ashford & Simpson, Holland Dozier Holland,” she says. “There was a disc jockey, Martha Jean ‘The Queen’ on WJLB. During the riots, she stayed on for 48 hours and was credited with calming the city down. She was the first woman to own a radio station. My mom passed away sud- denly when I was 15. I had my learner’s permit then. I’d jump in the car and lock myself in. She saved my life. “I was very aware of Berry Gordy. I wrote him a fan letter when I was 12. I didn’t meet him until Motown the Musical was in town,” she says. “The director went over to him and I could kind of hear them. ‘Do you know who that is?’ ‘She wrote what?’ I thanked him for letting me sit out on the lawn. He said, ‘No. Thank you.’” After graduating from Mumford High School in 1965, Willis majored in jour- nalism and advertising at the University of Wisconsin- Madison before heading to New York to work as a copywriter for Columbia Records. In 1972, Willis was riding a bus down Columbus Avenue, listen- ing to the song “Alone Again, Naturally” by Gilbert O’Sullivan. “I wrote a whole new lyric to LEFT: Allee Willis TOP: Visiting her family’s Walled Lake cottage, c. 1953. ABOVE: Willis with Maurice White, founder of Earth, Wind & Fire — and already rocking her trademark hairdo. details Allee Willis performs Allee Willis Loves Detroit! May 18-19 at the City Theatre in Detroit. $45. (800) 745-3000; 313presents.com. continued on page 42 jn May 10 • 2018 41