They’ve been sitting in the waiting room at Mottown Records for four hours. The Jackson 5, Jackie, Tito, Germaine, Maron, and 10-year-old Michael dressed in their best clothes that weren’t quite good enough. Shoes that had been polished until they shined, but couldn’t hide how old they were.

Joe Jackson sat rigid in his chair, checking his watch every few minutes. Catherine had stayed home in Gary with the younger children, praying that this trip would be worth the money they couldn’t afford to spend on gas and a cheap motel. Around them, the Mottown headquarters buzzed with activity. Famous people walking past, people who were on the radio, people who had made it.

“Maybe we should just go home,” Tito whispered. “They don’t want to see us. We’re not leaving, Joe said flatly. We drove nine hours to get here. Barry Gordy is going to hear you sing even if I have to. The office door opened. A woman in a crisp business suit looked at them with barely concealed impatience. Mr. Jackson, Mr.

Gordy can give you 10 minutes, but I need to be clear. He’s doing this as a courtesy. He doesn’t typically audition unknown groups, especially not children. So, please don’t waste his time. 10 minutes. That’s all they had. 10 minutes to prove that five kids from Gary, Indiana deserved to be on the same label as Stevie Wonder and Diana Ross.

Michael felt his hands start to shake, but then he remembered what his mother had told him before they left. Baby, you don’t get opportunities like this twice. When that door opens, you walk through it like you belong there. The door was open. Time to prove they belonged. July 23rd, 1968. Mottown Records headquarters, Detroit, Michigan.

The building at 2648 West Grand Boulevard was legendary. Hitsville, USA. The place where my girl was recorded, where stop in the name of love was born. Where the Supremes became the Supremes. For the Jackson brothers, walking through those doors was like entering a temple. They’d left Gary at 4:00 a.m. that morning.

9 hours in Joe’s old Volkswagen van. Five boys crammed in the back with their matching outfits on hangers, trying not to wrinkle them. No air conditioning, bathroom breaks kept to a minimum because they couldn’t afford to waste time or money. Joe had called ahead 3 weeks ago.

He’d been calling Mottown every week for 6 months, always getting the same answer. Mr. Gordy doesn’t audition unsolicited talent. Please send a demo tape. But Joe didn’t have money for a professional demo tape. He had five talented sons and a belief that if Barry Gordy could just see them perform, everything would change.

The breakthrough had come through Bobby Taylor, lead singer of a group called The Vancouvers. Bobby had seen the Jackson 5 perform at a club in Chicago and had been blown away. He’d promised to put in a word at Mottown. 3 weeks later, Joe got the call. Barry Gordy would see them. 10 minutes, one shot. Now, sitting in that waiting room, the reality of what they were attempting started to sink in.

This wasn’t a talent show at a community center. This wasn’t performing at a local club for 50 people. This was Mottown, the biggest, most successful blackowned record label in America, the place that turned unknown singers into household names. and they were about to audition for the man who discovered Stevie Wonder.

Stop bouncing your leg, Joe said quietly to Marlin. And Michael, fix your collar. Sit up straight, all of you. 10-year-old Michael smoothed down his collar for the hundth time. His stomach hurt. He needed to use the bathroom, but was afraid to ask because what if they called them in while he was gone? Through the walls, they could hear music.

Someone was recording. The drums were tight. The bass was perfect. That was the Mottown sound. Precision, excellence, nothing less than perfection. What if we’re not good enough? Michael whispered to Jackie. Jackie was 16 and trying to be brave for his little brothers. We’re good enough. We just have to show them.

But even Jackie’s voice wavered slightly. They’d seen other people come and go from Barry Gord’s office. a girl group in matching purple dresses who looked devastated after their meeting. A solo singer who came out smiling, which Joe noted with a tight jaw. Every person who walked out of that office was either living their dream or having it crushed.

In 10 minutes, the Jackson brothers would know which side they were on. At 2:15 p.m., the door finally opened. The woman in the business suit, her name tag said, Suzanne Edwards, ANR, gave them that same look of barely concealed skepticism. Mr. Jackson, Mr. Gordy will see you now. I need to remind you that he has another appointment in 15 minutes, so please be respectful of his time. Joe stood up.

We will. Thank you for this opportunity. The boys followed their father down a hallway lined with gold records. Michael tried not to stare, but it was impossible. Diana Ross, Marvin Gay, the Four Tops. These weren’t just singers, they were legends. And we’re about to audition in the same building where they made their dreams come true, Michael thought.

Barry Gord’s office was bigger than the Jackson family’s entire living room. floor to ceiling windows, awards and photographs covering every wall. A massive desk that looked like it cost more than Joe’s van. And behind that desk sat Barry Gordy himself. He was 40 years old, wearing an expensive suit, and his expression was polite but distant.

This was clearly just another meeting in a very long day. “Mr. Jackson,” Barry said, standing to shake Joe’s hand. I understand Bobby Taylor speaks highly of your boys. Yes, sir. We appreciate you taking the time to see us. Barry’s eyes moved to the five brothers. He studied them the way you might study a car you’re thinking about buying. Analytical, looking for flaws.

His gaze lingered on Michael, the smallest one, who was trying very hard to stand up straight and look confident. “How old are you, son?” Barry asked. “10, sir,” Michael said. His voice came out smaller than he wanted. 10. Barry sat back down. Mr. Jackson, I’m going to be frank with you.

I don’t typically work with children. Child performers are unpredictable. Voices change. They get distracted. They can’t handle the pressure of touring and recording. I’ve been in this business 20 years and I’ve seen it happen over and over. My boys are different, Joe said. Every parent thinks their kids are different.

Barry’s tone wasn’t cruel, just matter of fact. I’m giving you 10 minutes because Bobby asked me to, but I want to be clear about expectations. I’m looking for the next four tops, the next Temptations, groups that can perform consistently at the highest level for years. Can five children do that? Watch them and decide for yourself, Joe said.

Barry checked his watch. All right, you’ve got 10 minutes. Show me what you’ve got. The Jackson 5 moved to the open space in front of Barry’s desk. There was no stage, no microphones, no backing track. Just five brothers in a office about to sing for their lives. Jackie, Tito, and Germaine exchanged glances.

They’d planned to sing I Want You Back, a song they’d been perfecting for months. Germaine usually sang lead, but something made Michael step forward instead. We’re going to sing Tobacco Road, Michael said, his voice quiet but clear. Joe’s eyes widened slightly. They hadn’t discussed this. Tobacco Road wasn’t even on their set list for today.

But Barry Gordy leaned forward slightly. Tobacco Road was a hard song, adult song. It required emotional depth and vocal control that most kids simply didn’t have. Interesting choice, Barry said. Proceed. Michael closed his eyes, took a breath, and started to sing. The first note that came out of his mouth made Barry Gord’s pen stop moving on his notepad.

Michael’s voice was pure, controlled, but underneath that control was something raw and real. When he sang about being born in poverty, you believed him. When he sang about desperate dreams, you felt them. This wasn’t a 10-year-old mimicking adult emotions. This was a 10-year-old who somehow understood pain and hope and struggle in ways that shouldn’t have been possible.

Behind Michael, his brothers came in with harmonies, and they were good. Really good, tight, professional, the kind of harmonies that took most groups years to develop. But everyone’s attention was on Michael. He wasn’t just singing the notes. He was living them. His body moved with the music, not choreographed, just natural response to the rhythm.

His voice did things that shouldn’t have been possible from someone so young. Runs, riffs, emotional crescendos that would have impressed Barry coming from a grown man. Coming from a 10-year-old, it was impossible. But it was happening right in front of him. Suzanne had been about to leave to set up Barry’s next appointment.

She stopped in the doorway, frozen through the walls. The recording session in studio A paused. Engineers and musicians stepped into the hallway trying to figure out where that incredible voice was coming from. Michael hit the final chorus and his voice soared. The sound filled Barry’s office filled the hallway.

Seemed to fill the entire building. The last note hung in the air. Silence. Barry Gordy sat perfectly still, staring at Michael Jackson like he’d just witnessed something that defied physics. “How old did you say you were?” Barry asked quietly. “10, sir.” “And who taught you to sing like that?” “Nobody taught me, sir.

I just I feel it and then I sing it.” Barry stood up and walked around his desk. He crouched down to Michael’s eye level. “Son, I’ve been in this business my entire adult life. I’ve worked with Stevie Wonder, Diana Ross, Marvin Gay, Smokeoky Robinson, the greatest talents in music, and what I just heard from you? He paused, shaking his head.

That shouldn’t be possible from a 10-year-old. Is that bad? Michael asked nervously. Barry actually laughed. Bad? No, Michael. That’s the opposite of bad. That’s extraordinary. He stood up and turned to Joe. Mr. Jackson, I need to apologize. Joe’s eyebrows went up. Barry Gordy didn’t apologize to people. I made assumptions based on their age, Barry continued.

I thought this would be a waste of time. I was wrong. Your boys are special. But Michael? He looked back at the 10-year-old. Michael is unprecedented. Does that mean you want to sign us? Jackie asked, unable to contain his excitement. Sign you, son? I’m going to do more than sign you. I’m going to make you the biggest thing Mottown has ever produced.

Barry walked back to his desk and pressed a button on his intercom. Suzanne, cancel my 230. Actually, cancel everything for the rest of the day and get me Ralph Seltzer on the phone. We need to draw up contracts now. He turned back to the Jackson Boys. Gentlemen, welcome to Mottown Records. What happened next was a blur. Barry called in his creative team.

The boys sang three more songs, each one better than the last. Suzanne brought in other executives, producers, engineers. Everyone who was in the building that day found a reason to walk past Barry’s office, trying to get a glimpse of the kids who’d made Barry Gordy cancel his afternoon.

“We’re going to need to do artist development,” Barry said, already planning stage presence, choreography, studio training. But the raw talent is there, especially with Michael. We build everything around him. Germaine’s the lead singer, Joe said carefully. Not anymore he’s not, Barry said bluntly.

No disrespect to Germaine, your talented son. But Michael is once in a generation, maybe once in a lifetime. He’s your secret weapon, he turned to Michael. How do you feel about being the lead singer? Michael looked at his brothers, worried. He didn’t want to cause problems. Didn’t want Germaine to resent him.

But Germaine stepped forward. He should be the lead, Mr. Gordy. I’ve known it for a while now. Michael’s got something the rest of us don’t. What’s that? Barry asked. Magic, Germaine said simply. They left Mottown Records at 6:00 p.m. with signed contracts and plans to return to Detroit in 2 weeks to start recording.

In the van on the way home, the boys were so excited they could barely sit still. They were Mottown artists now. Mottown, the place their heroes recorded. Joe drove in silence, a small smile on his face. Everything he’d worked for, everything he’d believed. It was real. Michael sat in the back, staring out the window at Detroit passing by.

“You okay, Michael?” Tito asked. “I’m scared,” Michael admitted. “What if I can’t do it? What if I mess up?” “You won’t mess up,” Jackie said confidently. You just made Barry Gordy cancel his afternoon. You know how hard that is? That man runs on a schedule tighter than the president’s and he stopped everything to listen to you.

Barry Gordy stopped everything to listen to all of us. Michael corrected. Nah, man. Marlin said, “He stopped everything to listen to you. We’re good. You’re phenomenal. There’s a difference.” When they got home to Gary at 3:00 a.m., Catherine was still awake praying in the kitchen. The boys burst through the door, all talking at once, telling her about Mottown, about Barry Gordy, about the contracts.

“Mama, we did it!” Michael shouted, hugging her. “We’re Mottown artists!” Catherine held her youngest son, tears streaming down her face. “I knew you would be, baby. I always knew.” 11 months later, I Want You Back by the Jackson 5 hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100. It stayed there for 4 weeks.

Their next four singles also hit number one. The Jackson 5 became the first group in history to have their first four singles reach number one. And it all started in Barry Gord’s office on July 23rd, 1968 when a 10-year-old boy sang Tobacco Road and made the most powerful man in music realize that everything he thought he knew about age and talent was wrong.

In a 1994 interview, Barry Gordy was asked about his greatest discovery. Everyone expects me to say Diana Ross or Stevie Wonder, Barry said. And they were both incredible. But the greatest audition I ever witnessed, the one that changed everything I thought I knew. That was Michael Jackson at 10 years old.

What made it so special? Because he proved me wrong. Barry said, “I walked into that meeting thinking I was doing a favor for Bobby Taylor. I was ready to give them 10 minutes and send them home with some encouraging words. And then Michael opened his mouth and I realized I wasn’t watching a child audition.

I was watching the future of music. Did you know he’d become the biggest star in the world? Barry smiled. The moment he sang the first note of Tobacco Road, I knew two things. One, every assumption I’d made about child performers was And two, I’d just met someone who was going to change everything. He was right. July 23rd, 1968.

10 minutes that changed music history. All because a 10-year-old boy from Gary, Indiana, had the courage to step forward and prove that talent has no age limit. That genius doesn’t wait for permission and that sometimes the smallest person in the room has the biggest