Even if I don't release it myself, somebody else might hear it and want to record it. When you write a song, it gives it that potential.
Motown will always be a heavy-duty part of my life because those are my roots.
I've been speaking at churches for years, as well as juvenile jails, rehabs and hospitals, and I always talk about my faith. That is a declaration of my relationship with God.
I played golf all over Detroit.
I left Motown because of the regime of people who were there.
I had been stockpiling Gospel songs for other artists, and had planned to submit them to Gospel artists.
I don't ever balk at being considered a Motown person, because Motown is the greatest musical event that ever happened in the history of music.
Once you're a Motown artist, that's your stigmatism, and I was there from the very first day.
Had I not come out with an inspirational CD, you perhaps would have never known that I feel like I feel, that all songs, all the music I've ever done is a gift from God.
My mother was a churchgoing lady, so I always heard about God at home.
Drugs are in every walk of life - doctors, lawyers, preachers, the guy who works for IBM, teenagers on the street, teenagers in school.
As human beings, we're very materialistic and have all this stuff - furs and cars and diamonds and money.
As a kid, this is what I wanted my life to be. Not in my wildest dreams did I ever dare to dream that it would be this.
And I can say this, most of the people who have recorded my songs are songwriters themselves.
I always try to write a song, I never just want to write a record.