Bringing in Richard Morris and songwriter Sylvia Moy, the group managed to release two hit singles though this was the beginning of the end for the group as hitmakers on the pop charts. Like their label mates The Supremes and the Four Tops, they stalled without the team of Holland-Dozier-Holland, although they continued to chart well on the R&B charts and in England until their 1973 disbanding. This was also the first album to include lead singer Martha Reeves's sister Lois Reeves, who replaced Betty Kelly after Kelly was fired from the group in 1967 and also the first album where they were credited as Martha Reeves and the Vandellas. It was also the last album to feature original member Rosalind Ashford, who would exit out of the group shortly a year after this album came out.
The album became the group's penultimate album to chart on the Billboard 200, reaching number 167 on June 1, 1968, their lowest charting album to date, staying there for eight weeks.[2]