Amid creative differences, Johnson left the Flamingos in 1963, touring with a group he first dubbed the Modern Flamingos, which the Atco label changed to the Starglows upon releasing their sole single, Let's Be Lovers. A year later, Smokey Robinson recruited Johnson onto the staff of Motown Records. He and Robinson were regular collaborators in the years to follow, sharing a BMI Award for their song Baby, Please Don't Cry, in addition to writing and producing records for the Four Tops, the Temptations, and the Supremes. In 1969, Johnson issued the solo disc My Springtime, the first of three solo singles on Motown's Gordy subsidiary. The follow-up, Whatcha Gonna Do, generated no more attention than its predecessor, and after 1970's Stone Soul Booster (credited to "Buzzie," Johnson's childhood nickname), his tenure as a Motown act came to a close. He remained with the company until 1974 and then resumed touring with his own Flamingos lineup, a venture he helmed well into the next century, establishing the group as a mainstay of nightclubs and doo wop package tours. In 2005 Johnson released a solo LP, Still in the Pink, on his own TerryTree label. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi