Born in Houston, Wilson had moved to Los Angeles by the time he was in his teens. Hal Davis introduced him to Motown. One of his first cuts for Jobete (Motown's publishing arm) was Stevie Wonder's Castles in the Sand (1964). Wilson soon authored a whole slew of should-have-been-hits: I Can't Turn Around and I'm Gonna Hold On Long as I Can for the Marvelettes; I've Got to Find It for Brenda Holloway, and Darling Come Back Home, Honey Brown, Hooked On Your Love, and Son of Sagittarius for Eddie Kendricks.
As a singer, Frank Wilson's only Motown single, 1965's Do I Love You (Indeed I Do), (1965), is a prized item among collectors. (A duet featuring Wilson and Chris Clark performing Do I Love You escaped Motown's vaults sometime in the '90s.) For years, writers have Siamesed him with another Frank Wilson -- also with a Hal Davis connection -- who sang with the Remarkables and worked with Barry White in the '70s.
He left Motown in 1976, and became a born again Christian. He continued to lead national and international ministries with his wife Bunny, and wrote more books than songs. By the end of the century, the talented singer/songwriter/producer was getting more gloss and press than ever, including appreciation shows in the United Kingdom in the early 2000s, where Northern soul fans revere his work. Wilson died of cancer on September 27, 2012. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi