Diana Ross spent the 1960s as the lead voice of The Supremes, a group that helped define the Motown sound and delivered a run of hits that still appear in commercials, films and playlists more than half a century later. Baby Love and Stop! In the Name of Love were part of that foundation. When she stepped away from the group and launched her solo career in 1970, she carried that momentum forward with records that blended disco, soul and adult pop in ways few artists of her era could manage.
Ain’t No Mountain High Enough and I’m Coming Out are the songs most people reach for when her name comes up. Her film career added another layer, with an Academy Award nomination for Lady Sings the Blues and starring roles in Mahogany and The Wiz. That is the Diana Ross most listeners know.
The rest of her catalog is worth knowing too.
Where the overlooked work begins
The Supremes recorded prolifically, and not everything from those sessions made it onto the standard greatest hits collections. Nothing But Heartaches from 1965 is a clean example of Ross at her most emotionally direct, a track that did not receive the attention it warranted at the time. Everything Is Good About You, a B-side from the same year, has a melodic warmth that holds up well on its own terms. He’s All I Got from 1966 leans into the orchestration that defined Motown’s production style, with harmonies that push the song further than its obscurity might suggest.
Love Is Like an Itching in My Heart, also from 1966, is an uptempo track that moves with real urgency. Going Down for the Third Time from 1967 carries a dramatic groove that sounds like a Motown production at full strength, even if it never became a staple. No Matter What Sign You Are, released under the Diana Ross and The Supremes name in 1969, is lighter in tone, a zodiac-themed single that sits at an interesting moment in the group’s final chapter.
The solo years produced their own buried catalog
Last Time I Saw Him from 1973 takes Ross somewhere unexpected, a country-influenced narrative track that sits well outside the disco era she would help define a few years later. The shift in register is part of what makes it worth finding.
Eaten Alive from 1985 arrived as a glossy pop production with contributions from Barry Gibb and Michael Jackson. It is a product of its decade in the best sense, polished and confident, and it did not receive the commercial response it probably deserved. Let’s Go Up from around the same period blends adult contemporary production with pop momentum in a way that would have fit comfortably into heavy rotation if circumstances had broken differently.
Heavy Weather, recorded in the early 1990s, is a smooth R&B track that fits the emotional register Ross has always handled well, a song about resilience that does not oversell its own message.
What the catalog adds up to
Ross has spent more than six decades recording music, and the portion of that work most people engage with is a small fraction of what she actually made. The hits are hits for a reason. But the deeper catalog is where the full range of her voice and her willingness to move between genres becomes most visible.
For anyone who grew up with the Motown standards or came to Ross through her solo records, the underrated tracks offer a version of the same artist working in smaller rooms, without the weight of expectation that came with every major release. That is often where the most interesting work lives.

