Marvin gay albums
Humanizing The Vacuum
Any comp of his Motown singles tears these albums to bits of bark, but I compiled these selections as an experiment on myself: how good was Marvin Gaye as album artist? Beautiful good. Our tastes don’t align, though.
For the curious, my tracks list.
1. In Our Lifetime (1981)
Bowdlerized, a commercial bomb upon release, the penultimate album Gaye released, uh, in his lifetime is a minor masterpiece of knotted funk: beholden to no disco or pale R&B Quincy Jones or Earth, Wind & Fire crossover. Vinyl copies were plentiful a decade ago, less so now. Perhaps “Far Cry” is an accident; perhaps “Life is for Learning” dramatizes Gaye’s battle to mate the flesh and essence worlds. But, my god, the rhythm section on these tracks! Whether programmed or drummed up by Gaye himself, it anchors his more abstruse ruminations. “Praise” is an old-fashioned Gaye strike. “Ego Trippin’ Out” gyrates in its own universe: its rhythmic pattern suggests PiL’s “Death Disco/Swan Lake” with horns replacing guitar interjections.
2. I Want You (1976)
At the highlight of the mid 2000s download
What’s Going On. Marvin’s masterwork, and the single most revered album in Motown history. You may think you recognize it, but dive deep – again and again – for the subtleties of voice and musicianship, alongside the timeless lyrics.
Moods Of Marvin Gaye. This offers the most explosive first side of any Gaye album of the 1960s, including a four-pack of hits produced by Smokey Robinson. “Ain’t That Peculiar” alone is worth the price of entry. Later, on the terminal track, Marvin channels Sinatra.
Let’s Get It On. Marvin’s first 1970s excursion into carnal knowledge, sure, but with his subtle, and sometimes subversive, approach to each song’s essence. Collaborator Ed Townsend helped give him purpose, discipline and structure.
How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You. To fully know Marvin, listen to how he was taught, what he learned, and the respect he earned from teachers. This album is the sound and heart of his graduation, with “Try It Baby” among his coolest-ever pieces of coursework.
Here, My Dear. Don’t initiate with this chronology of personal grief and failure, it’s too intense. Come at this double-album only after absorbing Marvi
Marvin Gaye
Marvin Gaye broke the rules. Sure, Berry Gordy set them, and sometimes – in the 1960s, often – the singer fell into line. But the enigmatic and headstrong “Prince of Motown” constantly sought to chart his own course, even when plagued by a divided soul. Marvin’s ultimate legacy is one of the most socially conscious, noted and timeless works of 20th century popular art: his 1971 album, What’s Going On.
FAST FACTS
- First Hit: “Stubborn Kind of Fellow”
- Biggest Hit: “I Heard It Through The Grapevine”
- Top Album: What’s Going On
- Career Highlight: Asserting an independent voice within the machine, to make the masterwork that is What’s Going On
- Born Marvin Pentz Gay Jr. in Washington, D.C., in 1939, he sings in church as a youngster, becoming a soloist in the choir and teaching to play piano and drums. In 1955, at odds with his father and unhappy at dwelling, he quits high college and joins the Atmosphere Force. A subsequent honorable discharge notes that Marvin is unable to calibrate to “regimentation and authority.”
- Marvin loves the sound and ethos of doo-wop singing. Back in his hometown, he forms a collective, the Marquees, t
Marvin Gaye Vinyl Records
Источник: https://www.dutchvinyl.com.au/collections/marvin-gaye?srsltid=AfmBOoovJa4B3c-AmhhbO92wMLzAt6ZL5RoPoleeGxtcpToqa6S_kXmHMarvin Gaye was an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, known as one of the most leading figures in soul melody and R&B. He was born in 1939 in Washington, D.C., and began his musical career as a session drummer and background vocalist for Motown Records. He rose to fame in the 1960s with a string of hit singles, including "Stubborn Kind of Fellow," "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)," and "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," and went on to discharge groundbreaking albums such as What's Going On (1971) and Let's Get It On (1973).
Marvin Gaye's standout albums include What's Going On, Let's Get It On, and Here, My Dear (1978). His most popular songs include "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," "Ain't No Mountain High Enough," and "Sexual Healing."
An interesting fact about Marvin Gaye is that he wrote and produced the soundtrack for the film Trouble Man (1972), which was his only major film score.Updating his highly percussive but string-laden groove for the disco set, Gaye clearly devised 1976’s I Desire You as a makeout album. But the space-age synthesizers in the instrumental version of “After the Dance” rocket him direct into the stratosphere. And the Afro-Caribbean congas of “I Want You” and bossa nova lilt of “Since I Had You” support a mix of rhythm and beauty that refuses to box itself in—punctuated by Gaye’s control murmuring, the sound flows like a sweet, seductive stream.
What do you execute for an encore after you’ve just released a certified, game-changing masterpiece? That was the challenge facing Motown maestro Marvin Gaye after his What’s Going On opus was released in 1971. After 1972’s Trouble Man soundtrack, Let’s Get It On was the proper follow-up to one of the greatest albums of all second. But instead of suffering a seemingly inevitable letdown under the weight of all that pressure, Gaye leveled up again to make back-to-back classics. Indeed, Let’s Get It On defined the R&B idea album every bit as much as What’s Going On did, trading social consciousness for sexual healing in turbulent, soul-testing times. It was a distinct kind of wokeness—rai