Music
has been made, in some form or another, since mankind first beat the
drum and hummed the first tune or made the first sound; and just for the
record it was done first by black people. Of course, we know that music
has been sung and written for every genre. But, I will tell you that
nobody did it better than the stable of artists assembled by Mr. Barry
Gordy founder of Motown Records.
I don’t have enough paper to name
all of the stars who made all that great music or list the catalog of
hits that were produced. To give you an idea, I’ll just mention a few:
Michael Jackson, Dianna Ross, Smokey Robinson, Steve Wonder, The
Temptations, Supremes, Lionel Richie, and I could go on and on! But I
want to pay homage to the most profound, and maybe the most troubled, of
them all – Marvin Gaye.
Though this writing I won’t get into the
life problems of the man because most of us know the story. What I want
to do is speak to the genius of the man and of course as we know there
is a thin line between genius and insanity. It is not that I’m saying
that Marvin was insane, rather as he said himself – troubled! Marvin
made wonderful music with groups, solo, and with great female artists
such as Tammie Terrell, Kim Weston, Dianna Ross, and Mary Wells.
What
I want to do is to remind you of the timeless impact Marvin had on all
of us. It was on June 10, 1970, when Marvin returned to the Hitsville
U.S.A. studios to record a new composition, “What’s Going On”, inspired
by an idea from Renaldo “Obie” Benson of the Four Tops after he
witnessed an act of police Brutality at an anti-war rally in San
Francisco. Marvin later played the song to Berry Gordy, who refused to
release it due mainly to its jazz-oriented sound, which Gordy labeled
"outdated". As a result, Marvin refused to record unless Motown released
the song.
The song was released on January 17, 1971 and quickly
shot to number-one on the R&B charts within a month staying there
for five weeks, also reaching number-two on the Billboard pop chart and
number-one on Cashbox's pop chart for a week, selling over a million
copies. Emboldened by its success, Motown then allowed Marvin to record a
full album. The album became Gaye's first million-selling album and
featured two more top-ten hits, “Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)” and
“Inner City Blue”.
The album made history as it became one of
Motown's first autonomous works, without the help of Motown's staff
producers. Its themes and segue flow brought the concept album format to
rhythm and blues music. The album was later hailed as "the most
important and passionate record to come out of soul music, delivered by
one of its finest voices".
What makes the “What’s Going On” album
significant is that it because the most socially conscience and profound
recording of all times and it stands the test of time. Meaning, you can
play it today as we face the same issues as we did in 1971 and “What’s
Going On” is as relevant today as it was forty-years ago. With that
said, shouldn’t we listen to the tune again and make an effort to change
the world from what it used to be. And that’s my Though Provoking
Perspective…
http://johntwills.com
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Troubled Man
Labels:
ABC,
Barry Gordy,
CBS,
CNN,
Diana Ross,
Marvin Gaye,
Motown,
MSNBC,
music,
NBC,
PBS,
soul,
Steve Wonder,
Temptation
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