What's Going on (Dlx)
click the image to get it in cd-cover size
| Release Date: |
November 30, 1970 |
| Label: |
Motown / Pgd |
| Rating: |
5.0 |
Description: Sly & The Family Stone might have psychedelicized soul music, but Marvin Gaye personalized it. Although the powers-that-were Motown didn't even want to release the record, the unexpected success of
What's Going On, issued in 1971, inspired Stevie Wonder, Curtis Mayfield, and just about every other black artist on the planet to take greater responsibility for their music and its meaning. Gaye co-wrote the songs and produced the album, flavoring it with layer upon layer of his own multi-tracked vocals, oceans of hand percussion, strings, flutes, and jazzy horn solos. Spacey and loose as a spliff-fueled Sunday afternoon jam in the park, the nine songs all played like a hit single. The title track--inspired by his brother's return from the Vietnam War--and the obvious social commentary of "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)" and "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)" actually
were hit singles. Two other tracks ("Wholly Holy" and "Save the Children") would inspire hit covers by Aretha Franklin and Diana Ross, respectively. Nevertheless,
What's Going On sounds as fresh today as it did the week that it came out. Recommended reading:
Divided Soul: The Life of Marvin Gaye by David Ritz (McGraw-Hill, 1985).
--Don Waller
Tracklist of What's Going on (Dlx)
Reviews:
An absolute must-have for every Marvin Gaye fan!
I really believe that Marvin Gaye was speaking to the Black community when he co-wrote the songs and released the album. The music and the messages are timeless; the issues that he addresses on this album are clearly as important and prevalent today as they were 34 years ago.
Therefore, I believe everyone should listen to the album but I also think every Black man should have a copy of the album just to remind us how far we've come and how far we still have to go.
February marks Black History Month here in Canada. This is one of the best ways to celebrate our Black heritage and the obstacles we have overcome...take a listen to songs like What's Going On, What's Happening Brother, Inner City Blues (Makes Me Wanna Holler), Mercy Mercy Me, Right On and my all-time favourite, God Is Love.
The album is realistic and paints a true picture of what we face in society but also has several inspirational moments. I like to listen to the CD on my way home from a busy day at work. It reminds me of how fortunate I am to have what I have and to acknowledge my blessings when others have not been as fortunate. Peace..
An All-Time Classic
Any barebones Marvin Gaye collection should include a good compilation of his 60's hits as well as Let's Get It On and this one. What's Going On found Gaye breaking free from the Motown hit-making apparatus to produce an artistic statement that has since become a cornerstone of R&B and one of the all time great records. It's instructive that only an artist of Gaye's stature was allowed to get away with something like this at the time on Motown.
The title track is one of his greatest and has rightfully become an R&B standard. Gaye's gritty, streetwise lyrics set the tone for what's to come. "What's Happening Brother" concerns a dazed and confused returning Vietnam War vet while "Flyin' High (In The Friendly Sky)" is about the dangers of drugs. Considering his own habit and circumstances of his sad demise, it's eerie to hear him sing lines like "I go crazy when I can't get it...the pain, oh the pain."
"Mercy Mercy Me" is another of Gaye's best songs and for me is the high point of the album as Gaye welds a classic and hypnotic beat to ecology-minded lyrics. Another classic hit, "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)" closes out the set. Despite it's fair share of hits, this record was sequenced so that each song flows into each other, with a singular purpose of music and lyrics that makes it best heard from beginning to end in one sitting.
What's Going On not only pushed the boundries wide open on R&B subject matter, but experimented musically as well. Starting with background "party" sounds and adding bongos, congas and other percussion, full horn and string sections and lush backing vocals make this an almost symphonic form of R&B.
A truly remarkable recording, and quite possibly the best R&B album ever. A must for any comprehensive collection.
Detroit Soul's Finest Album
This album exemplifies Detroit Soul - strings, Spectorish wall of sound, melodies to die for. That the album has no love songs would suggest otherwise - everything here is socially or religiouslky conscious. But the lyrics are so generous, the tunes so marvelously crafted that it stands in a class by itself. It is to Gaye's credit that he steps so far out from the commercial limb of Motown (a social consciousness concept album doesn't sell) and yet hits paydirt! Mercy Mercy Me and What's Going On are just the beginning. This album grew on me in time.
Pure Genius
Recently VH-1 screened the viewers top 100 albums of all-time, which started me thinking what would be at the top of my list. I came up with this one.
Marvin produced many soul classics during his lifetime, but none that matched the perceptiveness or depth of this album.
Musical genius, troubled man, deep thinker, husband, father, this amazing work of art sends out a message that is not only political but profoundly personal in showing his many sides.
Here is a man who was decades ahead of his time personally and professionally, 'Marvin Knew'.
If you ever get the chance to experience the pure genius of 'What's goin on' DO IT!.
I promise you won't regret it.
The best album of the 70s
What's Going On catapulted Marvin Gaye into superstardom. Three number one singles were pulled from the album: the title song, "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)," and "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)." This was the first album where Marvin overdubbed his voice multiple times, creating a one-man vocal group. The result was a level of timbral integration in the harmonies that became a Gaye trademark.
This Is R&B's answer to 'Pet Sounds' and 'Sgt. Pepper'
One word describes this album, eternal. Incredble lyrical depth, both personal and political, set off by metaphysical jazz-folk-blues-pop-r&b and melancholic classical arrangements. Marvin's child. This is what he left us, and its more than Puffy or Biggie or Tupackin or R.Kelly or God knows what other joke of an r&b rap artist could ever attempt to achieve in this day and age! (Gotta give props to Wyclef and Lauryn though!) Buy this now. Its message is eternal.