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pi_8037269
Deze grote artiest bleek nog geen eigen centrale topic te hebben.
quote:
One of the most gifted, visionary, and enduring talents ever launched into orbit by the Motown hit machine, the career of Marvin Gaye blazed the trail for the continued evolution of popular black music: moving from lean, powerful R&B to stylish, sophisticated soul to finally arrive at an intensely political and personal form of artistic self-expression, his work not only redefined soul music as a creative force but also expanded its impact as an agent for social change.
Marvin Pentz Gay, Jr. (in the style of his hero Sam Cooke, he added the "e" to his surname as an adult) was born April 2, 1939 in Washington, D.C. The second of three children born to Marvin Sr., an ordained minister in the House of God a conservative Christian sect fusing elements of orthodox Judaism and Pentecostalism which imposes strict codes of conduct and observes no holidays he began singing in church at the age of three, quickly becoming a soloist in the choir. Later taking up piano and drums, music became Gaye's escape from the nightmarish realities of his home life throughout his childhood, his father beat him on an almost daily basis.

After graduating high school, Gaye enlisted in the U.S. Air Force; upon his discharge, he returned to Washington and began singing in a number of street-corner doo wop groups, eventually joining the Rainbows, a top local attraction. With the help of mentor Bo Diddley, the Rainbows cut "Wyatt Earp," a single for the Okeh label which brought them to the attention of singer Harvey Fuqua, who in 1958 recruited the group to become the latest edition of his backing ensemble, the Moonglows. After relocating to Chicago, the Moonglows recorded a series of singles for Chess including 1959's "Mama Loocie"; while touring the Midwest, the group performed in Detroit, where Gaye's graceful tenor and three-octave vocal range won the interest of fledgling impressario One of the most gifted, visionary, and enduring talents ever launched into orbit by the Motown hit machine, the career of Marvin Gaye blazed the trail for the continued evolution of popular black music: moving from lean, powerful R&B to stylish, sophisticated soul to finally arrive at an intensely political and personal form of artistic self-expression, his work not only redefined soul music as a creative force but also expanded its impact as an agent for social change.
Marvin Pentz Gay, Jr. (in the style of his hero Sam Cooke, he added the "e" to his surname as an adult) was born April 2, 1939 in Washington, D.C. The second of three children born to Marvin Sr., an ordained minister in the House of God a conservative Christian sect fusing elements of orthodox Judaism and Pentecostalism which imposes strict codes of conduct and observes no holidays he began singing in church at the age of three, quickly becoming a soloist in the choir. Later taking up piano and drums, music became Gaye's escape from the nightmarish realities of his home life throughout his childhood, his father beat him on an almost daily basis.

After graduating high school, Gaye enlisted in the U.S. Air Force; upon his discharge, he returned to Washington and began singing in a number of street-corner doo wop groups, eventually joining the Rainbows, a top local attraction. With the help of mentor Bo Diddley, the Rainbows cut "Wyatt Earp," a single for the Okeh label which brought them to the attention of singer Harvey Fuqua, who in 1958 recruited the group to become the latest edition of his backing ensemble, the Moonglows. After relocating to Chicago, the Moonglows recorded a series of singles for Chess including 1959's "Mama Loocie"; while touring the Midwest, the group performed in Detroit, where Gaye's graceful tenor and three-octave vocal range won the interest of fledgling impressario Berry Gordy Jr., who signed him to the Motown label in 1961.

While first working at Motown as a session drummer and playing on early hits by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, he met Gordy's sister Anna, and married her in late 1961. Upon mounting a solo career, Gaye struggled to find his voice, and early singles failed; finally, his fourth effort, "Stubborn Kind of Fellow," became a minor hit in 1962, and his next two singles the 1963 dance efforts "Hitch Hike" and "Can I Get a Witness" both reached the Top 30. With 1963's "Pride and Joy," Gaye scored his first Top Ten smash, but often found his role as a hitmaker stifling his desire to become a crooner of lush romantic ballads ran in direct opposition to Motown's all-important emphasis on chart success, and the ongoing battle between his artistic ambitions and the label's demands for commercial product continued throughout Gaye's long tenure with the company.

With 1964's Together, a collection of duets with Mary Wells, Gaye scored his first charting album; the duo also notched a number of hit singles together, including "Once Upon a Time" and "What's the Matter With You, Baby?" As a solo performer, Gaye continued to enjoy great success, scoring three superb Top Ten hits "Ain't That Peculiar," "I'll Be Doggone," and "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)" in 1965. In total, he scored some 39 Top 40 singles for Motown, many of which he also wrote and arranged; with Kim Weston, the second of his crucial vocal partners, he also established himself as one of the era's dominant duet singers with the stunning "It Takes Two."

However, Gaye's greatest duets were with Tammi Terrell, with whom he scored a series of massive hits penned by the team of Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson, including 1967's "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" and "Your Precious Love," followed by 1968's "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing" and "You're All I Need to Get By." The team's success was tragically cut short in 1967 when, during a concert appearance in Virginia, Terrell collapsed into Gaye's arms onstage, the first evidence of a brain tumor which abruptly ended her performing career and finally killed her on March 16, 1970. Her illness and eventual loss left Gaye deeply shaken, marring the chart-topping 1968 success of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," his biggest hit and arguably the pinnacle of the Motown Sound.

At the same time, Gaye was forced to cope with a number of other personal problems, not the least of which was his crumbling marriage. He also found the material he recorded for Motown to be increasingly irrelevant in the face of the tremendous social changes sweeping the nation, and after scoring a pair of 1969 Top Ten hits with "Too Busy Thinking About My Baby" and "That's the Way Love Is," he spent the majority of 1970 in seclusion, resurfacing early the next year with the self-produced What's Going On, a landmark effort heralding a dramatic shift in both content and style which forever altered the face of black music. A highly percussive album which incorporated jazz and classical elements to forge a remarkably sophisticated and fluid soul sound, What's Going On was a conceptual masterpiece which brought Gaye's deeply held spiritual beliefs to the fore to explore issues ranging from poverty and discrimination to the environment, drug abuse and political corruption; chief among the record's concerns was the conflict in Vietnam, as Gaye structured the songs around the point of view of his brother Frankie, himself a soldier recently returned from combat.

The ambitions and complexity of What's Going On baffled Berry Gordy, who initially refused to release the LP; he finally relented, although he maintained that he never understood the record's full scope. Gaye was vindicated when the majestic title track reached the number two spot in 1971, and both of the follow-ups, "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)" and "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)," also reached the Top Ten; the album's success guaranteed Gaye continued artistic control over his work and helped loosen the reins for other Motown artists, most notably Stevie Wonder, to also take command of their own destinies. Consequently, in 1972, Gaye changed directions again, agreeing to score the blaxploitation thriller Trouble Man; the resulting soundtrack was a primarily instrumental effort showcasing his increasing interest in jazz, although a vocal turn on the moody, minimalist title track scored another Top Ten smash.

The long-simmering eroticism implicit in much of Gaye's work reached its boiling point with 1973's Let's Get It On, one of the most sexually charged albums ever recorded; a work of intense lust and longing, it became the most commercially successful effort of his career, and the title cut became his second number one hit. Let's Get It On also marked another significant shift in Gaye's lyrical outlook, moving him from the political arena to a deeply personal, even insular stance which continued to define his subsequent work. After teaming with Diana Ross for the 1973 duet collection Marvin and Diana, he returned to work on his next solo effort, I Want You; however, the record's completion was delayed by his 1975 divorce from Anna Gordy. The dissolution of his marriage threw Gaye into a tailspin, and he spent much of the mid-1970s in divorce court; to combat Gaye's absence from the studio, Motown released the 1977 stopgap Live at the London Palladium, which spawned the single "Got to Give It Up (Pt. 1)," his final number one hit.

As a result of a 1976 court settlement, Gaye was ordered to make good on missed alimony payments by recording a new album, with the intention that all royalties earned from its sales would then be awarded to his ex-wife. The 1978 record, a two-LP set sardonically titled Here, My Dear, bitterly explored the couple's relationship in such intimate detail that Anna Gordy briefly considered suing Gaye for invasion of privacy. In the interim, he had remarried and begun work on another album, Lover Man, but scrapped the project when the lead single "Ego Tripping Out" a telling personal commentary presented as a duet between the spiritual and sexual halves of his identity, which biographer David Ritz later dubbed the singer's "divided soul" failed to chart. As his drug problems increased and his marriage to new wife Janis also began to fail, he relocated to Hawaii in an attempt to sort out his personal affairs.

In 1981, long-standing tax difficulties and renewed pressures from the I.R.S. forced Gaye to flee to Europe, where he began work on the ambitious In Our Lifetime, a deeply philosophical record which ultimately severed his long-standing relationship with Motown after he claimed the label had remixed and edited the album without his consent; additionally, Gaye stated that the finished artwork parodied his original intent, and that even the title had been changed to drop an all-important question mark. Upon signing with Columbia in 1982, he battled stories of erratic behavior and a consuming addiction to cocaine to emerge triumphant with Midnight Love, an assured comeback highlighted by the luminous Top Three hit "Sexual Healing." The record made Gaye a star yet again, and in 1983 he made peace with Berry Gordy by appearing on a television special celebrating Motown's silver anniversary. That same year, he also sang a soulful and idiosyncratic rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the NBA All-Star Game which instantly became one of the most controversial and legendary interpretations of the anthem ever performed; it was to be his final public appearance.

Gaye's career resurgence brought with it an increased reliance on cocaine; finally, his personal demons forced him back to the U.S., where he moved in with his parents in an attempt to regain control of his life. Tragically, the return home only exacerbated his spiral into depression; he and his father quarrelled bitterly, and Gaye threatened suicide on a number of occasions. Finally, on the afternoon of April 1, 1984 one day before his 45th birthday Gaye was shot and killed by the Reverend Marvin Gay, Sr. in the aftermath of a heated argument. In the wake of his death, Motown and Columbia teamed to issue two 1985 collections of outtakes, Dream of a Lifetime a compilation of erotic funk workouts teamed with spiritual ballads and the big-band inspired Romantically Yours. (Vulnerable, a collection of ballads which took over 12 years to complete, finally saw release in 1996.) With Gaye's death also came a critical re-evaluation of his work, which deemed What's Going On to be one of the landmark albums in pop history, and his 1987 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame permanently enshrined him among the pantheon of musical greats. Jason Ankeny


bron: www.allmusic.com

Een van de grootste artiesten van de vorige eeuw naar mijn mening. Helaas op veel te jonge leeftijd gestorven, vermoord. Ik word een beetje droevig als ik bedenk hoeveel pareltjes deze man nog had kunnen maken.
Persoonlijk ben ik het meest gecharmeerd van zijn jaren 60 nummers, die tot op de dag van vandaag vele artiesten hebben beinvloed.
Nummers als Stubborn kind of fellow, How sweet it is, it takes two, ain't no mountain high enough, I heard it through the grapevine, that's the way love is, zijn velen malen gecoverd en geimiteerd, maar haalden nooit de klasse van the man himself.
Ook de nummer uit de zeventiger jaren zijn legendarisch, Lets get it on en Sexual healing om er maar eens twee te noemen.

Huidige R&B kan niet eens tippen aan de illusie om ooit te tippen aan de genialiteit van deze artiest.

Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am, stuck in the middle with you.
What a day for a daydream.
  dinsdag 21 januari 2003 @ 22:52:45 #2
21829 Mr_knuppel
To Bone Or Not To Bone...
pi_8037561
Marvin Rulez... maakt mooie neukmuziek
Ja toch, zeker wel.. OF dan toch weer niet? WICKED!
pi_8051143
* Marvin rulezzz
It takes two baby, just me and you.....
En natuurlijk what's going on, die laatst nog gecoverd is..
Euh....?
pi_8053042
Marvin Gaye is erg relaxed. Ik heb eigenlijk alleen nog maar mp3's van hem; wat zijn nou DE albums die ik van de beste man moet hebben?
pi_8058400
Marvin Gaye absoluut prominent aanwezig in mijn verzameling CD's maar ook in mijn mp3-map...top!!
pi_8060647
quote:
Op woensdag 22 januari 2003 19:34 schreef Citroentje het volgende:
Marvin Gaye is erg relaxed. Ik heb eigenlijk alleen nog maar mp3's van hem; wat zijn nou DE albums die ik van de beste man moet hebben?
Misschien dat je het beste een greatest hits album kan kopen, en daarna kijken of je het echt wat vindt.
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am, stuck in the middle with you.
What a day for a daydream.
pi_8662676
Nu!! een live registratie op Ned 3!!!
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am, stuck in the middle with you.
What a day for a daydream.
  zondag 23 februari 2003 @ 11:37:41 #8
34839 4br4x4s
Enjoy the silence
pi_8662700
quote:
Op woensdag 22 januari 2003 19:34 schreef Citroentje het volgende:
Marvin Gaye is erg relaxed. Ik heb eigenlijk alleen nog maar mp3's van hem; wat zijn nou DE albums die ik van de beste man moet hebben?
Let's get it on .
  zondag 23 februari 2003 @ 14:28:04 #9
47840 Snuk
The Assmaster
pi_8665140
I heard it through the grapevine
not much longer would you be mine
Oh I heard it through the grapevine,
Oh and I'm just about to lose my mind!!

Running through my head... all the things she said...
  zondag 23 februari 2003 @ 14:29:02 #10
30919 mitt
Michael Corleone
pi_8665161
quote:
Op zondag 23 februari 2003 11:35 schreef julekes het volgende:
Nu!! een live registratie op Ned 3!!!
dat was wel lekker wakker worden
Op dinsdag 9 september 2003 13:57 schreef Dr.Daggla het volgende:
[13:57:43] <@Daggla> ik weet ei'k ook niet wie corleone is.. Uit ER ofzo?
pi_8665248
quote:
Op zondag 23 februari 2003 14:29 schreef mitt het volgende:

[..]

dat was wel lekker wakker worden


ja inderdaad, en hij speelde nummers uit zijn hele carriere
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am, stuck in the middle with you.
What a day for a daydream.
  zondag 23 februari 2003 @ 14:35:22 #12
25162 LLCoolR
This is a love song...
pi_8665291
Sexual Healing!
I believe in Heaven, I hope you understand...
  zondag 18 januari 2004 @ 21:24:12 #13
22396 Marvin
Xbox junkie
pi_16378018
Hoe heet dat nummer van m dan waar hij steeds zacht Marvin....Marvin... in zingt??
Euh....?
  maandag 19 januari 2004 @ 16:37:54 #14
46592 xplvr
X-Ray Papa Lima Victor Romeo
pi_16399600
quote:
Op zondag 18 januari 2004 21:24 schreef Marvin het volgende:
Hoe heet dat nummer van m dan waar hij steeds zacht Marvin....Marvin... in zingt??
Ik denk dat je het het nummer on the nightshift bedoelt, niet van Marvin Gaye, maar gedeeltelijk over Marvin Gaye. Is van de Commodores:

Marvin, he was a friend of mine
And he could sing a song
His heart in every line
Marvin sang of the joy and pain
He opened up our minds
And I still can hear him say
Aw talk to me so you can see
What's going on
Say you will sing your songs
Forevermore (evermore)

Laat mij in mijn zeven sloten, laat mij de draad volslagen kwijt.
pi_16498868
quote:
Op maandag 19 januari 2004 16:37 schreef xplvr het volgende:

[..]

Ik denk dat je het het nummer on the nightshift bedoelt, niet van Marvin Gaye, maar gedeeltelijk over Marvin Gaye. Is van de Commodores:

Marvin, he was a friend of mine
And he could sing a song
His heart in every line
Marvin sang of the joy and pain
He opened up our minds
And I still can hear him say
Aw talk to me so you can see
What's going on
Say you will sing your songs
Forevermore (evermore)


Die bedoelde ik inderdaad!
Euh....?
pi_16498960
Marvin

Let's get it on!

nu ja.. je suis moe

[i]"you left me standing here, a long long time ago"[/i]
pi_18103734
Vandaag is zijn sterfdag Morgen zijn verjaardag......da's geen geintje...
Het is ongetwijfeld gemakkelijker in blinde onderwerping te leven dan aan je bevrijding te werken: ook de doden zijn beter aangepast aan de aarde dan de levenden
pi_18125503
Mercy Me......
brokenbranches | last.fm
No time to be void, or save up on life, you've got to spend it all.
  vrijdag 2 april 2004 @ 13:43:25 #19
56758 Aschkael
Hitler bad, Aschkael good
pi_18130094
Een van mijn favoriete soul artiesten, en "what's going on" is echt een fantastische plaat. Volgens mij vanavond op nederland 3 om 21:00 een documentaire over hem...ben benieuwd
= there is a light that never goes out =
  vrijdag 2 april 2004 @ 20:20:43 #20
48870 Abbadon
Gevallen Engel
pi_18138828
schopje:

om 21:00 u op Ned 3: het uur van de wolf over Marvin Gaye
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
  vrijdag 2 april 2004 @ 21:17:47 #21
30919 mitt
Michael Corleone
pi_18139853
quote:
Op vrijdag 2 april 2004 20:20 schreef Abbadon het volgende:
schopje:

om 21:00 u op Ned 3: het uur van de wolf over Marvin Gaye


stukje gemist maar vooruit.
Op dinsdag 9 september 2003 13:57 schreef Dr.Daggla het volgende:
[13:57:43] <@Daggla> ik weet ei'k ook niet wie corleone is.. Uit ER ofzo?
  Moderator dinsdag 8 mei 2012 @ 16:06:55 #22
27682 crew  Bosbeetle
terminaal verdwaald
pi_111292857
*O* sitting on the dock of the bay *O*

Ohnee dat is otis reading :')
En mochten we vallen dan is het omhoog. - Krang (uit: Pantani)
My favourite music is the music I haven't yet heard - John Cage
Water: ijskoud de hardste - Gehenna
pi_111292903
Marvin! _O_ Sinds 2004 niet gepost :'(
Wanneer komt zijn nieuwe plaat? :? Wie weet dat?
pi_111292916
Oh nee! Ik wilde deze posten! :7 Wat een top versie! O+
pi_111293215
Nou omdat er in 2004 nog geen youtube was!

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