| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 1517 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $4.49 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 2003-01-14 |
| Label: | Motown |
| UPC: | 044006402222 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Motown |
| ASIN: | B00007FOMP |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on What's Going On by Motown
- What's Going On
- What's Happening Brother
- Flyin' High (In The Friendly Sky)
- Save the Children
- God Is Love
- Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)
- Right On
- Wholy Holy
- Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)
- God Is Love (Bonus Track)
- Sad Tomorrows a/k/a "Flyin' High (In The Friendly Sky)" (Bonus Track)
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Amazon.com essential recording
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
Customer Reviews
Gaye's Moon Shot - Without Peer! - Reviewed on 2008-11-07
1 customer found this review helpful.
A key chapter in the apocryphal back-story of Motown Records has it that when Berry Gordy the label's founder first heard Marvin Gaye's conceptual masterwork he simply wanted to shelve it as the work of a self-indulgent "artiste" who had lost his commercial bearings - since nothing about the record conformed to Gordy's hugely successful "Motown Sound" formula that routinely cranked out hits in apolitical, three minute increments.
It is only when Smokey Robinson intervened and told Gordy that "he did not quite know how to classify Gaye's new offering but he was certain that it was divinely inspired" (or words to that effect) that the Motown chieftain relented and agreed to a "limited" pressing. Thank you Smokey Robinson!
Even after hundreds of plays, What's Going On still leaves me speechless and groping for new superlatives. This is a mesmerizing and timeless record that is literally the soul and spirit of an extremely troubled man turned inside out with his humanity and heartache pressed into every groove.
Coming off a multi-year hiatus from recording in 1971 with his life in shambles and the social and racial fabric of the nation unraveling, Gaye was able to channel his own emotional fragility into a staggering and moving testimony to life on the streets that so poignently tapestried the crosscurrents of joy, beauty, redemption, drugs, despair, racism, anger and hopelessness - all within the framework of a near perfect thirty nine minute song cycle.
Of course you'll recognize the three major hits - What's Going On, Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology) and Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler) however it the quieter, more plaintive pieces such as Save the Children and Wholy Holy that allow Marvin to open his veins and infuse the entire record with supernatural grace.
What's Going On is Gaye's urban gospel of alienation told against a musical score that remains to this day a reference standard for rock-funk-R&B fusion and forms the foundation for what is IMHO the single greatest achievement in popular recording since Chuck Berry laid down his first three chords. WGO should be a cornerstone title for any collection not only for what the record once meant but for the meaning that it continues to offer new audiences.
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Book Subjects
- Pop
- R&B
- Soul/R & B
- Soul/R&B
- Soul/Reggae/Rhythm & Blues