What's Going On

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What's Going On album cover
Album Information
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  • Artist: Marvin Gaye (See All Albums by Marvin Gaye)
  • Date Released: Jan 14, 2003

  • Genre: Hip-Hop/R&B, Style: Soul, R&B

  • Label: Motown

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:54

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Hua Hsu

eMusic Contributor

Hua Hsu edits the hip-hop section of URB Magazine and writes about music, culture and politics for Slate, the Village Voice, The Wire and various other magazine...more »

11.16.10
On his masterpiece, Marvin trades visions of love in search of more abstract ecstasies
2003 | Label: Motown

As the story goes: Berry Gordy, Motown’s mastermind and Gaye’s brother-in-law, loathed “What’s Going On,” going so far as to dismiss it as one of the worst songs he had ever heard. With the benefit of hindsight, this seems patently absurd. But from the perspective of Gordy, the Motown brand had been built on hit singles and a carefree, pop sensibility. Harmony was ideology: the duet suggested the possibility of social order, maybe even unity. As Gaye presented Gordy with “What’s Going On,” however, Motown was still adapting to a changed landscape. On the other end of a tumultuous decade, there emerged new possibilities for pop artists and audiences, new definitions of what it meant to be an American. Within a year, Gordy would move the Motown operation from Detroit to Los Angeles.

After a series of “near-violent” arguments, Gordy green-lit the single, if only to prove Gaye a fool. Gaye, of course, was instantly proved right. “What’s Going On” was a worldwide crossover hit, and it would eventually inspire stirring cover versions from the likes of Donny Hathaway, Big Youth, Les McCann and even Cyndi Lauper. It is a captivating song, from its opening horn sigh to the way its… read more »

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DOWNLOAD THE WHOLE DAMN THING

Musiclover912

Anyone who is into Motown of the '70s should never (and I mean NEVER) be without this album in their collection. This is the last great album of the Motown Detroit era, giving album credit to the Funk Brothers, and one of the last hits to come from 2648 West Grand Boulevard before moving to California. From the title track to "Inner City Blues", a story of monumental proportions was being told through the eyes of Marvin's brother Frankie, fresh from Vietnam, and Marvin, still recovering mentally from the tragic death of Tammi Terrell. Well worth the downloads!

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never gets old

stopbeatingme

simply one of my favorite albums ever. If you love music, you have to get this, period.

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Mellow

margiewho

I like listening to this in the evening.

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From Back in the Day

jamesoh

But this is timeless music that sings to a part of me that still says what is going on. Right along with Imagine it should be the anthem of us all ....still. get it!

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Classic

germ416

Best album of all time!!!

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Motown's First Masterpiece!!!!!

isaacmusicman

Even though Marvin Gaye had tons, and tons, and tons of great songs before "What's Going On", none, and I do mean none of his albums ever came close to this one! The fact that Marvin was so defiant of Berry Gordy, to go ahead with this bombshell of just great music, stuns the mind. We all know the story: Marvin was tired of being a prettyboy(just like Stevie), and after talking with brother about Vietnam, and the tragic death of Ms. Tammi Terrell, Marvin could not take it anymore! He had to let it out, and what better way then through music! This is beyond an album, it's a documentary! The production of the record was also stunning, having it as a complete suite was priceless. I could go on and on, but why? You all know the deal, it worth you time, your attention, and the downloads!!!!!

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They Say All Music Guide

What’s Going On is not only Marvin Gaye’s masterpiece, it’s the most important and passionate record to come out of soul music, delivered by one of its finest voices, a man finally free to speak his mind and so move from R&B sex symbol to true recording artist. With What’s Going On, Gaye meditated on what had happened to the American dream of the past — as it related to urban decay, environmental woes, military turbulence, police brutality, unemployment, and poverty. These feelings had been bubbling up between 1967 and 1970, during which he felt increasingly caged by Motown’s behind-the-times hit machine and restrained from expressing himself seriously through his music. Finally, late in 1970, Gaye decided to record a song that the Four Tops’ Obie Benson had brought him, “What’s Going On.” When Berry Gordy decided not to issue the single, deeming it uncommercial, Gaye refused to record any more material until he relented. Confirmed by its tremendous commercial success in January 1971, he recorded the rest of the album over ten days in March, and Motown released it in late May. Besides cementing Marvin Gaye as one of the most important artists in pop music, What’s Going On was far and away the best full-length to issue from the singles-dominated Motown factory, and arguably the best soul album of all time.
Conceived as a statement from the viewpoint of a Vietnam veteran (Gaye’s brother Frankie had returned from a three-year hitch in 1967), What’s Going On isn’t just the question of a baffled soldier returning home to a strange place, but a promise that listeners would be informed by what they heard (that missing question mark in the title certainly wasn’t a typo). Instead of releasing listeners from their troubles, as so many of his singles had in the past, Gaye used the album to reflect on the climate of the early ’70s, rife with civil unrest, drug abuse, abandoned children, and the spectre of riots in the near past. Alternately depressed and hopeful, angry and jubilant, Gaye saved the most sublime, deeply inspired performances of his career for “Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology),” “Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler),” and “Save the Children.” The songs and performances, however, furnished only half of a revolution; little could’ve been accomplished with the Motown sound of previous Marvin Gaye hits like “Stubborn Kind of Fellow” and “Hitch Hike” or even “I Heard It Through the Grapevine.” What’s Going On, as he conceived and produced it, was like no other record heard before it: languid, dark, and jazzy, a series of relaxed grooves with a heavy bottom, filled by thick basslines along with bongos, conga, and other percussion. Fortunately, this aesthetic fit in perfectly with the style of longtime Motown session men like bassist James Jamerson and guitarist Joe Messina. When the Funk Brothers were, for once, allowed the opportunity to work in relaxed, open proceedings, they produced the best work of their careers (and indeed, they recognized its importance before any of the Motown executives). Jamerson’s playing on “Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)” functions as the low-end foundation but also its melodic hook, while an improvisatory jam by Eli Fountain on alto sax furnished the album’s opening flourish. (Much credit goes to Gaye himself for seizing on these often tossed-off lines as precious; indeed, he spent more time down in the Snakepit than he did in the control room.) Just as he’d hoped it would be, What’s Going On was Marvin Gaye’s masterwork, the most perfect expression of an artist’s hope, anger, and concern ever recorded. [This 2002 edition of What's Going On includes the B-side versions of "God Is Love" and "Sad Tomorrows" as bonus tracks.] – John Bush

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