What's Going On is the tenth
studio album by
soul
musician
Marvin Gaye, released May 21,
1971 on the Motown-subsidiary label
Tamla
Records.
Recording sessions for the album took place
in June 1970 and March–May 1971 at Hitsville U.S.A.
, Golden World and
United Sound Studios in Detroit, Michigan
and at The Sound
Factory in West Hollywood, California
. The first Marvin Gaye album credited as
produced solely by the artist himself,
What's Going On is
a unified
concept album consisting of
nine songs, most of which lead into the next. It has also been
categorized as a
song cycle, since the
album ends on a
reprise to the album's
opening
theme. The album is told from
the point of view of a
Vietnam War
veteran returning to the country he had been fighting for, and
seeing nothing but injustice, suffering and hatred.
What's Going On was the first album on which
Motown Records' main studio band, the group
of
session musicians known as the
Funk Brothers, received an
official credit. Featuring introspective lyrics about
drug abuse,
poverty and
the
Vietnam War, the album was also the
first to reflect the beginning of a new trend in soul music.
What's Going On was both an immediate commercial and
critical success and has endured as a classic of early-1970s soul.
In worldwide critics/artists and public surveys, it has been voted
as one of the landmark recordings in pop music history and is
considered to be one of the greatest albums ever made. In 2003, the
album was ranked number 6 on
Rolling
Stone magazine's list of
the 500 greatest albums of
all time.
Conception
Background
In late March 1970, Marvin Gaye had fallen into a deep
depression following the death of his
singing partner and fellow Motown artist
Tammi Terrell, who died of a
brain tumor earlier that month. Gaye refused to
record or perform, going as far as to attempt an athletic career in
football with the
Detroit Lions of the
NFL. After an unsuccessful tryout
for the team, Gaye came in contact with musician
Al Cleveland and the
Four
Tops'
Renaldo "Obie" Benson, who were
working on a politically conscious song called "
What's Going On". Gaye assisted
Cleveland and Benson in completing the
composition, and planned to produce the
song as a recording for the Motown act
The
Originals. However, Cleveland and "Obie" Benson persuaded Gaye
to record the song himself. In June of 1970, Gaye recorded "What's
Going On" and his own composition, "
God Is
Love", which further expanded Gaye's inclusion of his
spirituality in his music.
Recording such material was a different direction for Gaye, who had
previously performed and recorded
radio-formatted and contemporary songs that
were more representative of the Gordy-produced
Motown Sound rather than politically or
socially-conscious music. When Gaye delivered the songs as the
sides for his next
45 RPM single his brother-in-law, Motown Records CEO
Berry Gordy, Jr., objected to the
material and refused to release the recordings. After already
permitting other Motown artists to record and release material that
hinted social and political themes –
Edwin
Starr's "
War",
The Temptations' "
Ball of
Confusion", both released earlier in 1970, and
Stevie Wonder's "
Heaven Help Us All", released later in
the year – Gordy considered "What's Going On" far too political to
be released on radio and also too unfamiliar for the
popular music and sound of that time to be
commercially successful. Gaye, however, stood his ground and
continued to lobby his case to label executives and to Gordy, as he
did not want to be bound by Gordy's or Motown's version of music.
In an interview for
Rolling
Stone magazine, Marvin Gaye discussed what had shaped his
view on more socially conscious themes in music and the conception
of his eleventh full-length, non-duets studio album:
Gordy eventually gave in, certain that the record would flop. Upon
its release in January 1971, "What's Going On" became Motown's
fastest selling single at that point, going to the number-one spot
on the R&B charts for five weeks and number-two for three weeks
on the Pop listings, with "
Joy to the World" by
Three Dog Night retaining the top
spot.
Recording
After this success, Berry Gordy requested an entire accompanying
album. Gaye began recording the tracks that would eventually
comprise his best-known work, the
What's Going On album,
handling all of his own
production
and some of his own
songwriting. The
entire album was originally mixed in Detroit, with Marvin Gaye out
of town and not present. This mix, dubbed "The Detroit Mix", was
scrapped and redone, with Gaye present, in Los Angeles.
The content of
What's Going On was that of a politically
charged and deeply personal Motown album, and was notable for
including elements of
jazz and
classical music instrumentation and
arrangements. The record was among the
first soul albums to place heavy emphasis on political and social
concerns such as
environmentalism,
political corruption,
drug abuse, and the
Vietnam War, in which Gaye's brother,
Frankie Gaye, had served for three years for
the
U.S. Army.
However, after hearing a preliminary mix of the record, Berry Gordy
was not offended by Gaye's embrace of
countercultural politics, but was bothered
by the album's format, which had each song leading to the next.
This flow of sound was unconventional and not suited for
radio airplay, conflicting with Gordy's main
focus - the commercial aspect. The album's stylistic use of a
song cycle gave it a cohesive feel and
led
What's Going On to become known as the first soul
music
concept album.
Reception
Initial response
The critical and commercial success of the album was immediate and
significant.
What's Going On remained on the
Billboard Pop Album Charts for over a year and
sold over two million copies until the end of 1972, making it
Marvin Gaye's best-selling album to that date until he released
Let's Get It On in 1973.
In
addition, What's Going On received the highest ratings
from several leading American
publications, including Time, Rolling Stone (who named it "Album of the
Year"), The New York
Times, and Billboard, who gave it the Billboard
Trend setter Award of 1971. Upon release,
Rolling Stone magazine music critic
Vince Aletti praised
What's Going
On for its thematic approach towards social and political
concerns, while also mentioning the surprise of Motown releasing
such an album. In a review of the album and
Stevie Wonder's
Where I'm Coming From, Aletti
wrote:
Later on, many artists from different musical genres covered songs
from the album, most notably live recordings by
Aretha Franklin ("Wholy Holy" on
Amazing
Grace) and
Donny Hathaway
("What's Going On" on
Donny Hathaway Live), as well as
Robert Palmer's medley of
"Mercy Mercy Me/
I Want
You", among others. "Mercy Mercy Me" was featured as the
b-side to
The
Strokes' single "You Only Live Once".
What's Going On has been reissued on
casette tape and
compact disc as well. In 2001, a "Deluxe
Edition" 2-CD version of the album was released by Motown, which
included the original LP as released, the discarded "Detroit Mix"
of the album, and the
mono 45 RPM
mixes of the singles.
Also included was a
recording of Gaye's first live concert performance after two years
away from the stage following Tammi Terrell's illness and death,
performed at The Kennedy Center Auditorium
, Washington
DC
, on June 1, 1972.
Awards and accolades
In 2004, the album's title track was ranked number 4 on
Rolling
Stone's list of the
500 greatest
songs of all time. A 1999 critics poll conducted by British
newspaper
Guardian/Observer named it the "Greatest Album
of the 20th Century".
In 1997, What's Going On was named
the 17th greatest album of all time in a Music
of the Millennium poll
conducted in the United
Kingdom
by HMV Group, Channel 4, The
Guardian and Classic
FM. In 1998
Q
magazine readers placed it at number 97, while in 2001 the
TV network VH1 placed
it at number 4.
In 2003, it was one of 50 recordings chosen
that year by the Library of Congress
to be added to the National Recording
Registry. What's Going On was ranked #6 on
Rolling Stone magazine's 2003 list of the
500 Greatest Albums of All
Time, one of three Gaye albums to be included, preceded by
1973's
Let's Get It On
(#165) and 1978's
Here My Dear
(#462). The album is Gaye's highest-ranking entry on the list, as
well as several other publications' lists.
Track listing
All songs produced by Marvin Gaye.
Side one
- "What's Going On"
(Al Cleveland, Marvin Gaye, Renaldo
Benson) – 3:53
- "What's Happening
Brother" (James Nyx, M.
Gaye) – 2:43
- "Flyin' High "
(M. Gaye, Anna
Gordy Gaye, Elgie Stover) –
3:49
- "Save the Children"
(Cleveland, M. Gaye, Benson) –
4:03
- "God Is Love"
(M. Gaye, A. Gaye, Stover,
Nyx) – 1:41
- "Mercy Mercy Me "
(M. Gaye) – 3:16
Side two
- "Right On"
(Earl DeRouen, M.
Gaye) – 7:31
- "Wholy Holy" (Benson,
Cleveland, M. Gaye) – 3:08
- "Inner City
Blues " (M. Gaye, Nyx) –
5:26
Chart history
Album
| Title |
Information |
| What's Going On |
* US [[Billboard 200|Pop Albums]] #6 (1971) * US Pop Albums
#154 (1984) * Top R&B Albums #1 (9 weeks) |} ===Singles=== {|
class="wikitable" border="1" |- !Title !Information |- |"[[What's
Going On (song)|What's Going On]]" | * Tamla single 54201, January
20, 1971 * [[B-side]]: "[[God Is Love (song)|God Is Love]]" (alt.
version) * US [[Billboard Hot 100]] #2 * US [[Hot R&B/Hip-Hop
Singles & Tracks|R&B Singles]] #1 (5 weeks) |- |"[[Mercy
Mercy Me (The Ecology)]]" | * Tamla single 54207, June 10, 1971 *
B-side: "Sad Tomorrows" (alt. version of "[[Flyin' High (In the
Friendly Sky)]]") * US Pop Singles #4 * US R&B Singles #1 (2
weeks) |- |"[[Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)]]" |
- Tamla single 54209, September, 1971
- B-side: "Wholy Holy"
- US Pop Singles #9
- US R&B Singles #1 (2 weeks)
|
Personnel
- All lead vocals by Marvin Gaye
- Produced by Marvin Gaye
- Orchestra Conducted and Arranged by David Van De Pitte
- Background Voices:
- Instrumentation by The Funk
Brothers
- Katherine Marking – graphic
design
- Alana Coghlan – graphic design
- John Matousek – mastering
- James Hendin – Photography
- Curtis McNair – Art Direction
References
- Discogs.com - What's Going On (US LP). Discogs.
Retrieved on 2008-08-17.
- Acclaimed Music - What's Going On.
www.acclaimedmusic.net. Retrieved on 2008-08-23.
- Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All
Time. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 2008-08-17.
- Slant Magazine Music Review: Marvin Gaye: What's
Going On
- The RS 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 2008-08-23.