What's Going on | 
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Artist: Marvin Gaye Label: Motown Category: Music
List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $5.08 You Save: $4.90 (49%)
New (58) Used (24) Collectible (2) from $3.32
Avg. Customer Rating: 179 reviews Sales Rank: 1121
Format: Extra Tracks, Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.7 x 4.7 x 0.4
MPN: 064022 UPC: 044006402222 EAN: 0044006402222 ASIN: B00007FOMP
Release Date: January 14, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!
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| Tracks:
| • | 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) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
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
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| Customer Reviews: Read 174 more reviews...
Songs of life and death July 5, 2008 Wow. When it comes to an album like What's Going On, it's easy to become jaded. Critics have been praising this thing since the day of its conception, have been hailing it as a masterpiece since before you even knew how to read, have apparently been putting it on a pedestal since before Marvin Gaye was born. It gets old after a while. It's the kind of album that becomes cliche before you even hear it, that's the kind of thing you can have a conversation about even if you don't own a copy. It's the Dark Side Of The Moon of soul.
Well, I have some advice for you: If you don't already own a copy, buy one right now. Put on some headphones. Turn the volume up. Close your eyes. Listen. And fly away. This album has an entire world in it, a world of wah-wah guitars and moaning strings and divine horns and mind-enveloping percussion. It's a world of textures and feelings. Emotion bleeds out of every gorgeous layer of sound, radiates from every nook and cranny. It's the kind of thing you can swim in. Listen: There's joy, despair, anguish, hope, suffering, pain, beauty. There's life in it. The critics were right on the money with this one.
God IS Love... June 25, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Along with 'Kind of Blue' and 'Songs In The Key of Life', this cd, album, whatever...is the absolute embodiment of what music is about. Marvin was touched by the all-encompassing spirit that moves through and around all of us. 'What's Going On' speaks to a place in us that can only be described as seminal, pure, suigeneris...priceless.
Should be part of American History, and one of the greatest albums of all-time June 9, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
1.) This should be taught in schools. 2.) One of the most cohesive albums I've ever heard. A true, true, true classic.
WHAT'S GOING ON....IS (STILL) WHAT'S GOING ON ! June 8, 2008 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
Is Marvin Gaye's masterpiece, What's Going On, outdated?
Listen...
War, crime, poverty, drugs, inflation, taxation, ecological disasters. These are some of the social and political issues that Marvin Gaye addresses on his brilliant 1971 album, What's Going On.
And in 2008?
Take a look around. These same issues are (still) What's Going On.
This album couldn't be any more direct in identifying the world's most urgent problems, or in suggesting that the world slow down and take a spiritual and peaceful approach to solving these problems.
Outdated? No.
A masterpiece? Yes.
The atmospheric, funky, and smooth soul music is powerfully emotional, and perfectly highlights the thought provoking themes. Jazzy saxophones, flutes, congas, and funky bass lines accompany Gaye's soulful piano, heartfelt vocal expressions, and the sweet Motown orchestration. It all comes together beautifully.
Every song has a social conscience, and each one addresses one or more of the important issues that face the world, then and now.
What's Going On: Mother, mother There's too many of you crying Brother, brother, brother There's far too many of you dying
What's Happening Brother: Can't find no work, can't find no job, my friend Money is tighter than it's ever been
Save The Children: I just want to ask a question Who really cares? To save a world in despair Who really cares?
Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology): Oh mercy mercy me Ah, things ain't what they used to be What about this overcrowded land How much more abuse from man can she stand?
Inner City Blues (Makes Me Wanna Holler): Rockets, moon shots Spend it on the have nots Money, we make it 'Fore we see it, you take it
What's Going On is simply a brilliant and satisfying album. It couldn't be any better. The music is great, it's socially and politically relevant, and even as it tackles difficult issues, it's message is spiritually uplifting and positive. There are no romantic love songs here. They'll be on the next album. This isn't a sweeping epic, either, and more power to it for not being one. That would overwhelm Marvin's message. This is music for the people. For God's Children.
What's Going On.
A tour de peace. May 10, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Using questions, gestures of friendship, and ghetto lingo, Marvin Gaye makes powerful statements against war, pollution, poverty, drug addiction, and government overreach. The title track ("What's Going On") was a watershed in Vietnam-era protest music and for Motown Records. As Ben Edmonds's jacket notes explain, Gaye engaged in passive resistance (refusing to produce any more music) after Motown declined to release a single of "What's Going On." Gaye won the stalemate and so, eventually, did Motown after the song became a huge hit, giving the label its last smash before it left Detroit for Los Angeles. Motown's corporatist conformity and move to the Sun Belt were emblematic of trends blowing through American culture, trends so eloquently criticized by Gaye throughout the CD "What's Going On." Gaye movingly articulates emotions of the bewildered man of G-d amid the Silent Majority. The overseas militarism and domestic caution of the 1940s and 1950s had crashed headlong into the counterculture and civil rights movements, sending people and institutions careening in all directions. Rising as a musical Martin Luther King, Gaye tried to pull the strands back together, using appeals to America's Christian heritage and our common humanity. The job was/is too much for any one man but Gaye left an imperishable testament that current and future generations would do well to absorb. "What's Going On" the CD also displays notable worldly sophistication. "Inner City Blues" has the artist connecting hyper government spending and activity with rising taxes, shrinking economic prospects, and shorter physical life spans. (Give that man a Nobel Prize!). "...No, no baby, this ain't living No, no, no Inflation, no chance To increase finance Bills pile up sky high Send that boy off to die..." Gaye implores America to get back to long-term thinking. Less than two years after the 1971 release of "What's Going On," the U.S. Supreme Court declared all unborn children nonpersons through its infamous Roe v. Wade decision. Surveying the ongoing abortion holocaust that has disproportionately impacted blacks (15 million black babies dead and counting), listening to "Save The Children" is eerie and deeply saddening (especially since Gaye's prophetic plea was ignored). "...Live, live for life But let live everybody Live life for the children Oh, for the children You see, let's save the children Let's save all the children..." Driving home the point is a jacket photograph of the artist standing in an empty playground. Besides peaceful tones and appeals to love in the tradition of Nat King Cole, the enduring appeal of Marvin Gaye's music is its overall hopefulness. What's the cure for America's meltdown? George Harrison called it "unfolding your love." Others might refer to it as uncompartmentalized religion. Marvin referenced it as "Wholy Holy." "...Oh, Lord We can rock the world's foundation Yes, we can Better believe it Wholy holy together and wholy Holler love across the nation..."
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