May 1, 1972 was a whirlwind day of celebration in
Marvin Gaye's hometown of Washington, D.C. Designated "Marvin Gaye
Day," it began with Gaye giving a speech to students at Cardozo High, the
school he'd attended, before he and his parents were ushered by motorcade to
other points around the city. They visited the office of D.C.'s mayor, Walter
Washington, who presented Gaye with a key to the city. A VIP reception followed
at the U.S. House of Representatives' Rayburn House Office Building, before the
evening's hotly anticipated main event at the Kennedy Center: Marvin Gaye's
first live performance in four years. After opening acts and onstage
testimonials by others, Gaye finally
The
legendary concert – Marvin Gaye's only live performance of his iconic 1971
What's Going On album in full – was recorded. After being shelved for decades,
the recording was eventually released on CD in 2001 within Motown/UMe's
expanded deluxe edition for Gaye's What's Going On album. Never before issued
on vinyl or as a standalone CD, What's Going On Live is newly mixed by John
Morales at M+M Mix Studios and mastered by Alex Abrash at AA Mastering for its
October 18 release by Motown/UMe. The album is making its vinyl debut in black
2LP and limited turquoise 2LP editions
with deluxe gatefold packaging, in addition to CD and standard digital, ADM
(Apple Digital Masters), and 96kHz/24-bit HD digital audio editions. The vinyl
and CD packages include rare photos from Gaye's performance and new liner notes
by Marvin Gaye biographer David Ritz.
What's Going
On Live includes the only known live recordings of Gaye performing four songs:
"That's The Way Love Is" and "You," which he opened the
D.C. concert with as part of a meditative 13-minute medley; "Right
On;" and "Wholy Holy." Due to an unfortunate lag in switching
the first reel-to-reel tape to a second one during the concert, Gaye's
performance of "Mercy Mercy Me" from the What's Going On album was
not successfully recorded.
Gaye did not
tour in 1972, and he had not toured in years prior, following the collapse and
subsequent tragic death of his singing partner Tammi Terrell. While he was on
top of the world with the massive success of What's Going On, he much preferred
the studio to live performance, suffering from acute stage fright throughout
his career. That year, his only live shows were the D.C. concert and one other,
a brief set in Chicago on September 27, which was filmed and recorded for the
Save the Children documentary film.
Years later,
Gaye reflected on his "Marvin Gaye Day" experience in Washington, D.C.,
telling David Ritz, "I understood that I'd been punishing myself by
staying away so long. I'd been denying myself love, and that's one of the most
foolish things a man can do. It was certainly the biggest day of my parents'
life. Here they came to Washington in the thirties without a penny, and their
son was being honored by the mayor as some sort of hero. At least on this one
day I felt like I made Father proud."
What's Going
On Live's extended time spent unreleased parallels the long-delayed release of
another shelved Marvin Gaye project from 1972. The Kennedy Center concert was
recorded just as Gaye's new single, "You're The Man," was released,
but he did not perform the song in his set. Earlier this year, Motown/UMe
released Gaye's never-issued 1972 Tamla/Motown album, You're The Man, in 2LP
gatefold vinyl, CD, and digital editions. The album's release has been met with excitement and widespread critical
acclaim.
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