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Cream were one of music's finest supergroups. But they almost never happened at the hands of another icon. Read more about it ...
Exploring the origins of 'I Heard It Through The Grapevine', the utterly iconic Motown masterpiece that Marvin Gaye made his ...
In “What’s Happening Brother,” a shimmering cut from his classic 1971 album “What’s Going On,” Marvin Gaye sings from the perspective of an American soldier who’s just returned home ...
A pair of velvety Marvin Gaye voices now rode along together. "That's where the multiple lead vocals came from," said engineer Bob Olhsson. "He liked the sound of both. It was a process.
In the meantime, Marvin Gaye songs — the ones everybody know and love already — are still streamed and downloaded around 20 million times a month, according to the BBC.
Fifty years after Marvin Gaye's masterpiece dropped on May 21, 1971, the groundbreaking LP, which remains Motown's best-selling album, is more relevant than ever. We go inside the making of the ...
You listen to Marvin Gaye, this album right here, he’s singing to you.” CNN documentary senior producer Elise Zeiger told TheWrap that Lee was a natural choice to include in the documentary.
MG3Entertainment/Youtube Marvin is the adopted son of the late Marvin Gaye and his late wife Anna Gordy Gaye. The pair welcomed Marvin during their ill-fated union from 1963 until 1977.
Marvin Gaye’ s son has demanded his estranged wife be shut down in her attempt to gather information about trusts set up by the late musician, RadarOnline.com has learned.
The way Marvin Gaye figured it, if Lem Barney and Mel Farr of the Detroit Lions could sing with him on a landmark recording, the Motown superstar could play in the NFL. Forty years ago this summer ...
Marvin Gaye is getting the biopic treatment with "What's Going On," directed by Allen Hughes, one-half of the Hughes Brothers ("Menace II Society," "Dead Presidents").
A pair of velvety Marvin Gaye voices now rode along together. "That's where the multiple lead vocals came from," said engineer Bob Olhsson. "He liked the sound of both. It was a process.