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Audio CD review:
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| Marvin Gaye - M.P.G./That's the Way Love Is |
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Band: Marvin Gaye Title: M.P.G./That's the Way Love Is Rating: Release Date: 05 March, 2001 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: Too Busy Thinking About My Baby 2: This Magic Moment 3: End of Our Road 4: Seek and You Shall Find 5: Memories 6: Only a Lonely Man Would Know 7: It's a Bitter Pill to Swallow 8: More Than a Heart Can Stand 9: Try Me True Love 10: I Got to Get to California 11: It Don't Take Much to Keep Me 12: Gonna Give Her All the Love I've Got 13: Yesterday 14: Groovin' 15: I Wish It Would Rain 16: That's the Way Love Is 17: How Can I Forget 18: Abraham, Martin and John 19: Gonna Keep on Tryin' Till I Win Your Love 20: No Time for Tears 21: Cloud Nine 22: Don't You Miss Me a Little Bit Baby 23: So Long |
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Customer Reviews MPG is Marvin's best '60's ablum, TTWLI is good too! They feature terrific sound quality and great packaging. These import two-fers' are terrific. The albums included are: M. P. G. (1969) **** (4 out of 5) Despite Marvin's long stream of hit singles, this was his first album to actually crack the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot 200 albums chart and is his biggest seller of the sixties. M. P. G. reteams Marvin with "I Heard It Through The Grapevine-producer Norman Whitfield, and the two manage to overcome the typical Motown formula and create a surprisingly focused work. A sense of consistency (which is what's missing from most sixties Motown efforts) is brought to the set by the blisteringly lean arrangements and some of Marvin's most impassioned vocals ever. The big smash hit is "Too Busy Thinking About My Baby" (#4 Pop, #1 R&B), which is easily one of his best singles. The song's bouncy timbre made it the perfect (and somewhat surprising) follow up to the bone-chilling smash "I Heard It Through The Grapevine. " Some irresistible light blues is brought to the set with the incredible cuts "Seek And You Shall Find," "More Than A Heart Can Stand," and the hit "End Of The Road" (#40 Pop, #7 R&B). The disc plays out in a surprising satisfying manner, with the clever refrain of "Only A Lonely Man Would Know" laying down nicely beside the funky "It's A Bitter Pill To Swallow. " The only tracks that miss the boat is the forgettable cover of "This Magic Moment" (which is also placed too early in the album) and the banal "Memories," which has nothing to distinguish it aside from Marvin's powerful performance. Thankfully these two missteps are listenable and M. P. G. emerges as Marvin's best solo album of the sixties. THAT'S THE WAY LOVE IS (1970) **** (4 out of 5) Produced by Norman Whitfield again, THAT'S THE WAY LOVE IS continues the excellence of M. P. G. and is possibly the most underrated album from the first decade of Marvin's career. The tense and mournful title track (#7 Pop, #2 R&B) was another hit single, cracking the Top Ten on both charts. The formulaic "How Can I Forget" (#41 Pop, #18 R&B) was almost a hit, but it (along "No More Tears") is actually one of the disc's weakest moments. The sweeping "Gonna Give Her All The Love I Got (which received some airplay as the flip side of the "How Can I Forget" single) is really splendid and should have been a A-side release. Four covers appear on this recording, and they may be the most surprising songs here. Marvin's renditions of "Yesterday" and "Abraham, Martin, and John" are stunning and absolutely heartbreaking. Shockingly enough, both manage to top the original recordings (by The Beatles and Dion, respectively). The remaining two covers ("Groovin'" and "Cloud Nine") are much less effective, but they're perfectly solid. Throw in the vintage Motown sound of "Gonna Keep Tryin' Till I Win You're Love" and a few other catchy numbers and you have another excellent Gaye-Whitfield release. On this record, there are flashes of the brilliance that would come later in Marvin's career; although it's still pretty unbelievable that the peerless masterpiece WHAT'S GOING ON would be released in little less than a year. .
Two classic albums from Marvin The collection opens with Too busy thinking about my baby, a top five hit for Marvin in Britain and America. The first album featured here, MPG, was released in 1969 and the second, That's the way love is, was released in 1970. The follow-up single, That's the way love is, was atop ten American hit but missed the chart completely in Britain. How can I forget you became a minor American hit, but in Britain it was put on the B-side of Abraham Martin and John (my favorite Marvin Gaye song). The tribute to Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King and John F Kennedy gave Marvin a top ten UK hit, but it was Smokey Robinson and the Miracles who had the American hit with that song. From these two albums, there was one other minor American hit, The end of our road, which was not released as a single in Britain. The other tracks making up these albums include covers of This magic moment (Drifters), Yesterday (Beatles) and Grooving (Rascals) as well as songs that had been hits for other Motown artists and some interesting but obscure original songs. If you already have one of Marvin's hits collections and wish to explore further, you will certainly enjoy the two albums presented here.
2 Great Lost Gems from Motown
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