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Here, My Dear

 
Album Review: Here, My Dear

  • Artist: Marvin Gaye
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: December 15, 1978
  • Total Time: 72:56
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

Pre-dating the voyeuristic tendencies of reality television by 20 years, Here, My Dear is the sound of divorce on record -- exposed in all of its tender-nerve glory for the world to consume. During the amazing success of I Want You and his stellar Live at the London Palladium album, Marvin Gaye was served with divorce papers from his then-wife Anna Gordy Gaye (sister of Motown Records founder Berry Gordy). One of the conditions of the settlement was that Gordy Gaye would receive an extensive percentage of royalties as well as a portion of the advance for his next album. Initially, Gaye was contemplating giving less than his best effort, as he wouldn't stand to receive any money, but then reconsidered at the last moment. The result is a two-disc-long confessional on the deterioration of their marriage; starting from the opening notes of the title track, Gaye viciously cuts with every lyric deeper into an explanation of why the relationship died the way it did. Gaye uses the album, right down to its packaging, to exorcise his personal demons with subtle visual digs and less-than-subtle lyrical attacks. The inner sleeve had a pseudo-board-game-like illustration entitled "Judgment," in which a man's hand passes a record to a woman's. One side of the sleeve has Gaye's music and recording equipment, while the other side of the board included jewelry and other luxurious amenities. Musically the album retains the high standards Gaye set in the early '70s, but you can hear the agonizing strain of recent events in his voice, to the point where even several vocal overdubs can't save his delivery. Stripped to its bare essence, Here, My Dear is no less than brilliantly unsettling and a perfect cauterization to a decade filled with personal turmoil. ~ Rob Theakston, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Here, My Little Dear Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (2:48)
I Met a Little Girl (Lyrics) Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (5:02)
When Did You Stop Loving Me, When Did I Stop Loving You (Lyrics) Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (6:16)
Anger (Lyrics) Marvin Gaye, Ed Townsend, Delta Ashby Marvin Gaye (4:03)
Is That Enough Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (7:46)
Everybody Needs Love Marvin Gaye, Ed Townsend Marvin Gaye (5:46)
Time to Get It Together Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (3:54)
Sparrow (Lyrics) Marvin Gaye, Ed Townsend Marvin Gaye (6:11)
Anna's Song (Lyrics) Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (5:54)
When Did You Stop Loving Me, When Did I Stop Loving You [Instrumental] Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (6:03)
A Funky Space Reincarnation Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (8:17)
You Can Leave, But It's Gonna Cost You Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (5:30)
Falling in Love Again (Lyrics) Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (4:39)
When Did You Stop Loving Me, When Did I Stop Loving You (Reprise) Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye (:47)

Credits

Marvin Gaye (Synthesizer), Marvin Gaye (Arranger), Marvin Gaye (Drums), Marvin Gaye (Keyboards), Marvin Gaye (Vocals), Marvin Gaye (Vocals (Background)), Marvin Gaye (Producer), Marvin Gaye (Main Performer), Charles Owens (Sax (Tenor)), Wally Ali (Guitar), Jack Andrews (Mastering), Gordon Banks (Guitar), Frank Blair (Bass), Candace Bond (Executive Reissue Producer), Elmira Collins (Percussion), Ernie Fields Jr. (Sax (Alto)), Fernando Harkness (Sax (Tenor)), Dan Hersch (Digital Remastering), Tony Houston (Engineer), Bill Inglot (Digital Remastering), Gary Jones (Percussion), Cary E. Mansfield (Reissue Producer), Charles Owen (Sax (Tenor)), Bill Ravencraft (Engineer), Fred Ross (Engineer), Nolan Andrew Smith (Trumpet), Art Stewart (Engineer), Art Stewart (Mixing), Ed Townsend (Producer), Bugsy Wilcox (Drums), David Ritz (Liner Notes), Wali Ali (Guitar), Delta Ashby (Producer), Dana Smart (Reissue Coordinator), Tony N. Todaro (Reissue Design), Michael Bryant (Illustrations)
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Wikipedia: Here, My Dear
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Here, My Dear
Studio album by Marvin Gaye
Released December 15, 1978
Recorded 1976–1977
Marvin's Room
(Hollywood, California)
Genre Soul, funk, quiet storm, disco, smooth soul, jazz
Length 73:10
Label Tamla
T-364LP2
Producer Marvin Gaye, Ed Townsend
Professional reviews
Marvin Gaye chronology
I Want You
(1976)
Here, My Dear
(1978)
In Our Lifetime
(1981)

Here, My Dear is a studio double album by soul musician Marvin Gaye, released December 15, 1978 on Tamla Records.[1] Recording sessions for the album took place at Marvin's Room in Hollywood, California from 1976 to 1977. A deeply personal and controversial album, Here, My Dear was notable for autobiographing Gaye's ill-fated first marriage to Anna Gordy. Here, My Dear was initially a commercial failure, while receiving some critical favor from music writers. However, critical recognition of the album has improved significantly following further examinations by critics and compact disc-reissues. In 2003, the album was ranked number 462 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.[2]

Contents

Conception

Soul music doesn't get any deep, darker,
or more personal than this.
—–David Ritz, liner note essay, 2008[3]

By 1976, the relationship between Marvin Gaye and his first wife, Anna Gordy, had become estranged and was far from being repaired. Marvin, who was now carrying on an open relationship with singer Janis Hunter, and Anna often accused each other of infidelity over the years before his relationship with Hunter. Shortly after Marvin and Janis welcomed the second of their two children, Frankie, in November 1975, Anna filed for divorce. At this time, Marvin was running low on money because of an extravagant spending habit to support his lifestyle which included, among other things, a fleet of cars, several homes in and outside the country, and an increasing cocaine habit. Marvin's spending habits had made it impossible for the singer to pay Anna money for alimony and child support for the couple's only son, Marvin III. Marvin's attorney Curtis Shaw came up with a solution to Marvin to give half the royalties he would earn from his next project to Anna. After agreeing to the deal, the singer went into his recording studio in an effort to give Motown a "lazy, bad" album starting sessions in the spring of 1976. However, as Marvin set on making the "lazy" album, the singer's deep emotions and bittersweet feelings for his soon-to-be former wife took over the music.

Songs included in the album didn't just deal with the singer's troubling marriage ("I Met a Little Girl", "Anna's Song", "You Can Leave, But It's Going To Cost You") but with other deep issues including anger management ("Anger"), Jesus ("Everybody Needs Love", "Time to Get It Together"), solace ("Sparrow"), space (the loosely funky "A Funky Space Reincarnation") and new love ("Falling In Love", the one song dedicated to Marvin's new wife, Janis). An Allmusic.com reviewer later wrote of the music:

...the sound of divorce on record — exposed in all of its tender-nerve glory for the world to consume... Gaye viciously cuts with every lyric deeper into an explanation of why the relationship died the way it did... Musically the album retains the high standards Gaye set in the early '70s, but you can hear the agonizing strain of recent events in his voice, to the point where even several vocal overdubs can't save his delivery.[1]

Allmusic

The project was worked on for a year and was initially held back by Marvin, fearing that the project was too personal to be released. However, because of Motown's demands for Marvin to put out an album, as he had often delayed releases and it had been over two years since his last record, the sensually erotic I Want You, the singer decided to put out the album as promised in December 1978.

Release and reception

When Here, My Dear was released in the end of 1978, it was panned by consumers and critics alike, who called the album "bizarre" and "un-commercial". The album's lack of success angered Gaye to the point that he refused to promote it any further. Motown stopped promoting Here, My Dear in early 1979, by which point Gaye had gone in to self-imposed exile. Ironically, around the same time, Marvin's relationship with second wife Janis had also fallen apart and the couple separated sometime in 1979. Upon hearing the album, a visibly upset Anna Gordy considered suing Marvin for invasion of privacy but, according to People magazine, later recanted that decision. In 1994, the album was re-released due to increased attention on Marvin's life to commemorate the singer's tenth anniversary since his untimely death, and reached number-one on Billboard's R&B catalog chart. The original album peaked at number four R&B and number twenty-six pop becoming the lowest-charted studio album for Gaye in the 1970s. Initial response to the album was mixed, as most critics described it as weird. However, Gaye's lyrical honesty over the laid back disco grooves of Here, My Dear was praised by many. Robert Christgau of The Village Voice wrote of the album:

...this is a fascinating, playable album. Its confessional ranges from naked poetry ("Somebody tell me please/Why do I have to pay attorney fees?" is a modernist trope that ranks with any of Elvis Costello's) to rank jive, because Gaye's self-involvement is so open and unmediated, guileless even at its most insincere, it retains unusual documentary charm. And within the sweet, quiet, seductive, and slightly boring mood Gaye is at such pains to realize, his rhythmic undulations and whisper-to-a-scream timbral shifts can engross the mind, the body, and above all the ear. Definitely a weird one.[4]

Robert Christgau

The album was re-evaluated in the years following its original release, and is today seen as a landmark in Gaye's career. It is voted as one of the greatest albums in music history including Mojo Magazine (1995) and Rolling Stone magazine's critics poll (500 Greatest Albums of All-Time) (2003), among others. This reassessment was influenced by the album's subsequent re-release. On February 15, 2008, Hip-O Select reissued Here, My Dear as a two-disc Expanded Edition including a song cut from the original album, "Ain't It Funny How Things Turn Around", which was remixed by funk legend Bootsy Collins. Disc two featured remastered and alternate versions of the songs from the album remixed by contemporary soul producers such as Salaam Remi, Questlove, Prince Paul, DJ Smash and others.

Track listing

All songs written by Marvin Gaye except where noted.

Side one

  1. "Here, My Dear" – 2:48
  2. "I Met a Little Girl" – 5:03
  3. "When Did You Stop Loving Me, When Did I Stop Loving You" – 6:17
  4. "Anger" (Delta Ashby, Gaye) – 4:04

Side two

  1. "Is That Enough" – 7:47
  2. "Everybody Needs Love" (Ed Townsend, Gaye) – 5:48
  3. "Time to Get It Together" – 3:55

Side three

  1. "Sparrow" (Ed Townsend, Gaye) – 6:12
  2. "Anna's Song" – 5:56
  3. "When Did You Stop Loving Me, When Did I Stop Loving You (Instrumental)" – 6:03

Side four

  1. "A Funky Space Reincarnation" – 8:18
  2. "You Can Leave, But It's Going to Cost You" – 5:32
  3. "Falling in Love Again" – 4:39
  4. "When Did You Stop Loving Me, When Did I Stop Loving You (Reprise)" – 0:47

Chart history

Album

Year Chart Position
1979 Pop Albums 26
1979 Black Albums 4

Singles

Year Title Chart Position
1979 "A Funky Space Reincarnation" Black Singles 23

Personnel

  • Marvin Gaye - vocals, synthesizer, drums
  • Charles Owens - tenor saxophone
  • Wally Ali - guitar
  • Gordon Banks - guitar
  • Frank Blair - bass
  • Elmira Collins - percussion
  • Ernie Fields, Jr. - alto saxophone
  • Fernando Harkness - tenor saxophone
  • Gary Jones - percussion
  • Nolan Andrew Smith - trumpet
  • Bugsy Wilcox - drums
  • David Ritz - liner notes
  • Michael Bryant - illustrations

Notes

References

  • Here, My Dear album liner notes by David Ritz & Harry Weinger. UMG Recordings, Inc.. 2008. 

 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Here, My Dear" Read more

 

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