The Ultimate Gift Guide for Music Lovers
Christmas is fast approaching and some of you may still be looking for gift ideas for your loved ones. Here is our ultimate gift guide for music lovers!
Before Frank Ocean, Trey Songz and Cee-Lo; before R. Kelly, Maxwell and Usher, and before Luther Vandross, Teddy Pendergrass, Harold Melvin and Al Green, there was Marvin Gaye. Sure, there were soulful balladeers before and with him (think Smokey, Otis and Stevie; Ray Charles and Donny Hathaway).
But for a lot of music fans, Marvin was the man. There’s plenty of audio covering his career, from Motown in 1963 (first hit: “Hitch Hike”) to just before he was killed, by his own father, in 1984. Video? That’s another matter. Back then, there was little television exposure for pop artists. The occasional spot on a variety show or Bandstand; later, a Shindig or a Hullaballoo. Gaye dutifully lip-syncs his hits on those and other shows. But he was not a happy to be there. As he told me in 1972, for Rolling Stone: “I got a thing; a psychological hangup about performing live. I don’t think I’ll ever enjoy performing.”
So here he is, just a few years later, on his first European tour, performing in Amsterdam. He should have been petrified. But no. Either he was a great actor or managed to transcend his stage fright and actually enjoyed himself. Whatever it was, he was in fine shape and voice this night in 1976. What he had to overcome was his outfit, a garish, green-striped white jacket over a silky yellow shirt and Emerald green satin pants. Boy my boy!
He started slow, with a couple of unfamiliar tunes, after promising to do all his hits. Backed by a full orchestra, he does come close, although he bunches most of his Motown hits into medleys. The crowd really comes alive when he gets into What’s Going On, his greatest musical triumph. With help from backup singer Florence Lyles, he pays tribute to Tammi Terrell and others who paired with him for hits like “It Takes Two,” “You’re All I Need to Get By” and “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough.” Missing are such chartbusters as “Trouble Man,” “Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology),” and “I’ll Be Doggone.” But he grabs the audience with “Let’s Get it On,” taking off his high volume jacket and earning the gratitude of a grateful North Holland. He dances a little; he raises his arms in triumph; he shouts, at the end, “Marvin Gaye loves you!”
What hangup?
Enjoy Marvin performing “Let’s Get It On” & watch the full concert on Qello. You can also watch Marvin Gaye – Live at Montreux, 1980.
Christmas is fast approaching and some of you may still be looking for gift ideas for your loved ones. Here is our ultimate gift guide for music lovers!
Watch Live From Wrigley Field now on The Coda Collection and Qello Concerts and immerse yourself in the unforgettable experience of The Lumineers live!
Grab a partner, warm up your vocal cords, and enjoy bringing this timeless duet to life!
Our music curators have been customizing karaoke playlists for over a decade, working with Stingray Karaoke and Singing Machine by Stingray Karaoke’s extensive libraries. If we know anything, it’s that it’s not easy to select the very best from a catalog housing thousands of tracks! Anyone who braved the stage at a karaoke party knows the challenge of picking the best song to sing. In this article, we offer a selection of some of the best karaoke songs to inspire our fellow karaoke fans.
Stingray Music and TikTok Radio are getting Behind the Beat with Suki Waterhouse and her hit song “Good Looking.” The song became a hit, garnering millions of views and appearing in over 300,000 videos on TikTok.
Stingray Music and TikTok Radio are getting Behind The Beat with INJI and her hit song ‘Gaslight’. INJI describes it as a satirical song not meant to be taken seriously. The song became a hit overnight, garnering millions of views and was used in over 1.9 million videos on TikTok. She shares her story about how she wrote ‘Gaslight’ and her favorite TikTok trend.