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Thread started 08/09/07 8:55pm

funkpill

Flyin' High (In the Friendly Sky)

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Reply #1 posted 08/09/07 9:17pm

namepeace

An incredible song. His way of being able to write a song from a state of mind and being was sublime.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #2 posted 08/09/07 10:36pm

Timmy84

That song lyrically, vocally and musically send chills up and down my spine. touched

Marvin truly knew how to get to you! cool

You heard the mid-tempo version of this song ("Sad Tomorrows"?) It's just as cool. nod

The Originals were doing some serious backup on that one. biggrin
[Edited 8/9/07 22:36pm]
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Reply #3 posted 08/09/07 11:17pm

namepeace

Timmy84 said:

That song lyrically, vocally and musically send chills up and down my spine. touched

Marvin truly knew how to get to you! cool

You heard the mid-tempo version of this song ("Sad Tomorrows"?) It's just as cool. nod

The Originals were doing some serious backup on that one. biggrin
[Edited 8/9/07 22:36pm]


Yeah, I love the outro to "Sad Tomorrows":

I did the best I could/nobody understood
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #4 posted 08/10/07 2:34am

whatsgoingon

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Like most of the songs on Whats Going On this is another masterpiece. I've assumed it was about drugs.
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Reply #5 posted 08/10/07 2:42am

3121

Beautiful record.


i go to the place where danger awaits me
and its bound to foresake me
so stupid minded, so stupid minded
but i go crazy when i cant find it

in the morning i'll be alright my friend
but soon the night will bring of the pain... the pain of the day


So many strong lyrics in this track. Marvin at his most raw and desperate.
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Reply #6 posted 08/10/07 3:05am

funkpill

namepeace said:

Timmy84 said:

That song lyrically, vocally and musically send chills up and down my spine. touched

Marvin truly knew how to get to you! cool

You heard the mid-tempo version of this song ("Sad Tomorrows"?) It's just as cool. nod

The Originals were doing some serious backup on that one. biggrin
[Edited 8/9/07 22:36pm]


Yeah, I love the outro to "Sad Tomorrows":

I did the best I could/nobody understood



And here it is biggrin




http://www.youtube.com/wa...DtnZlaF-lI




There's another great rendition from this album...





But it's a bonus track on cd w/ an Mercy Mercy Me medley..

How he calls out Jesus on this one is just touching
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Reply #7 posted 08/10/07 9:55am

Timmy84

whatsgoingon said:

Like most of the songs on Whats Going On this is another masterpiece. I've assumed it was about drugs.


nod This was about heroin. Apparently, Marvin dedicated the track to Vietnam vets who suddenly got addicted to the drug as soon as they came home. I think Marvin's brother Frankie told him about that. I don't know if Frankie was hooked on the drug though it wouldn't surprise me.

This lyric meant heroin addiction:

Well I know I'm hooked my friend
To the boy who makes slaves out of men...


"Boy" is a slang for heroin.
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Reply #8 posted 08/10/07 10:58am

whatsgoingon

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Timmy84 said:

whatsgoingon said:

Like most of the songs on Whats Going On this is another masterpiece. I've assumed it was about drugs.


nod This was about heroin. Apparently, Marvin dedicated the track to Vietnam vets who suddenly got addicted to the drug as soon as they came home. I think Marvin's brother Frankie told him about that. I don't know if Frankie was hooked on the drug though it wouldn't surprise me.

This lyric meant heroin addiction:

Well I know I'm hooked my friend
To the boy who makes slaves out of men...


"Boy" is a slang for heroin.


To me Whats Going On is the most important album ever made because every song was a message about the way the world was back in the 70s, but what's so ironic is that the album probably reflects more of whats happening in the world today than it did in 1972.
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Reply #9 posted 08/10/07 11:16am

Timmy84

whatsgoingon said:

Timmy84 said:



nod This was about heroin. Apparently, Marvin dedicated the track to Vietnam vets who suddenly got addicted to the drug as soon as they came home. I think Marvin's brother Frankie told him about that. I don't know if Frankie was hooked on the drug though it wouldn't surprise me.

This lyric meant heroin addiction:

Well I know I'm hooked my friend
To the boy who makes slaves out of men...


"Boy" is a slang for heroin.


To me Whats Going On is the most important album ever made because every song was a message about the way the world was back in the 70s, but what's so ironic is that the album probably reflects more of whats happening in the world today than it did in 1972.


I concur. The album had so many messages in it than any album I ever heard, you felt like you were in some scene in a movie just the way the songs were brilliantly produced. The album is timeless because the pain is indeed unbearable and is still going on 36 years after its release.
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Reply #10 posted 08/10/07 12:43pm

silverchild

avatar

Timmy84 said:

whatsgoingon said:



To me Whats Going On is the most important album ever made because every song was a message about the way the world was back in the 70s, but what's so ironic is that the album probably reflects more of whats happening in the world today than it did in 1972.


I concur. The album had so many messages in it than any album I ever heard, you felt like you were in some scene in a movie just the way the songs were brilliantly produced. The album is timeless because the pain is indeed unbearable and is still going on 36 years after its release.


I definitely agree with both statements! Marvin went through a lot by the time this album came out in 1971. Tammi Terrell, his dear "intimate" friend, collapsed on stage in 1967, leaving Marvin depressed than ever about her brain tumor illness. And then she died three years later, and he went into seclusion. Before he started working with the group The Orginals and the WGO album, he promised his peers that he would retire from the music business and even tried to try out for a famous football team, but after he saw that the Orginals were getting successful, he was confident in making this landmark record. What's even more shocking is that after he recorded some of the classic songs that would appear on this album and wanted to release the single, What's Going On, Berry Gordy refused because he thought it was too "uncommercial" and in fact, too "irrelevant". Wow how silly and fantasy-minded Berry was, the single was released and became one of the biggest, most acclaimed hits of Marv's career only because Marv refused to record for Motown anymore if it wasn't released. Berry requested an album of familiar songs like WGO, and Marvin changed the forefront of pop and soul music. I've never heard an album with so much anger, sorrow, and pain that reflected the world's ills and spirituality at once. It's as if Marvin put himself in the shoes of his own brother who was in the Vietnam War and told this story of coming back to the world and seeing nothing but a living hell we are still living in today. Its production is perfect, the songs are timeless, and the messages still hits the nail on its head more today than when Marv addressed them back in the day. I can't imagine what music (soul music in particular) would be if it wasn't released.
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Reply #11 posted 08/10/07 12:52pm

2elijah

silverchild said:

Timmy84 said:



I concur. The album had so many messages in it than any album I ever heard, you felt like you were in some scene in a movie just the way the songs were brilliantly produced. The album is timeless because the pain is indeed unbearable and is still going on 36 years after its release.


I definitely agree with both statements! Marvin went through a lot by the time this album came out in 1971. Tammi Terrell, his dear "intimate" friend, collapsed on stage in 1967, leaving Marvin depressed than ever about her brain tumor illness. And then she died three years later, and he went into seclusion. Before he started working with the group The Orginals and the WGO album, he promised his peers that he would retire from the music business and even tried to try out for a famous football team, but after he saw that the Orginals were getting successful, he was confident in making this landmark record. What's even more shocking is that after he recorded some of the classic songs that would appear on this album and wanted to release the single, What's Going On, Berry Gordy refused because he thought it was too "uncommercial" and in fact, too "irrelevant". Wow how silly and fantasy-minded Berry was, the single was released and became one of the biggest, most acclaimed hits of Marv's career only because Marv refused to record for Motown anymore if it wasn't released. Berry requested an album of familiar songs like WGO, and Marvin changed the forefront of pop and soul music. I've never heard an album with so much anger, sorrow, and pain that reflected the world's ills and spirituality at once. It's as if Marvin put himself in the shoes of his own brother who was in the Vietnam War and told this story of coming back to the world and seeing nothing but a living hell we are still living in today. Its production is perfect, the songs are timeless, and the messages still hits the nail on its head more today than when Marv addressed them back in the day. I can't imagine what music (soul music in particular) would be if it wasn't released.


Wow, amazing story, thanks for that info.
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Reply #12 posted 08/11/07 2:02am

blackguitarist
z

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Wow pill...very nice pick. Not a run of the mill pick, by any means. And that's why I dig it. Yeah, great song. Marvin was a genius. Pure and simple. As popular as he was and still is, I do feel that he is underrated in other areas.
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Reply #13 posted 08/11/07 2:33am

MsLegs

blackguitaristz said:

Marvin was a genius. Pure and simple. As popular as he was and still is, I do feel that he is underrated in other areas.

nod Indeed. Marvin knack for creating music is underrated. He has a unique approach to songs.
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