Marvin Gaye talks about topics that he thinks need sharing. Starting with the song from The Four Tops' Obie Benson, Marvin adapted himself to the song and wrote that what he can say is his best album. In 1971, Gay fought with his simple record company, acquired and released an album about the sufferings of various parts of the United States, and since then became a hymn of the civil rights movement. In the riots and anger during the civil rights movement, Marvin Gayy resolved the minority changes suppressed using Martin Luther King's philosophy. Mr. Guy is talking about these passionate discussions with love and a fun question of "What is going on". Through the eyes of soldiers who came back from Vietnam, Guy 's album "What' s Going On" tells us that his own songs are flowing and intertwining with each other. Gay expressed his petition and caught the anger of many people.
Farrel Williams and Robin Schick were hit by a certified in 2013 "blurry line". This seems that many listeners owe Marvin Gaye's classic "Got To Give Up" in 1977. Of course, Pharrell and Thicke objected to this feeling and sent it to the court against copyright issues against Gaye Manor. Twice Today, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals argues that "we must abandon" is "a musical work is not limited to a narrow expression, so it is a right of extensive copyright protection" and the lower court Partially) support. The court confirmed that Gaye's legacy has the right to permanently receive 50% of the song usage fee. It also revealed that Rapper T.I., which offered poetry, is not responsible for personal responsibility in the case and is not liable for damages. (In the first survey in 2015, millions of dollars were sentenced to musicians prior to recent protests.)