Marvin Gaye (song)

"Marvin Gaye" is the debut single by American singer Charlie Puth, featuring singer-songwriter Meghan Trainor, for his third EP Some Type of Love (2015), and debut studio album Nine Track Mind (2016). Puth co-wrote it with Julie Frost, Jacob Luttrell and Nick Seeley, and produced it. Artist Partner Group released it as a single on February 10, 2015. The doo-wop and soul song is named after singer Marvin Gaye, whose name is used as a verb in the lyrics.

"Marvin Gaye"
Single by Charlie Puth featuring Meghan Trainor
from the album Nine Track Mind and the EP Some Type of Love
ReleasedFebruary 10, 2015
Genre
Length3:10
LabelArtist Partner
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
  • Charlie Puth
Charlie Puth singles chronology
"Marvin Gaye"
(2015)
"See You Again"
(2015)
Meghan Trainor singles chronology
"Lips Are Movin"
(2014)
"Marvin Gaye"
(2015)
"Dear Future Husband"
(2015)
Music video
"Marvin Gaye" on YouTube

"Marvin Gaye" received negative reviews from music critics, who were critical of its titular line but some appreciated Trainor's appearance. The song topped charts in France, Ireland, Israel, New Zealand, Scotland and the United Kingdom. Marc Klasfeld directed its music video, which was released on April 1, 2015. "Marvin Gaye" has been performed at The Today Show and the 2015 American Music Awards. Both the music video and latter performance end with the duo kissing. The song appears on the set list for Trainor's MTrain Tour (2015) and Puth's Voicenotes Tour (2018).

Background and release

Charlie Puth began his music career on YouTube and later signed with Ellen DeGeneres' record label eleveneleven.[1] He wrote "Marvin Gaye" with Julie Frost, Jacob Luttrell and Nick Seeley, and came up with its drum beat by "tapping [his] foot and clapping along" while sitting at a cafe in Cahuenga Boulevard.[2][3] Puth then ended up meeting Meghan Trainor at a party, where the two exchanged music. Upon hearing the song, Trainor thought it should be a duet and asked to sing on it. Puth recalled that she knew the whole song in a day, and they recorded it in one take.[3] The duo announced the collaboration in a January 2015 YouTube video, where Trainor said that it is "amazing" and noted that it would be her first release she did not write.[4] The track led to Puth appearing in Trainor's music video for her single "Dear Future Husband", and later serving as an opening act on her second headlining concert tour MTrain Tour (2015).[5]

Artist Partner Group released "Marvin Gaye" as the lead single from Puth's third EP, Some Type of Love (2015), on February 10, 2015.[6] Warner Music Group serviced the song to contemporary hit radio in Italy on July 10, 2015, and Artist Partner the United Kingdom on July 20.[7][8] A Remix EP to promote it was released on August 28, 2015, featuring remixes of it by DJ Kue, Cahill, Boehm and 10K Islands.[9] Atlantic Records released a CD single for "Marvin Gaye" on September 18, 2015, with an alternate version of it by Puth featuring Wale as its B-side.[10] The song was also included on Puth's debut studio album, Nine Track Mind (2016), and the Wale version and Boehm remix appeared on a Japanese edition of it.[11]

Composition

"Marvin Gaye" draws inspiration from Motown, and has a retro sound reminiscent of Trainor's debut major-label studio album Title (2015).[12] The doo-wop song includes lyrical references to several soul classics, and uses soul singer Marvin Gaye's name as a lyric and titular verb.[13][14] It has a "bass-booming" breakdown during Trainor's verse, and its modernized throwback soul sound drew comparisons to her song "All About That Bass" (2014).[15] Puth described the breakdown as "this trap thing with this hard-ass distorted 808", which was his attempt to contemporize "what Motown soul would sound like in 2015".[3] Pitchfork's Jia Tolentino commented that "Marvin Gaye" proves that Puth "lives for retro flourishes: doo-wop rhythms, sock-hop melodies, finger snaps [and] arpeggiated singalong piano".[16]

Puth described "Marvin Gaye" as "a musical icebreaker" that he wrote to help "any guy who wants to go up to a girl at a bar", noting that it would be hard to "not have a conversation" about the song if it came on the radio.[17] He named Gaye as an influence on the song's lyrics which he wrote to evoke a "feeling that would reach everybody", and further elaborated that:

Since I'm kind of a shy person, I can't just walk up to girls and be like, "Yo, let me get your number!" That's where the song comes in as a musical icebreaker. If you hear it on the radio or at a bar, it's a way to say, "Hey! Let's Marvin Gaye and get it on".[3]

Critical reception

"Marvin Gaye" received generally negative reviews from music critics. Idolator's Ryan Carey-Mahoney stated that it is "more mood-killer than hot and heavy" and "a big hit that never really deserved to be".[18] The same website's Mike Wass described the song as a "smooth anthem tune" with a "catchy" chorus, and called it a "natural fit" for Trainor.[12] Elias Leight of Billboard gave it a rating of two out of five stars, and wrote that though Trainor "lends Puth some of her doo-wop swagger", it "seems more academic exercise than an attempt at seduction".[13] Writing for Stereogum, Chris DeVille stated that the lyric "Let's Marvin Gaye and get it on" instantly "disqualifies ['Marvin Gaye'] from praise" and the gimmick is "too egregious and in-your-face" to appreciate the smart composition, but called it "musically sharp".[15] Entertainment Weekly's Madison Vain called the song "inescapable and irritating".[19]

Michael Cragg of The Observer referred to "Marvin Gaye" as "inordinately embarrassing", stating that it sees Puth cast himself as Trainor's male version.[20] Writing for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote that the song "suggested neither singer ever heard Gaye nor Motown but were inordinately fond of Glee", and included it as an example of collaborations where Puth acts as "the second banana, happily ceding the spotlight to another act who bowls him over with charisma".[21] Spin's Jason Gubbels stated that it is "a low-heat ode to high-heat passion, about as edgy as a Broadway revival cast recording and featuring one of the more dubious name-verbing exercises in contemporary pop" since Beyoncé's "Partition" (2013).[22]

"Marvin Gaye" made it on several year-end lists of the worst songs of 2015. Time included the song, calling the first line of its chorus so "cringe-worthy" that it made them wonder "why the Gaye estate didn't also sue these two in addition to the "Blurred Lines" guys" for tarnishing his legacy, but called Trainor its redeeming quality.[23] It also appeared on Jezebel's list, with Tolentino calling it "transposed to the ninth circle of hell" and comparing it to Christian musicals she used to attend as a child.[24] Gigwise included "Marvin Gaye" on their list, with Alexandra Pollard elaborating that it is "irritatingly catchy - but it's not even catchy", and went on to say that it is an unclever and "really stupid play on words".[25]

Chart performance

North America

In the United States, "Marvin Gaye" debuted at number 87 on the Billboard Hot 100 issued for July 4, 2015.[26] The song climbed to its peak of number 21 on October 10, 2015.[27] It was ranked at number 75 on Billboard's Hot 100 year-end chart for 2015, and was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on March 19, 2019.[28][29] In Canada, "Marvin Gaye" debuted at number 92 on the Canadian Hot 100 issued for June 27, 2015.[30] The song climbed to its peak of number 31 on October 10, 2015.[31] It was the 78th most-successful single on the Canadian Hot 100 for 2015, and was certified triple platinum by Music Canada.[32][33] In Mexico, "Marvin Gaye" peaked at number 32.[34]

Oceania and Europe

"Marvin Gaye" debuted at number 41 on the Australian Singles Chart on April 5, 2015, and reached number 4 on May 24, 2015.[35] The song was certified double platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), and was the 38th best-performing single of 2015 in the country.[36][37] It debuted at number 37 on the New Zealand Singles Chart on May 4, 2015. "Marvin Gaye" climbed to number one on June 15, 2015, and went back for another non-consecutive week at the spot two weeks later.[38] The song was certified platinum by Recorded Music NZ (RMNZ), and placed at number 17 on their year-end chart.[39][40]

"Marvin Gaye" debuted at number 90 on the UK Singles Chart on August 7, 2015, and climbed to number one the following week.[41] The song was certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), and was the 34th most-successful single in the country for 2015.[42][43] It debuted at number 97 on the Irish Singles Chart on July 17, 2015.[44] "Marvin Gaye" climbed to number one on August 14, 2015.[45] The song debuted at number one on the Scottish Singles Chart on August 14, 2015.[46] It also went number one on the French Singles Chart.[47]

Music video

Marc Klasfeld directed the music video for "Marvin Gaye", which was released on April 1, 2015. Puth summed up its concept by saying that he "wanted to make a video of how [he] always wanted high school to be -- a fun dance with people making out, on the floor, with whipped cream and strawberries".[48] The video begins with bored students sleeping with their heads against walls, after which Puth shows up and starts performing the song. All of the students start making out by the chorus.[49] Trainor joins Puth on the stage during her verse and the two sing together. The video ends with the two about to kiss.[50]

Trainor later revealed in an interview with MTV News that she actually kissed Puth "a bunch of times", but called it "so awkward" due to the presence of 40 people at the set and Puth's parents in the green room.[50] She uploaded a clip from behind the scenes of the video on her Instagram account, in which the singers kiss for a longer time.[51] Puth stated that they "had to do it five times, different angles, different lighting" as people at the set kept moving lights around, but "the word 'awkward' never came to mind because Meghan's a very good kisser".[52] Christina Garibaldi of MTV News placed it at number two on her list of the "11 Hot Music Video Kisses of 2015 That'll Make You Blush".[53]

Live performances

Puth and Trainor performed "Marvin Gaye" at The Today Show on August 4, 2015. The performance began with Puth playing the song at a piano, where the latter joined him during her verse, dressed in a black skirt.[54] They also performed it during the American Music Awards of 2015 on November 22, 2015. The performance ended with a kiss between the two, midway through which Puth grabbed Trainor's derriere and she placed her hands on his jaws. Los Angeles Times's Jessica Gelt wrote that it might be the most talked-about kiss at an award show since Britney Spears and Madonna kissed at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards.[55]

Jeff Benjamin of Fuse listed it as the sixth best performance of the night, adding that the kiss "made [it] one to remember".[56] On the other hand, Rolling Stone dubbed it one of the worst moments of the show, stating that the background dancers looked like "middle-school students allowed to stage a production of Grease without adult supervision" and calling the kiss a "forced 'moment'".[57] Puth described the kiss as "a visual representation" of "Marvin Gaye", and stated that he wanted both to represent "a record people could put on and fall in love with each other the minute they hear it".[58] The song was included on the setlists for the MTrain Tour as well as Puth's Voicenotes Tour (2018).[59][60]

Track listing

  • Digital download[6]
  1. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Meghan Trainor)  3:10
  1. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Meghan Trainor) (DJ Kue Remix)  5:33
  2. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Meghan Trainor) (Cahill Remix)  2:57
  3. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Meghan Trainor) (Boehm Remix)  3:14
  4. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Meghan Trainor) (10K Islands Remix)  3:10
  1. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Meghan Trainor)  3:10
  2. "Marvin Gaye" (featuring Wale)  3:20

Credits and personnel

Credits adapted from CD single's liner notes.[2]

  • Charlie Puth  producer, lead vocals, programmer
  • Meghan Trainor  featured vocals
  • Chris Galland  assistant mixing engineer
  • Ike Schultz  assistant mixing engineer
  • Kaveh Rastegar  bass guitarist
  • Dave Kutch  mastering engineer
  • Manny Marroquin  mixing engineer
  • Ryan Gladieux  recording engineer

Charts

Certifications

Certifications for "Marvin Gaye"
Region CertificationCertified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[36] 2× Platinum 140,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[109] Gold 15,000
Belgium (BEA)[110] Gold 15,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[33] 3× Platinum 240,000
Denmark (IFPI Denmark)[111] Platinum 60,000^
Germany (BVMI)[112] Gold 200,000
Italy (FIMI)[113] 3× Platinum 150,000
New Zealand (RMNZ)[39] Platinum 15,000*
Norway (IFPI Norway)[114] Platinum 40,000
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[115] Platinum 40,000
Sweden (GLF)[116] 2× Platinum 80,000
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[117] Platinum 30,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[42] Platinum 600,000
United States (RIAA)[29] 3× Platinum 3,000,000

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and format(s) for "Marvin Gaye"
Region Date Format(s) Version Label Ref.
Various February 10, 2015 Original Artist Partner [6][118]
Italy July 10, 2015 Contemporary hit radio Warner [7]
United Kingdom July 20, 2015 Artist Partner [8]
Various August 28, 2015
  • Digital download
  • streaming
Remixes [9]
September 18, 2015 CD Original Atlantic [10]

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