Marvin Gaye's 'Got To Give It Up:' Story And Facts About The Disco Hit He Didn't Want To Make

By | June 20, 2020

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Marvin Gaye live at Royal Albert Hall, London. 1979 (Photo by David Corio/Redferns)

When Marvin Gaye recorded "Got To Give It Up," he was joining the club -- the club of disco bandwagon-jumpers. Disco was so huge in the late '70s that labels, and many artists, wanted that big-selling disco hit. The Rolling Stones' "Miss You" is disco, the title track from Pink Floyd's The Wall is disco, The Clash's "Magnificent Seven" is disco. And Marvin Gaye, titan of soul music, got in line -- reluctantly, and even subversively. He set out to make a song that would be a parody of disco, or disco taken to its absurd conclusion. He ended up creating a chart-topping single that is one of the greatest disco tunes of all time.

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Where "Got To Give It Up" Started. (worthpoint)

Marvin Gaye, the "Prince of Motown," was a purveyor of baby-making music the world over. He'd recorded dance (or danceable) hits early in his career, such as "Ain't That Peculiar" and "It Takes Two," but in the '70s, he was all about smooth and slow, with hits like "What's Going On" and "Let's Get It On."

"Got To Give It Up" may not rank in the top five of most memorable Marvin Gaye songs -- partly because it isn't identifiably a Marvin Gaye song -- but it's a disco classic and evidence of Gaye's massive talent. “Got To Give It Up” started as a 12-minute song on the final side of his live double album Marvin Gaye Live at the London Palladium. Eventually, Gaye whittled it down to 4 minutes of funky chart-topping flavor that replaced "Dreams'' by Fleetwood Mac on Billboard’s Hot 100.