The Life and Death of Marvin Gaye
To Europe
After nine months, he returned to
He took up with Eugenie Vis, a blonde groupie he bedded after a concert in
She said, “He liked to be the master. He also liked to experiment. Once he had a whip and he played with it. Another time he asked me to sleep with some other women because he wanted to see that, but he never hurt me or let himself get out of control.”
While he was abroad, Motown released its final Gaye recording of new material, “In Our Lifetime.” The company had pressured him to produce the record for years, but Gaye had dallied. The label finally issued the record without the singer’s approval, and he was furious.
“I hadn’t completed it,” he said. “Can you imagine saying to an artist, say Picasso, you’re been fooling with this picture long enough?”
His relationship with Motown was irreparably damaged, and in 1982 the label sold his contract to CBS Records.


- Setting The Stage
- Motown's Lover Man
- Tangled Roots
- Gay Goes To Washington
- Nightmare Childhood
- Marvin Sr. "Enjoying the Whole Thing"
- Music & the Military
- Marquees & Moonglows
- Hitsville, USA
- The Top
- The Superego
- Let's Get It On
- "He Wanted To Suffer"
- The Influence Of Narcotics
- The World Closes In
- To The Beach
- To Europe
- Sexual Healing
- Increasingly Bizarre Behavior
- Flying Home
- "If He Touches Me Ill Kill Him"
- The Final Fight
- The Postmortem
- Conclusion
- Photo Gallery
- Bibliography






























