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(November 5, 2009 – New York, NY) The most quintessential of American holidays, Thanksgiving, is the setting for a special celebration of a quintessentially American musical treasure: the classic songs of Motown. NFL fans will be dancing in their seats at home and at Ford Field in Detroit during the 2009 United Way Thanksgiving Day Halftime Show: A Motown 50th Anniversary Tribute. The Motown tribute will take place during halftime of the first game of the NFL’s Thanksgiving tripleheader when the Detroit Lions host the Green Bay Packers on Thursday, November 26 at 12:30 PM ET on FOX.

In Motown’s original hometown, this special halftime event features six of the brightest talents from the current roster of Universal Motown Records, performing classics from Motown’s all-American songbook.

Bringing the unforgettable songs of Motown back to the Motor City are Melanie Fiona, Kem, Shontelle, Forever The Sickest Kids, Vita Chambers, and Hal Linton. The dynamic and driving tribute spans more than a decade of Motown classics – every one of the songs among the most recognizable and culture-defining songs in pop music history. Following the performance, fans can visit NFL.com/Thanksgiving to find out how to download a copy of the halftime medley, as well as music from each of the artists. Proceeds will benefit United Way.

MELANIE FIONA brings together vintage grooves on her exuberant and original SRC/Universal Motown debut album THE BRIDGE, available now at digital retail and on CD November 10th. Universal Motown singer-songwriter KEM performed a special live show in Detroit’s Cass Park in support of the city’s homeless in August 2009. KEM is a leading light of this decade’s progressive neo-soul movement with two gold albums and two No. 1 singles. International Top 10 hit singer-songwriter SHONTELLE’s SRP/SRC/Universal Motown album SHONTELLIGENCE contains the international hits “T-Shirt,” “Stuck With Each Other” (featuring Akon), and “Roll.” The innovative alternative rock/electronic six-man band FOREVER THE SICKEST KIDS’ Universal Motown album debut, UNDERDOG ALMA MATER, is now available in a deluxe edition now; the group will release an innovative series of three EPs of new material starting with FRIDAY on November 17th, 2009. The halftime show also features two impressive young Universal Motown newcomers: VITA CHAMBERS, who honors Motown’s classic era with her own edgy mix of rock, pop, and soul, and HAL LINTON, a talented singer who updates the great vocal tradition of Motown’s Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder for the new century. Both are completing debut albums for SRP/Universal Motown for 2010 release.

All of the halftime tribute’s songs are culled from the golden era of Motown, the company founded by Berry Gordy in 1959 that revolutionized contemporary music with its brilliant, influential, and unique fusion of pop, blues, R&B, rock, and gospel elements.

The celebration of Motown’s 50th anniversary continues around the globe with events, special programming, exhibits, etc. An irresistible force of social and cultural change, Berry Gordy’s legendary Motown made its mark not just on the music industry but society at large, with a sound that has become one of the most significant musical accomplishments and stunning success stories of the 20th century. No other record company in history has exerted such an enormous influence on both the style and substance of popular music and culture with artists such as Diana Ross and The Supremes, The Jackson 5, The Temptations, The Four Tops, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Gladys Knight and the Pips, and Martha Reeves and the Vandellas. That influence is still being felt today, from pop to hip-hop, as Motown celebrates the 50th anniversary of the company’s founding. Today, Motown is part of the Universal Music Group, with its classic recorded music catalog managed by Universal Music Enterprises (UMe).

Continuing an innovation introduced in 2006, the NFL will serve up three nationally-televised games on Thanksgiving Day. The early game (FOX, 12:30 PM ET) will be an NFC North meeting of the Green Bay Packers at the Detroit Lions. This is the 19th time the Lions have hosted the Packers on Thanksgiving, including 13 consecutive games from 1951– 1963. The second game (CBS, 4:15 PM ET) features the Oakland Raiders visiting the Dallas Cowboys in the Raiders’ first Thanksgiving game since 1970.

The Thanksgiving primetime game will air at 8:20 PM ET on the NFL Network with the defending NFC East champion New York Giants visiting the Denver Broncos, marking the first Thanksgiving contest in Denver since 1963. The late afternoon game in Dallas between the Oakland Raiders and Cowboys on CBS (4:15 p.m. ET) will also feature special National Anthem and halftime show performances by national artists who will be announced shortly.

Now in its 36th year, the United Way/NFL partnership is the longest running charitable collaboration of its kind and connects NFL PLAY 60 with United Way’s goal of 1.9 million more healthy young people by 2018.

This is the 11th year that United Way has worked with the NFL on the Thanksgiving Halftime Show to inspire NFL fans across the country to get involved in their communities.

In the spirit of Thanksgiving, performers Melanie Fiona, Kem, Hal Linton, Shontelle and Vita Chambers will join United Way the week of their performance to volunteer at the Detroit Boys & Girls Club’s “I Am Thankful” Dinner on Tuesday, November 24 from 5:00-7:00 p.m.

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Marvin Gaye broke down barriers singing about the body and the soul, social consciousness and sexual politics. One of music’s most expressive singers, a deeply talented producer and a superb songwriter of both the romantic and the revolutionary, his voice spoke for a generation. Now legendary, Marvin continues to speak across the decades.

Born April 2, 1939 and raised in Washington, D.C., Gaye sang in a few local vocal groups before joining the doo-wop group the Moonglows, where he was mentored by Harvey Fuqua. When Fuqua joined Motown he brought his young protégé with him. At Motown Marvin was a session drummer, waiting for his chance to sing standards and be the “black Sinatra”; he showed songwriting skills as co-writer of the Marvelettes’ 1962 hit “Beechwood 4-5789.”

Marvin made his own breakthrough that year not singing ballads but tough R&B, with the Top 10 R&B “Stubborn Kind Of Fellow,” the first of his many autobiographical singles, followed by the massive hits “Hitch Hike,” “Pride And Joy” (his first pop Top 10, written about his new wife Anna Gordy), “Can I Get A Witness,” “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You),” and the No. 1 R&B smashes “Ain’t That Peculiar” and “I’ll Be Doggone.” Motown’s top solo male artist of the Sixties, he became known as ‘the “Prince of Motown,” reaching an apex with the No. 1 “I Heard It Through The Grapevine.” At times haunting and funky, it become the company’s biggest-selling single of the decade. Other Marvin singles from the sixties include “Too Busy Thinking About My Baby,” “That’s The Way Love Is” and “The End Of Our Road.” He also co-wrote Martha & the Vandellas’ classic “Dancing In The Street,” and at the end of the decade co-wrote and produced the Originals’ hits “Baby I’m For Real” and “The Bells.”

And Marvin sang sublime duets. He joined forces with Mary Wells in 1964 for a single that produced a Top 20 on each side—“What’s The Matter With You Baby” and “Once Upon A Time”—and later teamed with Kim Weston for “It Takes Two.” But his collaboration with Tammi Terrell is the standard by which all male-female duos are measured. Their partnership was intensely melodic, spectacularly successful, and devastatingly tragic. “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” was their exciting debut in 1967; it was featured on the album, United, which also included the Top 10s “If I Could Build My World Around You” and “Your Precious Love.” You’re All I Need, the ’68 follow-up LP, included the R&B No. #1 hits “Ain’t Nothing Like The Real Thing” and “You’re All I Need To Get By.”

The hits hid Marvin and Tammi’s real pain: she was suffering from a brain tumor, discovered after she collapsed in his arms onstage during an October ’67 concert. Marvin was deeply shaken, refusing to perform for several years. In 1970, at age 24, Terrell passed away. Marvin would have other female singing partners, notably Diana Ross, but Marvin and Tammi truly was the real thing.

Around the time of Tammi’s death, Marvin was deeply affected by his brother Frankie’s stories from the Vietnam War, and turned to music to express his discomfort with a world in turmoil. Out poured the 1971 album What’s Going On, which explored issues from poverty and discrimination to the environment, drug abuse, political corruption and the war, forever changing the sound and substance of soul and pop music. Three singles from the LP were #1 R&B and Top 10 pop: “What’s Going On,” “Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)” and “Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler).” Gaye’s first self-production, it was the last great Motown album recorded in Detroit before the label’s move to Los Angeles.

What’s Going On was social revolution. Let’s Get It On, two years later, was sexual revolution. Let’s Get It On remains one of the most passionate albums ever recorded; the title track, a no. 1 pop and R&B smash, is by every poll the no. 1 make-out song of all time - and one of the best-selling ringtones of the 21st century. The album, also no. 1 on both charts, featured several classic confessional slow jams, including “Distant Lover,” “Just To Keep You Satisfied” and the hit single “Come Get To This.”

Between those two albums Marvin released his duet album with Diana Ross, Diana and Marvin, which featured the hits “My Mistake (Was To Love You)” and “You’re A Special Part Of Me.” He also joined his contemporaries Isaac Hayes and Curtis Mayfield and scored the soundtrack to a feature film, Trouble Man, which produced a largely instrumental LP that became a template for the acid-jazz movement in the nineties. The title track, the lone vocal from the album, was a Top 10 hit.

In 1974 Marvin was finally convinced to return to the road; one of his first concerts back, in Oakland, CA, resulted in the hit album Live!. He struggled with recording until Motown founder and president Berry Gordy suggested a collaboration with Leon Ware. They crafted the highly erotic I Want You, which Marvin turned into a love letter to Janis Hunter, a young woman with whom he had been involved since the recording of “Let’s Get it On.” Funky and sexy, the album featured the no. 1 title track, and such hot grooves as “Since I Had You,” “Soon I’ll Be Loving You Again” and the hit single “After The Dance.” The album’s influence ranges from Prince to R. Kelly, Madonna to Maxwell, and more.

Live At The London Palladium, a two-LP set released in 1977, documented Marvin’s first European tour. But the album’s highlight was a funky studio cut, “Got To Give It Up,” an across-the-board no. 1 pop/R&B/disco hit that, ironically, spoke to Marvin’s fear of dancing. But troubles mounted for him, from divorce to back taxes to substance abuse. In his usual idiosyncratic fashion, Marvin settled his divorce from Anna with an album about their relationship, Here, My Dear, a masterful song suite misunderstood at the time but is now considered one of Rolling Stone magazine’s Top Albums of All Time.

He dealt with the rest of his difficulties by moving to Hawaii, then London, where he worked on the album In Our Lifetime, his last for Motown. Marvin settled in Ostende, Belgium, a small seaside town that afforded a respite from the world at large. While there he developed the song “Sexual Healing,” signed to Columbia Records and returned to the U.S.

“Sexual Healing” became a worldwide smash in 1982-83, winning for Marvin his only two Grammy® Awards. The album Midnight Love, also featuring “Til Tomorrow,” was a hit as well, capping Marvin’s triumphant comeback. At the 1983 NBA All-Star Game Marvin provided a surprisingly emotional reading of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” accompanied only by a drum machine, that has become legendary. But his torments grew and he threatened suicide after bitter arguments with his father. A day before his 45th birthday in 1984, after another confrontation, his father shot and killed him.

In his career, Marvin Gaye earned 18 pop Top 10s, three of which peaked at no. 1, and 38 R&B Top 10s; 13 of those hit no. 1, tying him for first in that category with Michael Jackson. In 1987, he was among the second group of artists honored with induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. But his legacy goes beyond numbers and honors. He led the way for intensely personal artistic self-expression in the commercial world of modern pop music and elevated the impact of soul music as an agent for social change. Intimate, raw and brutally honest, his songs revealed a mixture of grit and sweetness, confidence and vulnerability, spirituality and sensuality.
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Profile Comments

Aug 13th, 5:21am
HAPPY BIRTHDAY...CASS
Aug 12th, 8:06pm
Happy Birthday..Mullage
Aug 12th, 4:58pm
Happy Birthday
Aug 12th, 11:41am
Happy Birthday !!!
May 12th, 9:25pm
yo! i just went to that site www.musze.com and watched the music video for Maxwell's new single, "PRETTY WINGS" and it is hot as hell. cant wait to pick up BLACK SUMMERS NIGHT on July 7th!!

Thanks for the link to the video!
Apr 9th, 5:12am
THANKS FOR THE ADD................
Apr 3rd, 4:16am
Marvin IS the man and will always be. Sorry I didn't get over in time for the anniversary of your death, Marvin. I missed it by a day, well two days really, now that it's past midnight and the third of April...
Apr 2nd, 4:11pm
Happy birthday.