Why was marvin gaye killed

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“For some reason, he didn’t love Marvin, and what’s worse, he didn’t want me to love Marvin either. His earlier offerings—”Pride and Joy” and “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” for example—got him crowned The Prince of Motown. The first shot was fatal, but Gay Sr. decided to shoot him a second time, point-blank.

He was also, by all accounts, a hard-drinking cross-dresser who personally embodied a rather complicated model of morality.

Wonder composed an original song for the tribute titled “Lighting Up the Candles.” It would later appear on his 1991 album, Jungle Fever.

[RELATED: The 15 Best Marvin Gaye Quotes]

“Marvin was the person who encouraged me that the music I had within me, I must feel free to let come out,” Wonder said at the time.

Photo by David Redfern/Redferns

Legendary R&B singer/songwriter/activist Marvin Gaye was shot and killed by his own father on April 1, 1984. In 1984, I was doing the morning show on B-97-FM in New Orleans and I recall sharing the tragic news of Marvin Gaye’s death with the audience. The story was unbelievable because Marvin Gaye was shot and killed by his father in the family home. My first reaction was what would lead a father to shoot and kill his son.

B-97-FM was a pop/rock station and for most of his career Mavin Gaye was known as one of the most popular R&B artists at Motown, but his career was revived in 1983 with the release of his hit, “Sexual Healing.”  It was on our playlist at B-97 which made the news of Marvin Gaye’s death pertinent to our audience.

As I researched into what led Marvin Gaye’s father to shoot and kill his son, I learned about the truly sad story of Marvin Gaye’s life and that he may have wanted his father to do something he could not bring himself to do - kill himself.

Marvin Gaye’s father was a Christian minister who believed in the strictest discipline for his children and he was known to administer physical punishment.  Marvin, Sr.

was also a crossdresser at a time when such behavior was much less understood and acceptable than it is today.  Marvin, Jr. was bullied at school because his father was a crossdresser and there were rumors that young Marvin was - gay..  As  Marvin, Jr. began to sense success in his music career, he added an “e” to his name to distance himself from his crossdressing father.

Marvin, Sr.

did not approve of his son’s interest in pursuing a career in music and in addition to tension building because Marvin, Sr. was a harsh disciplinarian, Marvin, Jr. and his father developed a strained and tense relationship.  Over the years there were only scarce moments of a father/son having a normal relationship.

Marvin Gaye battled depression and paranoia and attempted suicide on at least three occasions.  Marvin did not like touring and during the tour to promote his new hit, “Sexual Healing” and his newest music, he turned to cocaine to help him deal with his life on the road.  Cocaine became a serious problem for Marvin.  He became so paranoid that he was convinced that people wanted to kill him and even though there was no real threat, Marvin Gaye wore a bulletproof vest until the moment he went on stage.

When his tour was over in August of 1983, Marvin moved back into the family home to help his mother, Alberta, recover from kidney surgery.  It was the home young Marvin had purchased for them in 1973.  When Marvin, Sr.

returned from a long trip, the conflict between him and his musically successful son grew and for a six month period both men worked to keep their distance.  At one point the conflict was so intense that Marvin, Sr. called the police to have his son removed from their home.  Marvin, Sr. showed signs of being extremely jealous of his son’s success.

Marvin, Jr.

left the family home and moved in with his sister.  He grew remorseful and told his sister, “After all, I have just one father.  I want to make peace with him.” 

It was Christmas Day, 1983 when Marvin, Jr. gave his father a Smith & Wesson :38 special pistol to protect him from intruders.

According to family members and friends, Marvin, Jr.

had become more suicidal and talked often about suicide and death.  His behavior grew strange.  He would put on multiple overcoats and his shoes were on the wrong feet.

Days before he was shot and killed by his father, Marvin, Jr. threw himself out of a sports car traveling at a high rate of speed in an effort to kill himself, but he only suffered minor injuries.

On April 1, 1984, Marvine Gaye and his father got into a physical altercation.  Apparently, Marvin, Sr.

had gotten into an argument with his wife and Marvin, Jr. was attempting to settle the argument.  When the fight broke out between Marvin, Sr. and Marvin, Jr., Alberta stepped in to try to calm her son down.  As Alberta got involved and showed interest in calming her son down, Marvin, Sr. picked up the gun his son had given him that Christmas Day in 1983 and shot his son three times in the chest.  Bullets hit Marvin, Jr.’s heart, lung, and liver.  He was pronounced dead on arrival at the Los Angeles hospital.

Marvin Gaye’s brother, Frankie, lived next door and immediately went to the family house and held Marvin in his arms as his life was slipping away.  In a shocking revelation, Frankie wrote in his memoir about the final thing Marvin Gaye said to him:  “I got what I wanted...I couldn’t do it myself, so I made him do it.”

The criminal case:

The Los Angeles Herald-Examiner printed Marvin Gay, Sr.’s recollection of that day: “I didn’t mean to do that.”

Shortly after killing his son, Marvin, Sr.

was diagnosed with a brain tumor that was benign.  Judge Michael Pirosh decided after two psychiatric evaluations that Marvin, Sr. was competent to stand trial and was sentenced.  But the amount of drugs in Marvin, Jr. 's system and the physical injuries to his father were factors in the sentencing.  Judge Gordon Ringer sentenced him to a six-year suspended sentence and five years of probation.  At the sentencing, Marvin, Sr.

told the court:

“If I could bring him back, I would.  I was afraid of him.  I thought I was going to get hurt.  I didn’t know what was going to happen.  I’m really sorry for everything that happened.  I loved him.  I wish he could step through this door right now.  I’m paying the price now.”

Marvin Gaye’s father lived with the regret of killing his son for 14 years.  He passed away in October of 1998.

The iconic Motown superstar, Marvin Gaye, had failed at suicide attempts and wanted to die.  But he couldn’t kill himself so he put his father in a position to do the one thing Marvin couldn’t do - kill himself.

I will never hear a Marvin Gaye song without thinking about the sad story of a father and son who both lived - and died - with regrets.

.

I was going to go in there and lock the door.”

Gay Sr.

was ultimately given a six-year suspended prison sentence. His later releases made him a voice of a generation wanting for societal change. Reportedly, Gaye stood up for his mother, screaming at Gay Sr., “You can’t talk to my mother like that!”

After a brief, but clearly heated, physical fight, Gay Sr. walked up to his son with a .38 caliber revolver and shot him twice.

why was marvin gaye killed

His father, Marvin Gay Sr.—the “e” was added to the soul singer’s stage name—worked as a preacher at a Hebrew Pentecostal Church.

Gaye’s mother, Alberta Cooper Gay, spoke out a number of times about the harbored animosity Gay Sr. held for his son. The soul singer’s final words were, “I got what I wanted….I couldn’t do it myself, so I made him do it.”

Gay Sr.

pleaded no contest to the murder. He later died of pneumonia in 1998. Only one year removed from his first Grammy win and from a triumphant return to the pop charts with “Sexual Healing,” Marvin Gaye was in horrible physical, psychological and financial shape.

After an argument between father and son escalated into a physical fight on the morning of April 1, 1984, Alberta Gay was trying to calm her son in his bedroom when Marvin Sr.

took a revolver given to him by Marvin Jr. and shot him three times in his chest.

“He fancied himself as a prophet and message-giver, and then Marvin became hailed as a voice of his generation, and yet Marvin wasn’t living a Godly life,” Turner said. He kept strictly to his moral code and ensured his children did too.

Marvin Gay, Sr., (the “e” was added by his son for his stage name) was a preacher in the Hebrew Pentecostal Church and a proponent of a strict moral code he enforced brutally with his four children.

“Living with a Father was like living with a king, an all-cruel, changeable, cruel, and all-powerful king,” Gaye once said.

His childhood trauma paired with his addiction struggles sent Gaye into a deep depression toward the end of his life. But as the critic Michael Eric Dyson put it, the man who “chased away the demons of millions…with his heavenly sound and divine art” was chased by demons of his own throughout his life.

If the physical cause of Marvin Gaye’s death was straightforward—”gunshot wound to chest perforating heart, lung and liver,” according to the Los Angeles County Coroner—the events that led to it were much more tangled.

In an interview with A&E True Crime, Turner says it was Gay Sr.’s jealousy of his son’s success and the resentment he felt for him not living a “Godly life” that moved him to murder. I was backing up toward my room.