You (Marvin Gaye song)

1967 single by Marvin Gaye From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"You" is a 1967 single released by American singer Marvin Gaye on the Tamla label.

B-side"Change What You Can"
ReleasedDecember 21, 1967
RecordedApril 14; May 23; June 23 & 26; September 11, 1967
Quick facts Single by Marvin Gaye, from the album In the Groove/I Heard It Through the Grapevine ...
"You"
Single by Marvin Gaye
from the album In the Groove/I Heard It Through the Grapevine
B-side"Change What You Can"
ReleasedDecember 21, 1967
RecordedApril 14; May 23; June 23 & 26; September 11, 1967
GenreSoul
Length2:25
LabelTamla
SongwritersIvy Jo Hunter
Jack Goga
Jeffrey Bowen
ProducerIvy Jo Hunter
Marvin Gaye singles chronology
"If I Could Build My Whole World Around You/If This World Were Mine"
(1967)
"You"
(1967)
"Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing"
(1968)
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Background

Released as the first single from Gaye's In the Groove album, it was written by Ivy Jo Hunter, Jack Goga and Jeffrey Bowen and produced by Hunter.

The song talked of a man wanting to keep a rendezvous secret with one woman due to their differing social statuses, Marvin's narrator being working class, while the woman is upper class.

Recorded after Gaye recorded his "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" single, it showcased a new rougher Gaye vocal than usual signaling a change in the singer's direction as he stepped away from the sophisticated-styled soul that dominated his mid-sixties releases.

A modest hit on the pop charts peaking at number thirty-four, it was a top ten single on the R&B charts where it peaked at number seven.

Cash Box said that it has "tremendous rhythmic impact and a big vocal showing."[1]

Chart performance

More information Chart (1968), Peak position ...
Chart (1968) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[2] 34
US Best Selling R&B Singles (Billboard)[3] 7
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Personnel

Other versions

References

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