How Did Marvin Gaye DIE?

After inflict­ing decades of tor­ment and abuse, Mar­vin Gay Sr. shot his son Mar­vin Gaye at point-blank range inside the fam­i­ly’s Los Ange­les home on April 1, 1984

A s music crit­ic Michael Eric Dyson once said, Motown leg­end Mar­vin Gaye “chased away the demons of mil­lions… with his heav­en­ly sound and divine art.” But while this soul­ful voice healed those who lis­tened, the man behind it suf­fered a tremen­dous amount of pain.

That pain large­ly cen­tered on Gaye’s rela­tion­ship with his father, Mar­vin Gay Sr., an abu­sive man who nev­er want­ed his son and made no secret of it. A vio­lent alco­holic, Gay took out his anger on his chil­dren — espe­cial­ly Mar­vin

But not only did Mar­vin Gaye endure this abu­sive child­hood, he even­tu­al­ly found world­wide fame as a soul singer for the icon­ic Motown Records in the 1960s and ’70s. But by the 1980s, Gaye moved back in with his par­ents in Los Ange­les fol­low­ing a los­ing bat­tle with cocaine addic­tion as well as finan­cial dif­fi­cul­ties.

Marvin Gaye Death

Wiki­me­dia Commons“He want­ed every­thing to be beau­ti­ful,” a friend once said of Gaye. “I think his only real hap­pi­ness was in his music.”

It was there, in the family’s Los Ange­les home, that the ten­sion between Gaye and his father reached its trag­ic cli­max when Mar­vin Gay Sr. fatal­ly shot his son three times in the chest on April 1, 1984.

But as the Prince Of Motown’s broth­er, Frankie, lat­er said in his mem­oir Mar­vin Gaye: My Broth­er, Mar­vin Gaye’s death seemed writ­ten in stone from the begin­ning

Inside The Abusive Household Of Marvin Gay Sr.

Mar­vin Pentz Gay Jr. (he changed the spelling of his sur­name lat­er on) was born on April 2, 1939, in Wash­ing­ton, D.C. From the start, there was vio­lence inside the home thanks to his father and vio­lence out­side the home due to the rough neigh­bor­hood and pub­lic hous­ing project in which they lived.

Gaye described liv­ing in his father’s house as “liv­ing with a king, a very pecu­liar, change­able, cru­el, and all-pow­er­ful king.”

That king, Mar­vin Gay Sr., hailed from Jes­samine Coun­ty, Ken­tucky, where he was born to an abu­sive father of his own in 1914. By the time he had a fam­i­ly him­self, Gay was a min­is­ter in a strict Pen­te­costal sect who dis­ci­plined his chil­dren severe­ly, with Mar­vin report­ed­ly get­ting the worst of it.

While under his father’s roof, the young Gaye suf­fered vicious abuse from his father near­ly every day. His sis­ter Jeanne lat­er recalled that Gaye’s child­hood “con­sist­ed of a series of bru­tal whip­pings.”

And as Gaye him­self lat­er said, “By the time I was twelve, there wasn’t an inch on my body that hadn’t been bruised and beat­en by him.”

This abuse prompt­ed him to turn to music rather quick­ly as an escape. He also lat­er said that were it not for his mother’s encour­age­ment and care, he would have killed him­self

The abuse that caused these sui­ci­dal thoughts may have been part­ly fueled by Mar­vin Gay Sr.’s com­pli­cat­ed emo­tions about his own rumored homo­sex­u­al­i­ty. Whether or not that’s true, the source of the rumors was large­ly that he cross-dressed, a behav­ior that was — often erro­neous­ly — linked with homo­sex­u­al­i­ty, espe­cial­ly in decades past

Accord­ing to Mar­vin Gaye, his father often wore women’s clothes, and “there have been peri­ods when [my father’s] hair was very long and curled under, and when he seemed quite adamant in show­ing the world the girl­ish side of him­self.”

But what­ev­er its cause, the abuse didn’t stop Gaye from also devel­op­ing an extra­or­di­nary tal­ent for music. He went from per­form­ing at his father’s church at age four to mas­ter­ing both the piano and drums by the time he was a teen. He devel­oped a deep love for R&B and doo-wop.

As he start­ed to make a name for him­self pro­fes­sion­al­ly, Gaye want­ed to dis­tance him­self from his tox­ic rela­tion­ship with his father so he changed his name from “Gay” to “Gaye.” Gaye report­ed­ly also changed his name in order to quell rumors that he and his father were both homo­sex­u­als

Gaye even­tu­al­ly moved with a musi­cal col­league of his to Detroit and was able to secure a per­for­mance for the biggest name on that city’s music scene, Motown Records founder Berry Gordy. He was quick­ly signed to the label and soon mar­ried Gordy’s old­er sis­ter Anna

Though Gaye soon became the Prince of Motown and enjoyed mon­u­men­tal suc­cess for the next 15 years, his rela­tion­ship with his father nev­er tru­ly healed.

By the time Mar­vin Gaye fin­ished what would be his last tour in 1983, he had devel­oped a cocaine addic­tion to cope with the pres­sures of the road as well as his failed mar­riage to Anna due to his infi­deli­ty and which result­ed in a con­tentious legal bat­tle. Addic­tion had made him para­noid and finan­cial­ly unsta­ble, inspir­ing him to return home. When he learned that his moth­er was recov­er­ing from kid­ney surgery, that only gave him more rea­son to move into the fam­i­ly home in Los Ange­les.

Back home, he found him­self in a pat­tern of vio­lent fights with his father. Even after decades, the old prob­lems between the two were still rag­ing.

“My hus­band nev­er want­ed Mar­vin, and he nev­er liked him,” Alber­ta Gay, Mar­vin Gaye’s moth­er, lat­er explained. “He used to say he didn’t think he was real­ly his child. I told him that was non­sense. He knew Mar­vin was his. But for some rea­son, he didn’t love Mar­vin, and what’s worse, he didn’t want me to love Mar­vin either.”

Marvin Gaye Sr

Lennox McLendon/Associated Press­Mar­vin Gay Sr. said he wasn’t aware his son had died until a detec­tive told him hours lat­er.

Whether it was these fears, Mar­vin Gaye’s drug addic­tion, Mar­vin Gay Sr.’s alco­holism, or a myr­i­ad of oth­er caus­es, Gaye’s time back home quick­ly proved to be vio­lent. Gay even­tu­al­ly kicked Gaye out, but the lat­ter returned, say­ing, “I have just one father. I want to make peace with him.”

How Marvin Gaye Died At The Hands Of His Father

Funeral Of The Prince Of Soul

The “Prince of Motown” was buried three days after his 45th birth­day. Fans were dev­as­tat­ed when they learned how Mar­vin Gaye had died.
On April 1, 1984, Mar­vin Gaye and Mar­vin Gay Sr. became engaged in a phys­i­cal alter­ca­tion after anoth­er one of their ver­bal bat­tles in their Los Ange­les home.

Then, Gaye alleged­ly began beat­ing his father until his moth­er, Alber­ta, sep­a­rat­ed them. While Gaye was talk­ing with his moth­er in his bed­room and try­ing to calm down, his father reached for a gift that his son had once giv­en him: a .38 Spe­cial.

Mar­vin Gay Sr. entered the bed­room and, with­out a word, shot his son once in the chest. That one shot was enough to kill Gaye, but after he fell to the ground, his father approached him and shot him a sec­ond and third time at point-blank range.

Death Of Marvin Gaye

Ron Galella/Ron Galel­la Col­lec­tion via Get­ty Images­Some 10,000 mourn­ers attend­ed the funer­al fol­low­ing the death of Mar­vin Gaye.

Alber­ta fled in hor­ror and her younger son Frankie, who lived in a guest house on the prop­er­ty with his wife, was the first one to enter the scene just after Mar­vin Gaye’s death. Frankie lat­er recalled how his moth­er col­lapsed before them, cry­ing, “he’s shot Mar­vin. He’s killed my boy.”

Mar­vin Gaye was pro­nounced dead at age 44 at 1:01 PM. When police arrived, Mar­vin Gay Sr. was sit­ting calm­ly on the porch, gun in hand. When police asked him if he loved his son, Gay replied, “Let’s say I didn’t dis­like him