Smokey Robinson Wrote a Song the Day Marvin Gaye Died — He Never Let Anyone Hear It

Quan Marvin Gay and Smokeoky Robinson were best friends for 30 years. The day Marvin died, Smokeoky locked himself in a room. What he wrote that night, he never released. There is a room in Detroit that nobody talks about. Not the studios on West Grand Boulevard where the hits were made. Not the boardrooms where Barry Gordy built his empire.
Not the stages where the mottown acts performed for audiences who could not believe what they were hearing. A different kind of room. A private room in a private house in the city where two men had become friends before either of them knew what they were going to become and where one of them spent a night in April 1984 that he has never fully described to anyone.
The door was locked from the inside. The people who loved him knew better than to knock. They understood in the way that the people who are closest to someone understand things that cannot be explained or justified. That whatever was happening behind that door was something that required the specific privacy of absolute solitude.
That the grief that had arrived that afternoon with a phone call was not the kind that could be shared or witnessed or managed with company. His name was William Robinson Jeter. The world knew him as Smokey and the phone call had told him that Marvin Gay was dead. He had known Marvin Gay for 30 years. Not known of him, known him in the specific irreplaceable sense of two people who have been present for each other through the full arc of what adult life contains.
who have accumulated between them enough shared history and private knowledge and genuine mutual understanding that the loss of one of them leaves the other carrying something that has no adequate name. They had met in the late 1950s when both of them were teenagers in Detroit trying to figure out if the music they were making was going to amount to anything.
Smoky Robinson was already writing songs, extraordinary songs with a gift for melody and lyric that Barry Gordy recognized immediately as something that did not come along often. Marvin Gay had arrived in Detroit through Harvey Fukqua and the Moonglows carrying a voice that everyone who heard it recognized as remarkable and that the music industry had not yet figured out how to fully deploy.
They were both young. They were both talented in ways that exceeded what the world had yet confirmed. They were both black men in a city and an industry that had specific ideas about what black men were allowed to do and how they were allowed to do it. And they were both in their different ways in the process of deciding that those ideas were insufficient.
The friendship that formed between them was not the friendship of two people who were similar. It was the friendship of two people who were complimentary, who had enough in common to understand each other and enough that was different to genuinely need each other. Smokey was the writer, the craftsman, the man whose gift for language and melody produced some of the most perfectly constructed songs in the history of popular music.
Marvin was the voice, the feeling, the man whose gift for transmission for taking whatever a song contained and sending it directly into the chest of whoever was listening produced something that the most perfectly constructed song could not produce on its own. They recognized in each other what they themselves lacked, and they spent 30 years in each other’s orbit because of it.
The friendship was not without its complications. No 30year friendship between two people of genuine ego and genuine talent is without its complications. There were periods of distance, periods when the demands of their respective careers and their respective personal lives reduced the contact between them to occasional phone calls and the specific reliable reconnection that happened whenever their professional paths intersected.
There were disagreements about music, about business, about the choices each of them made in their personal lives that the other watched with the particular mix of concern and resignation that comes from knowing someone well enough to see the problem clearly and loving them enough not to walk away from it.
But underneath the complications, the friendship was real in the way that the most important relationships are real. Not despite the difficulties, but through them. Not in spite of the disagreements, but because the disagreements had been survived, and the surviving had confirmed something about the depth of the connection.
Smokey watched Marvin’s what’s going on battle with Barry Gordy from the inside. He was present in the mottown world, deeply embedded in the organization that Gordy had built, loyal to Gordy in ways that sometimes put him in a complicated position relative to the artists who were fighting against Gord’s commercial instincts. But he heard the recordings.
He heard what Marvin was trying to make. and he understood with the specific understanding of a songwriter who had spent his entire career trying to say something true in three minutes that what Marvin was making was important in a way that the commercial calculation could not fully account for.
He told him so not publicly. Smokeoky Robinson was not a man who made his private conversations public, but in the specific direct way that real friends speak to each other when they believe in something the other person is doing. He told Marvin that the music was right and that the battle was worth fighting. He called him during the worst of it.
During the months when Gordy was refusing to release the album and the entire industry seemed to be aligned against what Marvin was trying to do. Smokey called they talked the way they always talked not about the business not about the politics but about the music about what it was trying to say and whether it was saying it and whether the saying of it was worth what it cost.
Marvin needed those calls. He needed them in the specific way that people in the middle of a genuine creative crisis need the confirmation of someone whose judgment they trust. Not reassurance, not the empty encouragement of people who want to make you feel better, but the honest assessment of someone who knows what the work requires and can tell you whether you are meeting that requirement.
Smokeoky’s assessment was that Marvin was meeting it and what’s going on was released and went to number one and changed everything. And Smokeoky Robinson was one of the people who was not surprised. The years that followed contained everything that the years of any two people who remain in genuine contact contain.
The births and the deaths and the marriages and the divorces and the professional triumphs and the personal failures and the gradual cumulative accumulation of shared history. That is the substance of a 30-year friendship. Smokey watched Marvin’s divorce from Anna Gordy. With the specific pain of someone who had known both parties for a long time and could see the damage being done to people, he cared about without being able to prevent it.
He watched the relationship with Janice Hunter and its complications. He watched the cocaine and what it did over the years to the man he had known since they were both teenagers in Detroit, trying to figure out if their music was going to amount to anything. He called. He always called. Even during the periods when Marvin was least accessible, during the Austin years, during the periods of maximum isolation and maximum difficulty, Smokeoky found ways to maintain the connection.
Not because he had a strategy for it or because he was following some template for how to support a friend in crisis. Because Marvin was his friend and the friendship was real and real friendships do not require a strategy. He called the year before Marvin died when Marvin had come back from Ostend and made sexual healing and gone on the midnight love tour and seemed to everyone who saw him to be a man who had come through the fire and emerged changed but intact.
They talked for a long time that night about the music, about the comeback, about what it had felt like to be in Oend, and whether the isolation had been what it needed to be or whether it had been something else. Marvin said something in that conversation that Smokey has quoted in various forms, in various accounts over the years that amount, in all of them, to the same essential statement.
He said that the only thing that had kept him going during the worst of it was was the knowledge that the music was still there. That whatever else had been compromised or lost or damaged during those years, the voice had survived and the need to use it had survived. And as long as those two things were intact, there was still something to come back to.
Smokey heard this and felt something that he has described as a combination of relief and forboding. relief because Marvin sounded like himself, like the man who had been his friend for 30 years, the man who moved through the world with the specific combination of sensitivity and strength that had always characterized him. forboating because the relief seemed fragile seemed dependent on conditions on the music continuing to be there on the voice continuing to work on the specific and irreplaceable thing that made Marvin gay Marvin Gay continuing to
function he was right to feel the forboding the call came on April 1st 1984 the morning after Marvin’s 44th birthday the morning that the world learned that Marvin Gayair had shot his son in the hallway of a family house in Los Angeles and that Marvin Gay was gone. Smokeoky Robinson received the news the way people receive news of this kind.
Not all at once, not in the clean processed form that news eventually takes after it has been repeated and contextualized and integrated into the narrative of a life, but in the raw unmediated form of a phone call that says something the mind cannot immediately accommodate. He went to his room. He locked the door. The people in his house understood not to knock.
What happened in that room over the hours that followed is not something Smokeoky Robinson has ever fully described. He has spoken in interviews conducted in the years and decades since about that day and that night, but always in the careful measured language of a man who is describing the outline of something without giving access to its interior.
He has said that he needed to be alone. He has said that the loss was something he could not process in the presence of other people. He has said that the friendship had been one of the most important things in his life and that its ending was something he was not prepared for had not prepared for could not have prepared for regardless of how much the years of watching Marvin had suggested that something like this was possible.
What he has never fully described is what he did in that room. What he wrote because Smokeoky Robinson is a writer, has always been a writer, reaches for language and melody the way other people reach for other things when what they are carrying becomes too large to hold without externalizing it in some form.
He wrote something that night. This much is known or as close to known as anything about that room is known. He sat down at whatever instrument was available to him, and he wrote something that came directly from the specific terrible, irreplaceable grief of losing the man who had been his friend for 30 years, whose voice he had heard more times than he could count, whose presence in his life had been so constant, and so assumed that its absence was something his mind kept refusing to accept as permanent. He
wrote it and he never released it. This is the fact that stops people when they hear it. Not that he wrote something Smokeoky Robinson responding to grief by writing was as predictable as the sun rising, but that he never released it. That whatever came out of that room on the night of April 1st, 1984 was something that Smokeoky Robinson decided was not for the world.
Was not for the Mottown catalog or the radio or the audience that had loved both of them for 30 years. was for something else. For himself, perhaps? For Marvin, for the specific private, irreplaceable relationship between two people who had known each other since they were teenagers in Detroit, and who would never again be in the same room.
The unreleased song exists. People close to Smokey have confirmed its existence without providing details about its content. It is not a mystery in the commercial sense, not a missing recording that the music industry is searching for, not a piece of lost mottown history that scholars are trying to locate.
It is a piece of private grief that was given a form and then kept in the only place where it was appropriate to keep it between two people. Even after one of them is gone, Smokeoky Robinson has outlived Marvin Gay by more than 40 years. He has continued to make music, to perform, to be one of the most beloved figures in the history of American popular music.
He has spoken about Marvin in countless interviews, has been asked about their friendship and their collaboration and the specific quality of what Marvin was as an artist and as a man more times than anyone could count. He always answers carefully. He always answers with the specific protective care of someone who is holding something that belongs to both of them and is not going to give all of it to the people who are asking.
He says that Marvin was his best friend. He says that the voice was something the world had not heard before and will not hear again. He says that the loss of him was something he has never fully recovered from, which is not a dramatic statement, but a simple factual one. The kind that only makes sense coming from someone who actually knew what they lost.
He does not say what he wrote that night. He does not say where it is or what it sounds like or whether he ever listens to it. He keeps it in the room with the locked door, which is where certain things belong. in the private space between two people whose relationship the world witnessed but never fully understood.
This is what 30 years of genuine friendship looks like when it ends. Not a press release, not a public tribute, not even a song released into the world to confirm to the audience that the loss was real. A locked room, a night of writing, and something that will never be heard by anyone who was not in that friendship.
Marvin Gay and Smokeoky Robinson were best friends for 30 years. The day Marvin died, Smokeoky locked himself in a room. What he wrote that night, he never released. And the specific, irreplaceable weight of what that represents, the grief that is too private to be public, the love that is too real to be performed, the loss that is honored most completely by being held rather than shared.
That weight is in every word. Smokeoky Robinson has ever spoken about his friend. You can hear it if you listen carefully enough. It sounds like 30 years. It sounds like everything that two people build between them that the world cannot fully see and cannot when it is gone fully account for.
It sounds in the end like Marvin Gay’s voice, which is the only sound in the world that was adequate to what they were to each other. And which in the music that Marvin left behind is still audible, still traveling, still finding the people it was meant to find and doing to them what Smokeoky Robinson understood from the first time he heard it that it would always do.
still making people feel that they are not alone in whatever they are carrying even now, even after everything. Still, if this story moved you, if you felt something hearing about a friendship so real that its ending could only be honored with a song that was never meant to be heard, subscribe and hit that like button.
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