Stevie Wonder

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Stevie Wonder Bio
Stevie Wonder is
a much-beloved American icon and an indisputable genius not only of
R&B but popular music in general. Blind virtually since birth,
Wonder's heightened awareness of sound helped him create vibrant, colorful
music teeming with life and ambition. Nearly everything he recorded bore
the stamp of his sunny, joyous positivity; even when he addressed serious
racial, social, and spiritual issues (which he did quite often in his
prime), or sang about heartbreak and romantic uncertainty, an underlying
sense of optimism and hope always seemed to emerge. Much like his
inspiration, Ray Charles, Wonder had a voracious appetite for many
different kinds of music, and refused to confine himself to any one sound
or style. His best records were a richly eclectic brew of soul, funk, rock
& roll, sophisticated Broadway/Tin Pan Alley-style pop, jazz, reggae,
and African elements -- and they weren't just stylistic exercises; Wonder
took it all and forged it into his own personal form of expression. His
range helped account for his broad-based appeal, but so did his unique,
elastic voice, his peerless melodic facility, his gift for complex
arrangements, and his taste for lovely, often sentimental ballads.
Additionally, Wonder's pioneering use of synthesizers during the '70s
changed the face of R&B; he employed a kaleidoscope of contrasting
textures and voices that made him a virtual one-man band, all the while
evoking a surprisingly organic warmth. Along with Marvin Gaye and Isaac
Hayes, Wonder brought R&B into the album age, crafting his LPs as
cohesive, consistent statements with compositions that often took time to
make their point. All of this made Wonder perhaps R&B's greatest
individual auteur, rivaled only by Gaye or, in later days, Prince.
Originally, Wonder was a child prodigy who started out in the general
Motown mold, but he took control of his vision in the '70s, spinning off a
series of incredible albums that were as popular as they were acclaimed;
most of his reputation rests on these works, which most prominently
include Talking Book, Innervisions, and Songs in the Key of Life. His
output since then has been inconsistent, marred by excesses of
sentimentality and less of the progressive imagination of his best work,
but it's hardly lessened the reverence in which he's long been held. |

Stevie Wonder Bio |
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Stevie Wonder Pictures

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Stevie Wonder Biography |
Wonder
was born Steveland Hardaway Judkins in Saginaw, MI, on May 13, 1950 (he
later altered his name to Steveland Morris when his mother married). A
premature infant, he was put on oxygen treatment in an incubator; likely
it was an excess of oxygen that exacerbated a visual condition known as
retinopathy of prematurity, causing his blindness. In 1954, his family
moved to Detroit, where the already musically inclined Stevie began
singing in his church's choir; from there he blossomed into a genuine
prodigy, learning piano, drums, and harmonica all by the age of nine.
While performing for some of his friends in 1961, Stevie was discovered by
Ronnie White of the Miracles, who helped arrange an audition with Berry
Gordy at Motown. Gordy signed the youngster immediately and teamed him
with producer/songwriter Clarence Paul, under the new name Little Stevie
Wonder. Stevie released his first two albums in 1962: A Tribute to Uncle
Ray, which featured covers of Stevie's hero Ray Charles, and The Jazz Soul
of Little Stevie, an orchestral jazz album spotlighting his instrumental
skills on piano, harmonica, and assorted percussion. Neither sold very
well, but that all changed in 1963 with the live album The 12 Year Old
Genius, which featured a new extended version of the harmonica
instrumental "Fingertips." Edited for release as a single,
"Fingertips, Pt. 2" rocketed to the top of both the pop and
R&B charts, thanks to Wonder's irresistible, youthful exuberance;
meanwhile, The 12 Year Old Genius became Motown's first chart-topping LP.
Wonder charted a few more singles over the
next year, but none on the level of "Fingertips, Pt. 2." As his
voice changed, his recording career was temporarily put on hold, and he
studied classical piano at the Michigan School for the Blind in the
meantime. He dropped the "Little" portion of his stage name in
1964, and re-emerged the following year with the infectious, typically
Motown-sounding dance tune "Uptight (Everything's Alright)," a
number one R&B/Top Five pop smash. Not only did he co-write the song
for his first original hit, but it also reinvented him as a more mature
vocalist in the public's mind, making the similar follow-up
"Nothing's Too Good for My Baby" another success. The first
signs of Wonder's social activism appeared in 1966 via his hit cover of
Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" and its follow-up, "A
Place in the Sun," but as Motown still had the final say on Wonder's
choice of material, this new direction would not yet become a major facet
of his work.
By this time, Wonder was, however,
beginning to take more of a hand in his own career. He co-wrote his next
several hits, all of which made the R&B Top Ten -- "Hey
Love," "I Was Made to Love Her" (an R&B number one that
went to number two pop in 1967), and "For Once in My Life"
(another smash that reached number two pop and R&B). Wonder's 1968
album For Once in My Life signaled his budding ambition; he co-wrote about
half of the material and, for the first time, co-produced several tracks.
The record also contained three more singles in the R&B chart-topper
"Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day," "You Met Your Match," and
"I Don't Know Why." Wonder scored again in 1969 with the pop and
R&B Top Five hit "My Cherie Amour" (which he'd actually
recorded three years prior) and the Top Ten "Yester-Me, Yester-You,
Yesterday." In 1970, Wonder received his first-ever co-production
credit for the album Signed, Sealed & Delivered; he co-wrote the
R&B chart-topper "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours" with
singer Syreeta Wright, whom he married later that year, and also scored
hits with "Heaven Help Us All" and a rearrangement of the
Beatles' "We Can Work It Out." In addition, two other Motown
artists had major success with Wonder co-writes: the Spinners' "It's
a Shame" and the Miracles' only pop number one, "Tears of a
Clown."
1971 brought a turning point in Wonder's
career. On his 21st birthday, his contract with Motown expired, and the
royalties set aside in his trust fund became available to him. A month
before his birthday, Wonder released Where I'm Coming From, his first
entirely self-produced album, which also marked the first time he wrote or
co-wrote every song on an LP (usually in tandem with Wright) and the first
time his keyboard and synthesizer work dominated his arrangements. Gordy
was reportedly not fond of the work, and it wasn't a major commercial
success, producing only the Top Ten hit "If You Really Love Me"
(plus a classic B-side in "Never Dreamed You'd Leave in
Summer"). Nonetheless, it was clearly an ambitious attempt at making
a unified album-length artistic statement, and served notice that Wonder
was no longer content to release albums composed of hit singles and
assorted filler. Accordingly, Wonder did not immediately renew his
contract with Motown, as the label had expected; instead, he used proceeds
from his trust fund to build his own recording studio and to enroll in
music theory classes at USC. He negotiated a new deal with Motown that
dramatically increased his royalty rate and established his own publishing
company, Black Bull Music, which allowed him to retain the rights to his
music; most importantly, he wrested full artistic control over his
recordings, as Gaye had just done with the landmark What's Going On.
Freed from the dictates of Motown's
hit-factory mindset, Wonder had already begun following a more personal
and idiosyncratic muse. One of his negotiating chips had been a full album
completed at his new studio; Wonder had produced, played nearly all the
instruments, and written all the material (with Wright contributing to
several tracks). Released under Wonder's new deal in early 1972, Music of
My Mind heralded his arrival as a major, self-contained talent with an
original vision that pushed the boundaries of R&B. The album produced
a hit single in the spacy, synth-driven ballad "Superwoman (Where
Were You When I Needed You)," but like contemporary work by Hayes and
Gaye, Music of My Mind worked as a smoothly flowing song suite unto
itself. Around the same time it was released, Wonder's marriage to Wright
broke up; the two remained friends, however, and Wonder produced and wrote
several songs for her debut album. The same year, Wonder toured with the
Rolling Stones, bringing his music to a large white audience as well.
For the follow-up to Music of My Mind,
Wonder refined his approach, tightening up his songcraft while addressing
his romance with Wright. The result, Talking Book, was released in late
1972 and made him a superstar. Song for song one of the strongest R&B
albums ever released, Talking Book also perfected Wonder's spacy,
futuristic experiments with electronics, and was hailed as a magnificently
realized masterpiece. Wonder topped the charts with the gutsy, driving
funk classic "Superstition" and the mellow, jazzy ballad
"You Are the Sunshine of My Life," which went on to become a pop
standard; those two songs went on to win three Grammys between them.
Amazingly, Wonder only upped the ante with his next album, 1973's
Innervisions, a concept album about the state of contemporary society that
ranks with Gaye's What's Going On as a pinnacle of socially conscious
R&B. The ghetto chronicle "Living for the City" and the
intense spiritual self-examination "Higher Ground" both went to
number one on the R&B charts and the pop Top Ten, and Innervisions
took home a Grammy for Album of the Year. Wonder was lucky to be alive to
enjoy the success; while being driven to a concert in North Carolina, a
large timber fell on Wonder's car. He sustained serious head injuries and
lapsed into a coma, but fortunately made a full recovery.
Wonder's next record, 1974's Fulfillingness'
First Finale, was slightly more insular and less accessible than its
immediate predecessors, and unsurprisingly imbued with a sense of
mortality. The hits, however, were the upbeat "Boogie On, Reggae
Woman" (a number one R&B and Top Five pop hit) and the venomous
Richard Nixon critique "You Haven't Done Nothin'" (number one on
both sides). It won him a second straight Album of the Year Grammy, by
which time he'd been heavily involved as a producer and writer on
Syreeta's second album, Stevie Wonder Presents Syreeta. Wonder
subsequently retired to his studio and spent two years crafting a
large-scale project that would stand as his magnum opus. Finally released
in 1976, Songs in the Key of Life was a sprawling two-LP-plus-one-EP set
that found Wonder at his most ambitious and expansive. Some critics called
it brilliant but prone to excess and indulgence, while others hailed it as
his greatest masterpiece and the culmination of his career; in the end,
they were probably both right. "Sir Duke," an ebullient tribute
to music in general and Duke Ellington in particular, and the funky
"I Wish" both went to number one pop and R&B; the hit
"Isn't She Lovely," a paean to Wonder's daughter, became
something of a standard, and "Pastime Paradise" was later
sampled for the backbone of Coolio's rap smash "Gangsta's
Paradise." Not surprisingly, Songs in the Key of Life won a Grammy
for Album of the Year; in hindsight, though, it marked the end of a
remarkable explosion of creativity and of Wonder's artistic prime.
Having poured a tremendous amount of energy
into Songs in the Key of Life, Wonder released nothing for the next three
years. When he finally returned in 1979, it was with the mostly
instrumental Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants, ostensibly the
soundtrack to a never-released documentary. Although it contained a few
pop songs, including the hit "Send One Your Love," its symphonic
flirtations befuddled most listeners and critics. It still made the Top
Ten on the LP chart on Wonder's momentum alone -- one of the stranger
releases to do so. To counteract possible speculation that he'd gone off
the deep end, Wonder rushed out the straightforward pop album Hotter Than
July in 1980. The reggae-flavored "Master Blaster (Jammin')"
returned him to the top of the R&B charts and the pop Top Five, and
"Happy Birthday" was part of the ultimately successful campaign
to make Martin Luther King's birthday a national holiday (Wonder being one
of the cause's most active champions). Artistically speaking, Hotter Than
July was a cut below his classic '70s output, but it was still a solid
outing; fans were so grateful to have the old Wonder back that they made
it his first platinum-selling LP.
In 1981, Wonder began work on a follow-up
album that was plagued by delays, suggesting that he might not be able to
return to the visionary heights of old. He kept busy in the meantime,
though; in 1982, his racial-harmony duet with Paul McCartney, "Ebony
and Ivory," hit number one, and he released a greatest-hits set
covering 1972-1982 called Original Musiquarium I. It featured four new
songs, of which "That Girl" (number one R&B, Top Five pop)
and the lengthy, jazzy "Do I Do" (featuring Dizzy Gillespie;
number two R&B) were significant hits. In 1984, still not having
completed the official follow-up to Hotter Than July, he recorded the
soundtrack to the Gene Wilder comedy The Woman in Red, which wasn't quite
a full-fledged Stevie Wonder album but did feature a number of new songs,
including "I Just Called to Say I Love You." Adored by the
public (it was his biggest-selling single ever) and loathed by critics
(who derided it as sappy and simple-minded), "I Just Called to Say I
Love You" was an across-the-board number one smash, and won an Oscar
for Best Song.
Wonder finally completed the official album
he'd been working on for nearly five years, and released In Square Circle
in 1985. Paced by the number one hit "Part Time Lover" -- his
last solo pop chart-topper -- and several other strong songs, In Square
Circle went platinum, even if Wonder's synthesizer arrangements now
sounded standard rather than groundbreaking. He performed on the number
one charity singles "We Are the World" by USA for Africa and
"That's What Friends Are For" by Dionne Warwick & Friends,
and returned quickly with a new album, Characters, in 1987. While
Characters found Wonder's commercial clout on the pop charts slipping
away, it was a hit on the R&B side, topping the album charts and
producing a number one hit in "Skeletons." It would be his final
release of the '80s; he didn't return until 1991, with the soundtrack to
the Spike Lee film Jungle Fever. His next full album of new material,
1995's Conversation Peace, was a commercial disappointment, despite
winning two Grammys for the single "For Your Love." That same
year, Coolio revived "Pastime Paradise" in his own brooding rap
smash "Gangsta's Paradise," which became the year's biggest hit.
Wonder capitalized on the renewed notoriety by cutting a hit duet with
Babyface, "How Come, How Long," in 1996. Since then, Motown has
released a number of remasters and compilations attempting to define and
repackage Wonder's vast legacy. His far-reaching influence was felt in the
neo-soul movement that came to prominence in the late '90s, and he also
remained a composer of choice for jazz artists looking to incorporate
harmonically sophisticated pop/R&B tunes into their repertoires. That
only scratches the surface of Wonder's impact on contemporary popular
music, which is why he was inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in
1989, and remains a living legend regardless of whatever else he does. ~
Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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