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lovemydog

(11,833 posts)
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 05:39 PM Oct 2016

Stevie Wonder’s ‘Songs in the Key of Life’: The Masterpiece That Captured Every Color of Life

Stevie Wonder’s ‘Songs in the Key of Life’ Turns 40: The Masterpiece That Captured Every Color of Life
by Stereo Williams

The double album is the superstar musician’s favorite indulgence. A double LP, more often than not, is a status symbol for top-tier pop artists to both flex creatively and to announce themselves as an artiste of the highest order. Double albums are, by nature, sprawling; a testament to both the artist’s creative ambition and ego-driven indulgence. In the post-CD era, double albums are especially unnecessary and overstuffed—even the best double albums since 1987 are weighed down with just too much music—and not all of it is inspired. But in the 1970s, the album was still the tool with which artists transmitted their most evocative musical ideas, and the double album was a sign that you’d reached a certain level of artistry.

And while the LP era gave us a plethora of great double albums—the visceral urgency and variety of the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main St., the mish-mash collection of eccentricities on the Beatles’ “White Album,” Marvin Gaye’s achingly personal Here My Dear, Elton John’s melodic pop opus Goodbye Yellow Brick Road—none of those great albums achieve the kind of balance in creative scope, musical variety and consistent listenability that Stevie Wonder captures so masterfully on his magnificent Songs In the Key of Life.

He’d had to fight to get to this place. In the 1960s, Wonder was one of Motown’s hitmakers, but hadn’t had anywhere near the level of consistency that label standard-bearers like The Supremes, Smokey Robinson and Marvin Gaye had enjoyed. His commercial lulls even led to in-house speculation at one point that it would be best for the label to drop the former child star.

“If I were the president of the company I’d do the same thing,” Wonder recalled decades later in a 1984 interview with David Breskin. “Straight out. But fortunately, it all worked out … to everyone’s surprise—or to some people’s surprise. Because some people would say things like, ‘Oh, that boy’s gonna really be great. You don’t know how talented that boy is.’ And the others would say ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, uh-huh, sure.’ They didn’t really vibe on me. Now [Motown greats] James Jamerson and Benny Benjamin always said I’d be great. I had the confidence that something good was gonna happen but I didn’t know when. And then … it began to happen.”

More here:

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/10/02/stevie-wonder-s-songs-in-the-key-of-life-turns-40-the-masterpiece-that-captured-every-color-of-life.html

It's tough to pick a favorite song from this or any of Stevie records. All of Music On My Mind, Talking Book, Innervisions, Fullfillingnes' First Finale, Songs & Hotter Than July is what I'd say! Songs In The Key Of Life has Pastime Paradise, Have a Talk with God, Love's in Need of Love Today & of course I Wish & Sir Duke. As is one of my faves:



What are some of your favorite Stevie Wonder songs?
18 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Stevie Wonder’s ‘Songs in the Key of Life’: The Masterpiece That Captured Every Color of Life (Original Post) lovemydog Oct 2016 OP
Heaven is Ten Zillion Light Years Away Raster Oct 2016 #1
'in my heart I can feel it' lovemydog Oct 2016 #4
"I Wish" is my favorite off this album kwassa Oct 2016 #2
At that time... tonedevil Oct 2016 #3
Very interesting analysis. lovemydog Oct 2016 #16
Oh my, first I time I read so much of his story. sheshe2 Oct 2016 #5
summer soft and ordinary pain mopinko Oct 2016 #6
Oh wow... you just brought back one of my favorite memories :) Silver Gaia Oct 2016 #7
You haven't done NOTHING! TheDebbieDee Oct 2016 #8
Bum bum bum doo da wop lovemydog Oct 2016 #9
Sing it loud, for your people, sing doo-da-wop -- byronius Oct 2016 #10
Doo do wop! mahina Oct 2016 #13
Raised our son on this album bigbrother05 Oct 2016 #11
you picked it: "As" paulkienitz Oct 2016 #12
Another Star. Uptight (Everything's Alright). Eleanors38 Oct 2016 #14
More great songs! lovemydog Oct 2016 #15
Everyone has their view on why Motown was so unique... Eleanors38 Oct 2016 #18
Great guest appearances too Montauk6 Oct 2016 #17

kwassa

(23,340 posts)
2. "I Wish" is my favorite off this album
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 05:47 PM
Oct 2016

A wonderful lead-in bass line, to an absolutely great funk song. Wonder at his best.

 

tonedevil

(3,022 posts)
3. At that time...
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 05:57 PM
Oct 2016

Stevie Wonder was putting out albums that charted where popular music was going for the next several years. After Talking Book and Innervisions come out everybody was trying to sound like that. Songs in the Key of Life appears and for the next five years all the popular artists are trying to copy that sound. In many ways I think Stevie Wonder influenced and changed popular music even more than the Beatles. Oh yeah one more thing, Superstitious has the best bass line ever written.

lovemydog

(11,833 posts)
16. Very interesting analysis.
Mon Oct 10, 2016, 12:21 AM
Oct 2016

I haven't thought about it too much but I think you're right.

Stevie & all the Motown records definitely influenced the Beatles & other popular music in the 60's & 70's.

His unique use of synthesizers influenced so much of 80's music too, now that I think more on it.

Thanks for sharing your musical insight.

mopinko

(70,118 posts)
6. summer soft and ordinary pain
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 07:26 PM
Oct 2016

got me through a broken heart.

i think "as" is the one i cant resist singing.

saw him in '08 doing a free concert in grant park here. played for 3 hours, everyone in the crowd singing and dancing.

Silver Gaia

(4,544 posts)
7. Oh wow... you just brought back one of my favorite memories :)
Mon Oct 3, 2016, 07:31 PM
Oct 2016

(which is from the first time I heard this album) This is one of my all-time favorite albums, and contains some of my all-time favorite songs. Just had to go listen to a few on YouTube... Love's in Need of Love Today... I Wish... Sir Duke... but really, all of it. It's still relevant and still makes me want to get up and dance...

Thanks!

bigbrother05

(5,995 posts)
11. Raised our son on this album
Wed Oct 5, 2016, 04:20 PM
Oct 2016

40 next month. When he was crying and wouldn't quiet down, two minutes in and we were dancing around the room with smiles

 

Eleanors38

(18,318 posts)
18. Everyone has their view on why Motown was so unique...
Mon Oct 10, 2016, 05:07 PM
Oct 2016

I think the best sounds were Processional! The horns were at least as strong as strings in heralding the music, maybe more so. When I grew up, I longed for the Homecoming/Gator Growl each year in Gainesville, Florida when FAMU's great band were guests, and performed down University Avenue, and then at Florida Field the same night before tens of thousands. Man! those horns! A victory parade -- and they got the applause.

Another Star is epic. You could imagine a movie and write the narrative to it.

Montauk6

(8,077 posts)
17. Great guest appearances too
Mon Oct 10, 2016, 12:00 PM
Oct 2016

George Benson - Takes over lead duties on the close of "Another Star"
Herbie Hancock - Beautiful Rhodes solo on "As"
Dorothy Ashby - Ethereal harp on "If It's Magic"
Michael Sembello - Killer guitar on "Contusion"
Deniece Williams, Minnie Riperton - Angelic backgrounds on "Ordinary Pain" not to mention Shirley Brewer's counterpoint
Bobbi Humphrey - Great flute work leading into the Benson takeover

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