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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for posting the music video of Stevie Wonder [born as Stevland Hardaway Judkins] performing Uptight (Everything's Alright) in 1965 in honor of the anniversary of his birth on May 13, 1950.
Happy 70th birthday Stevie Wonder!


Stevie Wonder - A Musical History (BBC4)
Documentary celebrating the career of Stevie Wonder
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-WQblPvwPE


Images:
1. Stevie Wonder holding his daughter Aisha Zakia 'Isn't She Lovely'
2. Stevie Wonder and Coretta Scott King in 1984
3. Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney 'Ebony and Ivory'
4. Stevie Wonder and Tomeeka Robyn Bracy are married in 2017

Biographies
1. imdb.com/name/nm0005567/bio
2. allmusic.com/artist/stevie-wonder-mn [login to see] /biograph

1. Background from {[https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005567/bio]}
"Stevie Wonder Biography
Overview
Born May 13, 1950 in Saginaw, Michigan, USA
Birth Name Stevland Hardaway Judkins
Nickname "Little Stevie" Wonder
Height 6' 0½" (1.84 m)

Mini Bio
Born Stevland Hardaway Judkins in Saginaw, Michigan, United States, to Calvin Judkins and Lula Mae Hardaway. Due to being born six weeks premature, Stevie Wonder was born with a condition called retinopathy of prematurity, which made him blind. Stevie Wonder, even with this disability, made his landmark to be a pioneer and innovator in the music industry.

Stevie Wonder's mother, Lula Mae Hardaway left her husband and moved herself and her children to Detroit. Due to her leaving Lula Hardaway Judkins changed her name to Lula Hardaway and changed Stevie's surname to Stevland Morris. Stevland Morris growing up played various instruments such as the piano, harmonica, drums, and bass. Stevland Morris never played a lot of outdoor activities due to his protective mother. Stevland Morris due to his musical talent was also strongly apart of the church choir. Stevland Morris was originally discovered by Gerald White who often persuaded his brother, soul singer Ronnie White to visit the talented Stevland Morris. Ronnie White after seeing Stevland Morris brought Stevland and his mother to MoTown Records to visit Berry Gordy. Berry Gordy stated he was not impressed by Stevland's singing,or drumming,bongo skills and then he played the harmonica, which astounded Berry Gordy and Stevland Morris in 1961 at the age of eleven signed onto MoTown Records with the stage name, Little Stevie Wonder. The reason why Stevie Wonder had gotten that stage name was because many people were astounded by his ability to play numerous instruments and his ability to sing doing both at the same time, and people called Stevie "A Little Wonder".

Stevie Wonder released his first album called, The Jazz Soul Of Little Stevie at the age of twelve followed by an additional album, Tribute To Uncle Ray dedicated to Ray Charles.

In 1963, Stevie Wonder released a hit-song called, Fingertips Pt(2). The song reached number one on the Billboard Pop Charts. Stevie Wonder became the first singer to have a number one album and single simultaneously. In the song were several percussion instruments played by Stevie Wonder and this song was added to the album, Recorded Live: The Twelve Year Old Genius. Stevie Wonder was then referred to as the child prodigy. Stevie Wonder in 1964 made in film debut in the movie, Muscle Beach Party as well as the sequel Bikini Beach both directed by William Asher. In this movie Stevie Wonder shows off his musical talent singing the songs, Happy Street and Happy Feeling (Dance And Shout).

Stevie Wonder also dropped "Little" from this stage name as his voice started to change and he could no longer sing songs which Clarence Paul had written for him, as they were all written in a higher pitched note. Stevie Wonder then started focusing more on songwriting and came out with genuine hits like Uptight (Everything's Alright),With A Child's Heart, Blowing In The Wind, and a song which he wrote for Smokey Robinson and The Miracles, Tears Of A Clown. Several other songs which were smashing hits in the 60's and 70's were I Was Made To Love Her, Signed Sealed And Delivered I'm Yours, which Stevie stated was an idea he had gotten from his mother, and For Once In My Life.

In 1970 Stevie Wonder left MoTown and recorded two independent albums by himself. Berry Gordy was shocked to hear this by Stevie Wonder and Berry Gord agreed to Stevie Wonder's demand of more independence and full creative control and rights to all his songs. In 1972 Stevie Wonder returned to MoTown records and signed a thirteen million dollar contract with MoTown Records. This entitled Stevie Wonder to a higher royalty rate and more full creative control and the rights to his own songs, which few artists had gotten at that time period. This contract unleashed Wonder's songs to now talk about controversial issues such as poverty, war, drugs, and politics. Stevie is known for writing and performing political songs such as, You Haven't Done Nothing, which took a political stab at Richard Nixon. The first album he had released with his new agreement with MoTown was, Music Of My Mind in 1972. In late 1972 Stevie Wonder released an album which today is known as a historic piece in music, Talking Book. Which included the number one hit-song, Superstition. This song featured the clavinet which Stevie Wonder was credited pioneer of, he later used the electric amplified keyboard instrument in many of his other albums along with the synthesizer. The song Superstition was seen as a significant contribution to the Funk genre. Talking Book also featured, You Are The Sunshine Of My Life which also peaked at number one. Stevie Wonder also toured with The Rolling Stones in 1972 which contributed to his album's success. Stevie Wonder struck a controversial issue with the album, Innervisions in 1973 with singles such as Living For The City which talked about poverty and was credited to African Americans. The album also included singles such as Golden Lady, and All Love Is Fair.

On August,6, 1973 Stevie Wonder was in a car accident. The twenty-three year old Stevie Wonder was in the passenger seat of a 1948 Dodge Flatbed Truck, he was sleeping and had his headphones on, the driver distracted by something, and failed to notice the truck ahead of them and crashed. This sent Stevie Wonder into a coma for several days. In a biography entitled, The Miraculous Journey Of Lula Mae Hardaway she retells the story, "There was a great, grinding screech as metal hit metal and, then, impossibly, as if in some lavishly produced Hollywood action movie, one of the great logs disencumbered itself of the truck and came crashing through the windshield, spearing Stevie square in the forehead." Wonder was sent to a hospital immediately after the accident, and was placed under intensive care, with what they described a "bruise on the head" Wonder then made a successful recovery and in 1974 released Fullfillingness' First Finale and which song topped number one on the Billboard Pop Charts was the political song, You Haven't Done Nothing. By the age of twenty-five he was a multiple Grammy-Award winner, winning Grammies for albums such as Talking Book, Inner Vision, and Fullfillingness' First Finale and at the age of twenty-five with several talent musicians he was on the verge of making what came to be one of this most admirable masterpieces, an album called, Songs In The Key Of Life.

The double-album, Songs In The Key Of Life was released in 1976 and the album became the first of an American artist to debut straight at number one where it remained for fourteen consecutive weeks. The album contained two tracks which rose to number one on the Billboard Charts, I Wish and Sir Duke. The album also contained an extraordinary sentimental song about his daughter Aisha Morris called, Isn't She Lovely". It also contained the song which focused strongly on poverty called, Village Ghetto Land. Rolling Stones listed the album as the 56th Greatest Album Of All Time out of 500.

In 1979, Wonder released a soundtrack album called Journey Through The Secret Life Of Plants. It was featured in the film The Secret Life Of Plants. Wonder also wrote the song, Let's Get Serious for Jermaine Jackson who left The Jacksons and was starting his own solo career. The song was ranked by Billboard to be the number one rhythm and blues song of 1980.

In 1980, Stevie Wonder released the album called Hotter Than July. On this album was a song called Happy Birthday. That song was dedicated to Martin Luther King Jr, and Stevie Wonder was one of the pioneers to getting Martin Luther King Jr a national holiday. Stevie Wonder in 1985 received an Academy Award for his song, I Just Called To Say I Love in the film, The Woman In Red. In 1986, Stevie Wonder made a guest appearance on the hit-show The Cosby Show. It was during this episode in which people were astounded toward what the synthesizer could really do. In 1987 Stevie Wonder made a duet with Michael Jackson on his Bad album with the single, Just Good Friends. In the same year Michael Jackson did a duet on Stevie Wonder's characters album. In 1991, Stevie Wonder recorded a soundtrack album for Spike Lee in his new movie, Jungle Fever. The album was entitled, Jungle Fever and the hit-song on it was entitled Jungle Fever. Other singles that came from this album were Gotta Have You, Feeding Off The Love Of The Land, and These Three Words. Stevie Wonder continued releasing new material throughout the 90's such as Natural Wonder, and Conversation Piece. In 1996 Stevie Wonder's A Song In The Key Of Life album became a documentary subject, and several of the musicians who contributed to the success of the album had a reunion. In 1997 Stevie Wonder collaborated with Babyface on the single, How Come How Long.

In 2000 Stevie Wonder contributed to two sound track songs for Spike Lee's film Bamboozled. The two soundtrack songs were Misrepresented People and Some Years Ago. In 2006, Stevie Wonder's inspiration of his life, his mother, Lula Mae Hardaway died on May,31,2006. Stevie Wonder then in 2007 announced his tour, A Wonder's Summer Night 13 concert tour- this was his first in over ten years, and he states, he wants to take all the sadness he feels, turn it around and celebrate. Stevie Wonder in 2008 was very involved in the Presidential Campaign, and why he thinks Obama will be a great president for America. Stevie Wonder talked at several press conferences about Obama and why America should vote for him. Stevie Wonder in 2009 was named the United Nations Messenger Of Peace. On February 23,2009 Stevie Wonder received the Gershwin Prize For Pop Music awarded to Stevie Wonder by Barack Obama. On June,25,2009 one of his best friends, Michael Jackson had died. Stevie Wonder attended the memorial and performed the song, Never Dreamed You'd Leave In Summer at the Staple's Center. Stevie Wonder recently in 2011 can be heard playing harmonica on Drake Graham's album Take Care.

Stevie Wonder's songs have been sampled by artists such as Jon Gibson, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Mary J Blige and several other artists were inspired by Stevie's musical talent. Stevie Wonder will forever be known as a pioneer in music a philanthropist, and a messenger of peace addressing controversies in music which very few artists did at that time. Stevie Wonder has touched the hearts of millions through his music and his philanthropic generosity.
- IMDb Mini Biography By: Peter Sean
Spouse (3)
Tomeeka Robyn Bracy (July 2017 - present) (2 children)
Kai Millard Morris (1 September 2001 - 5 October 2015) (divorced) (2 children)
Syreeta (14 September 1970 - 1972) (divorced)

Trade Mark (3)
His hairdo; Sunglasses; Plays the chromatic harmonica

Trivia (49)
1. At age 49 he was youngest-ever recipient in the 22-year history of Kennedy Center Honors given annually for lifetime contribution to arts and culture, presented by President Bill Clinton in Wash DC, Dec. 5, 1999.
2. Awarded the Polar Music Prize, the Royal Swedish Academy of Music Award, in 1999.
3. Recorded an instrumental jazz album under the name "Eivets Rednow" ("Stevie Wonder" spelled backwards).
4. At the age of 17 he performed with The Jimi Hendrix Experience playing drums at the BBC. (Jammin'/I was made to love her, BBC Sessions)
5. Elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989.
6. His first #1 hit was the half-improvised "Fingertips - Part 2", recorded live in concert (The first live pop single to ever reach #1). It topped the Pop Music and R&B charts in 1963 when Stevie Wonder was only 12. You can hear the musicians struggling to keep up with the young vocalist and harmonica player as he improvises rhythm and blues riffs, and at one point in the recording a musician is heard shouting "What key? What key?"
7. Has won 21 Grammy awards (a record for most Grammy awards)
8. He was voted the 15th Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Artist of all time by Rolling Stone.
9. "Little Stevie" Wonder grew up to not very little at all, as he stands over 6' tall.
10. In 1988, he announced his interest in running for mayor of Detroit in the 1992 election. However, he never followed through with a campaign.
11. His ex-wife, Syreeta, died of breast cancer in Los Angeles on July 6, 2004.
12. In his acceptance speech for the Oscar for Best Song in 1984, Wonder dedicated his award to imprisoned civil rights leader Nelson Mandela. The South African government promptly banned Wonder's music from the country.
13. He has 7 children. The last of these, Mandla Kadjaly Carl Stevland Morris, was born May 13, 2005. He was born on his 55th birthday and is his and Kai's first child. Mandla means "Powerful/Defiant" in Zulu. Kadjaly is Swahili for "Born from God"
14. In addition to his being blind, he also has loss of smell due to a 1973 car crash in North Carolina from which he also has a scar.
15. Shortly after reaching his 21st birthday in the spring of 1971, he became the first Motown Recording artist to gain complete artistic control of his records.
16. Collaborated on the 1985 smash hit "We Are the World" (USA for Africa)
17. His 1976 song "Isn't She Lovely" (from album "Songs in the Key of Life") was dedicated to then newborn daughter Aisha whose name and "baby sounds" can be heard on the track
18. Joined friends Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight and Elton John on the 1986 chart-topper "That's What Friends Are For", the proceeds of which were donated to AIDS research. Also played harmonica on the recording.
19. Oddly enough, two other vocalists introduced his 1973 smash hit "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" (from album "Talking Book") before Wonder actually sang any lyrics. Respectively, these singers were James Gilstrap and Lani Groves.
20. Played harmonica on Chaka Khan's 1984 hit "I Feel For You"
21. Wrote "Superstition" originally for friend Jeff Beck while completing his 1973 album "Talking Book." Though Beck had actually recorded the number in 1972, Motown rush-released Wonder's cut ahead of the album, and "Superstition" became his second number one hit in January 1973
22. Has been blind since birth
23. Father of Aisha Morris, Keita Morris and Ekow.
24. Son of Lula Mae Hardaway.
25. Became the very first blind recipient of an Academy Award when his composition "I Just Called to Say I Love You" won Best Original Song from The Woman in Red (1984) soundtrack.
26. Inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1983.
27. Wrote the tribute for Mariah Carey's endorsement in Time magazine's "100 Most Influential People in the World" (Artists & Entertainers section / Issue May 12, 2008).
28. Voted the ninth greatest singer of the rock era in a Rolling Stone magazine poll in 2008.
29. He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Recording at 7050 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.
30. Received the Second Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song on February 25, 2009. Selection was announced September 2008.
31. Friend Dizzy Gillespie played the trumpet solo on "Do I Do" from Wonder's "Musiquarium" compilation album (1982).
32. He was nominated for a 2010 New Jersey Hall of Fame for his services and contributions to Arts and Entertainment.
33. Named U.N. Messenger of Peace [December 2, 2009].
34. Dedicated his song "Sir Duke" (from "Songs in the Key of Life" (1976)) to lifelong hero Duke Ellington.
35. Dedicated the finale of his 2008 "Live At Last" London concert to the memory of his beloved mother who had died 31 May 2006. Wonder performed his song "As" (from album "Songs in the Key of Life") to commemorate the moment.
36. The funky "guitar riff" that underscores most of his song "Superstition" was actually generated on a Hohner D6 Clavinet keyboard that is still, to this day, a mainstay among Wonder's array of keyboard instruments.
37. Inducted into the Apollo Legends Hall of Fame in 2011.
38. He is a lifelong staunch liberal Democrat.
39. A guest at the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Concert.
40. His song "Another Star" was chosen by BBC television as the theme tune for their coverage of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.
41. Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama 24 November 2014.
42. Freddie Mercury once said he thought Wonder was the best ballad writer in the world.
43. First African-American artist to win the Grammy Award for "Album of the Year" for "Innervisions" (1973). The trophy was presented by Telly Savalas and Cher (Hollywood Palladium / 2 March 1974).
44. Friends with Diana Ross, Michael Jackson, Donny Hathaway, Maurice White, Nancy Wilson, Teddy Pendergrass, and Wyclef Jean.
45. Stevie's signature mouth organ sound is created on his Hohner 64-Reed Chromonica, a 16-hole harmonica that's been part of his musical inventory for decades.
46. Has a recording studio called Wonderland.
47. He was the youngest person ever inducted into the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame at the age of thirty-eight. He held the title until he was surpassed by thirty-two year old Josh Klinghoffer in 2012.
48. He is the youngest solo artist to be inducted into the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame.
49. He is the youngest artist ever to have a song reach number one on the charts.

Personal Quotes (54)
1. Just because a man lacks the use of his eyes doesn't mean he lacks vision.
2. Before I ride with somebody who's been drinking, I'll drive myself.
3. I just dig audiences. That to me is the most worthwhile thing about this whole business. Just people coming to have a good time and letting me sing for them.
4. I do believe in women. I really do.
5. I am not a normal man.
6. I am all for stem cell research.
7. For the most part, I feel really comfortable with what I've given to the people. I want to give it to them again.
8. First of all, I'm no better than the next person.
9. Blind don't mean you can't, you know, listen.
10. Time is long but life is short.
11. Eyes lie if you ever look into them for the character of the person.
12. Clearly, love is love, between a man and a woman, a woman and a man, a woman and a woman and a man and a man.
13. What I'm not confused about is the world needing much more love, no hate, no prejudice, no bigotry and more unity, peace and understanding. Period.
14. I am what I am. I love me! And I don't mean that egotistically - I love that God has allowed me to take whatever it was that I had and to make something out of it.
15. Life has meaning only in the struggle. Triumph or defeat is in the hands of the Gods. So let us celebrate the struggle!
16. Ya gots to work with what you gots to work with.
17. Minds ripen at very different ages.
18. Do you know, it's funny, but I never thought of being blind as a disadvantage, and I never thought of being black as a disadvantage.
19. God gave me life to continue to do things that I would never have done.
20. Ability may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.
21. Music, at its essence, is what gives us memories. And the longer a song has existed in our lives, the more memories we have of it.
22. You can't base your life on other people's expectations.
23. Mama was my greatest teacher, a teacher of compassion, love and fearlessness. If love is sweet as a flower, then my mother is that sweet flower of love.
24. You know, I always when people ask me, like, what is my most favorite song, I quote Duke Ellington, when they would ask him, what's his favorite composition? And I say, I haven't written it yet. Because, you know, there are different songs for different occasions.
25. This is like one thing that I've tried to do, and I think successfully, that when you realize that nothing really belongs to you, you begin to appreciate having an understanding of just where your head is at, and you feel so much better.
26. I remember the beginnings of the Kurzweil reading machine. I was one of the first to meet Ray Kurzweil and purchase the reading machine in Boston. To think that the machine was at least two and a half large suitcases at the time, and now you have a camera and it takes a picture and you have sound.
27. I can't say that I'm always writing in my head but I do spend a lot of time in my head writing or coming up with ideas. And what I do usually is write the music and melody and then, you know, maybe the basic idea. But when I feel that I don't have a song or just say, God, please give me another song. And I just am quiet and it happens.
28. You know, I have seven children, so I guess I know some things about life.
29. The right to bear arms? What about the right to live?
30. Sometimes I wish I could drive a car, but I'm gonna drive a car one day, so I don't worry about that.
31. Some people have a desire to be with the same sex. But that's them.
32. People can misconstrue closeness for love.
33. Of course I read Braille, yes.
34. No one has been a greater advocate for the power of love in this world than I; both in my life and in my music.
35. My father really was not the dominant person who raised the family, it was my mother who raised the family.
36. Let us come together before we're annihilated.
37. I've had threats.
38. I've had some incredibly triumphal things happen in my life.
39. I'm still experimenting.
40. I am all for anything that is going to better equip a person who is physically challenged in any way, to have an opportunity to be able to do what they are able to do.
41. Sometimes, I feel I am really blessed to be blind because I probably would not last a minute if I were able to see things.
42. My mother had a rule, obviously, that I couldn't go across the street by myself, but I had to find a way of doing it.
43. If you don't ask, you don't get.
44. I think honestly, some people who think they're gay, they're confused.
45. I'm concerned about how accessible guns are.
46. I want to take all the pain that I feel and celebrate and turn it around.
47. I might do something in Arabic. I might do something in Hebrew.
48. I know there are thousands of images of me.
49. I guess people expect or figure me to be a lot of different things.
50. Until the 'Stand Your Ground' law is abolished in Florida, I will never perform there again.
51. There's no way we can find peace with the ego.
52. We needed Michael here on Earth, but God needed him more.
53. [on the 'Hand in Hand' telethon that raised more than $44 million for hurricane survivors] We come together today to love on people that have been devastated by the hurricanes. When love goes into action, it preferences no color of skin, no ethnicity, no religious beliefs, no sexual preferences, and no political persuasions. It just loves.
54. Anyone who believes that there is no such thing as global warming must be blind or unintelligent

2. Background from {[https://www.allmusic.com/artist/stevie-wonder-mn [login to see] /biography]}
"Artist Biography by Steve Huey
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.

Wonder was born Stevland Hardaway Judkins in Saginaw, Michigan, on May 13, 1950 (his name was later altered to Stevland Morris when his mother married). A premature infant, he was put on oxygen treatment in an incubator; it was likely 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. Wonder released his first two albums in 1962: A Tribute to Uncle Ray, which featured covers of Wonder'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-toppers "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 proved 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, taking his music to a larger white audience.
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 made, 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 piece of 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. 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, a decade capped by his induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

New studio material from Wonder didn't arrive until 1991, when he provided the soundtrack to the Spike Lee film Jungle Fever. His next full album of new material, 1995's Conversation Peace, was a commercial disappointment, thought it did win 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 attention by cutting a hit duet with Babyface, "How Come, How Long," in 1996. During the early 2000s, Motown remastered and reissued Wonder's exceptional 1972-1980 run of solo albums (Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants excepted) and also released The Definitive Collection, a representative single-disc primer.

In 2005, after a decade had transpired without a new studio album, Wonder released A Time to Love, which was bolstered by collaborations with Prince and Paul McCartney, as well as one with daughter and "Isn't She Lovely" inspiration Aisha Morris. His far-reaching influence continued to be felt through samples, cover versions, and reinterpretations, highlighted by Robert Glasper Experiment and Lalah Hathaway's Grammy-winning version of "Jesus Children of America." Well into the late 2010s, Wonder continued to appear on albums by other artists, including Snoop Dogg, Raphael Saadiq, and Mark Ronson. All the while, Wonder regularly toured. From November 2014 through 2015, he celebrated the approaching 40th anniversary of Songs in the Key of Life with lengthy set lists that included all 21 songs of the classic album."

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Celebrity Profile Entertainment Reporter, Mesha McDaniel interviews Stevie Wonder in his Los Angeles recording studio.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=126ni6rvzPU

Images:
1. Stevie Wonder and The Rolling Stones at Madison Square Gardens on July 18, 1972
2. Stevie Wonder in a MoTown jam session
3. 1962 Little Stevie Wonder album The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie,
4. 1968 Stevie Wonder album For Once in My Life

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Stevie Wonder's Family: 9 Kids and Quite a Few Women
Stevie Wonder is an exceptionally talented singer and composer, who influenced a lot on music of XX century. He is one of the creators of such music genres as soul and R&B.
A legendary musician was born in 1950 and since childhood has been interested in music. A young starlet released his very first song at the age of just 11 and at 12, presented the first solo album. During all his career, he released 22 successful albums that were sold with millions of copies. The musician’s talent is so unique and extraordinary that he was nominated for Grammy 48 times and won 25 of them!
Nowadays, he still has an amazing voice as well as plays different musical instruments. Apart from work, he devotes a lot of time to charity activities.
As for his personal life, he is a father to nine children and so, had quite a few women in his life. So, let’s have a closer look at them.

A singer Syreeta Wright became the celebrity’s first spouse in 1970. The union lasted only 2 years and didn’t result in any children. Wright died in 2004, aged 58 from cancer.
Since 1975 and till 1979 a talented musician had been romantically involved with a secretary Yolanda Simmons. Even though the couple wasn’t married, they became parents to two kids.
A vocalist Melody McCulley had been with Wonder since 1982 up till 1984. Together they parented a son.
In 2001 Stevie walked Kai Millard Morris down the aisle. Morris deals with clothes design as well as entertainment industry. They met in 1999 and two years later tied the knot on Bahamas. During 11 years of a married life, they produced two children.
Since 2017 and up till present moment, the famous singer has been happily married to Tomeeka Robyn Bracy. She is a former school teacher, who was previously married. Together with Wonder she has two kids.

In total, the celebrity has 9 children.
In a relationship with Simmons, he parented two children with a daughter Aisha being the older one. She was delivered in 1975 and like her dad, also deals with music. She can be often seen along with a famed father on tours or events. As for her personal life, it is not known whether she is married or not but she is a mother to a son.
The second child is a son Keita, who was welcomed in 1977. He is a DJ as well as a father to three children.

With McCulley there is a son named Mumtaz, who was born in 1983. He is a recognized singer, who is married and has 6 kids.
A daughter Sophia was welcomed in 1985 and there is very little information known about her. The same can be said about her mother, whose named is disclosed.
A son Kwame was born in 1988 to Wonder and a woman, whose name is also not revealed. He works as a producer.

In a second marriage with Kai, there are two more sons. The older one is named Kailand and he became a wonderful addition to the family in 2001. He is a drummer and a model.
Mandla was delivered in 2005 and he is pursuing acting career. He appeared in a movie A Star is Born. Additionally, he took part in Dancing with the Stars.
From the third marriage, there are two wonderful daughters. The first daughter was born in 2013 and her name is kept in secret.
The name of the second daughter is Nia and she joined the family in 2014 and is currently the youngest of all celebrity’s kids.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7Cu_zTsD3k

Images:
1. Stevie Wonder & his wife Syreeta in happy times
2. 1979 Stevie Wonder mostly instrumental album 'Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants'
3. 1972 Stevie Wonder album Music of My Mind
4. 1982 Stevie Wonder greatest-hits set covering 1972-1982 called Original Musiquarium I

Background from {[http://www.steviewonder.org.uk/bio/chapter1.html]}
"1. Little Nappy Headed Boy
A skinny little boy, radiant with unlimited energy, sat in the living room of Ronnie White, member of The Miracles recording group. Shaking his head from side to side the 10 year old boy repeated the question asked of him, Can I sing? Yeah, I'm bad, I'm better than Smokey! the brash kid began to sing The Miracles recording of Lonely Boy. Impressed by the little kid's talents, Ronnie set up a meeting for him with Brian Holland, a talent scout for Motown.
It was back in 1961 that Stevland Morris AKA Little Stevie Wonder was brought to Motown. Reflecting on the past Stevie says, Singing for me was fun and I didn't realize that I was going through all of the auditions. I was just having fun singing.
Born on May 13, 1950 in Saginaw, Michigan, Stephen Judkins Hardaway was the third of six children whose family later moved to Detroit. Although blind since birth, Stevie never looked upon his blindness as being a handicap. I did what all the kids my age were doing, I played games, rode bikes and climbed trees. His first introduction in the music field came when he received a gift of a small six hole harmonica from his uncle and a set of toy drums for Christmas. A local Kiwanis Club replaced the toy drums with a set of real drums soon after.
Steve recalled, People at school told me I couldn't make it, that I'd end up making potholders instead. But after I thought I was going to be a musician, I became very determined simply to prove those people wrong.
Stevie found that during the beginning stages of his career things were given to him, including his name "Little Stevie Wonder" which came from Motown. According to Stevie, Billie Jean Brown who worked at Motown in the A & R Department (Artist Relations) along with Lucy and Berry Gordy, tossed around different names for their new artist.
Stevie Little Wonder, Little Stevie Wonder, Stevie The Little Wonder, were some of the suggestions. In the 50's and 60's Little was an identifiable label attached to most protégés or teenage entertainers, such as Little John, Little Anthony and the Imperials. This along with the type of music they selected for him all pointed towards the name Little Stevie Wonder. Stevie says, If they had waited a while longer they might have called me Knuckle-head or something.

2. Everybody Say Yeah
Stevie was signed with Motown for almost two years before his career launching recording Fingertips Part 2 recorded live, took the public by storm. Stevie had recorded three singles and one album prior to Fingertips. His first single, I Call It Pretty Music But The Old People Call It The Blues, sold well locally and in the South. His second single, Little Water Boy written by Clarence Paul and Stevie himself didn't do too well. This was followed by a third single, Contract On Love, written by Lamont Dozier and it did well locally and regionally in Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Originally, Fingertips was done on an album called The Jazz Soul Of Little Stevie. It featured Thomas 'Bean' Bowles on flute, Marvin Gaye on drums and piano, Stevie played drums on one cut, Joe Messina, Robert White, James Jamerson on bass, Benny Benjamin on drums, Joe Hunter on piano and Earl Van Dyke on organ. This gave the Motown musicians a chance to play like they did in the clubs of Detroit. After recording Fingertips in the key of G, we decided to change the key to C and that's when the excitement started. Audience participation happened on the road with "Everybody Say Yeah" and it stuck. The ad-libbing by Little Stevie, both vocally and on the harmonica, together with his exuberant stage presence is what transformed the song into the hit it turned out to be. Fingertips Part 2 was the first recording whose single and album became #1 simultaneously on Billboard chart.
The summer of 1963 and the remainder of the year offered nothing but success for Little Stevie Wonder. There were many who felt that success at such a young age would spoil
Little Stevie Wonder.
As far as a large ego is concerned, many people felt that I was getting too much too soon, but I didn't realize that it was all happening. I just enjoyed singing. Sometime when it was time for an interview or rehearsal, I asked for candy. I just wanted to go play or have a few cookies and candy, I didn't care about interviews, I wanted to do other things. That might have made some feel that I was a brat, but not true, just a normal kid.
Motown controlled everything from the artists stage movements to their concert bookings and the copyrights of their songs. Many of the performers were straight from the street and unschooled in finance. Unlike most white performers, they had no lawyers to negotiate their contracts, and they accepted without question the royalties they received. Stevie's royalties were kept in trust for him by a state-appointed guardian until he was twenty-one.
As Little Stevie Wonder became more and more popular, more and more problems developed. Scholastically, things were not working out. I could not keep up my regular studies at school as it became necessary to go on the road. There was no person qualified to tutor me in my studies while on tour. Because of this, my teachers told me that I should stop pursuing music and continue my education until I was 19 years old. They informed me that legally they could keep me in school until that time. I went in the bathroom and cried and prayed that God would allow me to remain in the industry, but I just knew it was impossible. One of my teachers told me that I had three strikes against me that must be considered.
I was poor, black and blind. I should buckle down and try to forget about music, realistically, there would be nothing for an uneducated blind man to do but make rugs and pot holders.

3. One Hit Wonder?
Stevie says that he is fortunate that God gave him the gift and made it possible for him to create. Most important, says Stevie, is that I was able to live in a family situation where I was loved and encouraged. If you lack any of those things, it can throw you off balance as to what is to be or not.
Motown was a special place for Little Stevie Wonder. It provided him with more than enough parents, Everyone over 11 was my parent, Clarence Paul loved me like his own son, Esther Edwards, Berry Gordy's sister, Ardena Johnson, all the musicians and artists watched over me. Wanda of the Marvelettes would always tell me when she thought I was eating too much candy. I wish kids today could have the same kind of caring expressed and shown to them. Today there is a lack of concern for others and for ones' self.
Adults began to recognise Stevie as an entertainer after Fingertips. They compared him with Ray Charles. Stevie was labelled, The 12 Year Old Genius I'd say 'What is a genius?' I was not able to compare anything to anything. I was having fun. I felt that I was only having fun and that the Ray Charles was the professional.
Between his recordings of 1963 and 1965, several major events took place in Stevie's career. There were two traumatic events. My voice changed. Clarence Paul was producing With A Song In My Heart, Dream, Smile, Make Someone Happy, etc. All the keys had been done. In 1964, Stevie went on tour with the Supremes and the Temptations. At the beginning of the tour Clarence had all the keys, after the tour and back in the studio, all of the keys were too high for Stevie. My second tragedy was not having the opportunity to meet Dinah Washington. She had expressed a desire to meet me but when I got off the tour in the South, she was performing. She past away soon after that.
Little Stevie Wonder was beginning to mature. He was taller, had a moustache and was talking to girls on the phone. Instead of throwing his tie out to the audience he was hoping that the girls would throw phone numbers on stage.
Not to overlook his studies, Stevie was fortunate enough to acquire a private teacher to travel with him. One who cared about him very much. Ted Hull could see well enough to not be considered blind and was considered partially sighted. By Ted having experience of travel around the world, he helped me a great deal from the standpoint of understanding what blindness is about, how to deal and communicate with people.
A person who had no experience of travelling the world may not have been able to so readily understand the things that should be checked out by a person with the opportunities. If Ted had been a different person he might have felt that as long as we got the studies done and toured a little that would be enough. But he explained the foreign currencies to me, taught me about the electric currents and their differences. He connected the blind world with the sighted world.
Stevie recalls a personal experience shared by Ted and himself. I met a person in a record shop while I was signing autographs. I thought this person was so nice, had such a nice voice. I kept holding this person's hand. The person's name was Bobbie. After we left the shop, I asked Ted about Bobbie. Wasn't that girl nice? Ted said, 'What girl?' The girl in the record shop whose hand I was holding. Ted fell out into hysterics. "That was a boy, Stevie." Then I broke out into hysterics.
I was into voices at the time I thought by the voice being high that Bobbie was a short girl. I don't know how funny that would be today, but it was funny then.
The time period between Fingertips and Uptight was crucial. One of Motown's producers suggested that along with some of their other artists, that they drop Little Stevie Wonder. He had gone 2 years without a hit record. The singles Workout Stevie Workout, Castles In The Sand, Hey Harmonica Man, Kiss Me Baby and High Heal Sneakers did not fare too well on the charts. None of them charted in the UK and only Hey Harmonica Man entered the US top 30 at 29.
It was evident that much of the material selected for Stevie during that period was inappropriate for his age and vocal styling. It was left to Stevie himself and a new team of songwriters to see how best they could rescue his career.

4. Everyting Will Be Alright
However, Uptight (Everything's Alright) changed that story a bit and every year thereafter, in the sixties, Stevie had hit records. Much of this success had to do with the new song writing team of 15 year old Stevie along with Henry Cosby and Sylvia Moy. Stevie always liked to write and several things influenced his writing. I was greatly influenced by radio. Detroit had the best cross section of music, different cultures, etc.
The Uptight album showed a more personal side of Stevie. It embraced many of his influences such as the soulful moods of Sam Cooke to a cover of Bob Dylan's Blowin' in the Wind.
The single Uptight returned Stevie to the top of the US R&B chart, while placing at #3 on the pop chart. It was his first single to enter the UK singles chart, where it peaked at #14. Other singles from the albums were Nothing's to Good For My Baby and Blowin' in the Wind.
Six months later saw the release of Stevie's next album Down To Earth. The first single culled from it, being the optimistic A Place In The Sun that placed well in the top US pop and R&B charts as well as returning Stevie to the UK top 20.
At 17, Stevie met a girl named Angie and fell in love. The melody and music for I Was Made To Love Her came from that experience. Sylvia Moy wrote incredible lyrics to that song. It was a vigorously exciting track, with a compelling dance beat, an inspiring James Jamerson bass line and Stevie's racing vocals.
The single shot to #1 on the R&B chart and #2 on the pop charts. It was Stevie's first top ten UK hit where it peaked at #5. The album I Was made To Love Her was produced by Hank Cosby and released in August 1967. It was a pot-pourri of interesting sounds, appealing to a wider audience than his previous works. I was a sign of things to come in the not too distant future.
By the end of the year, Motown was ready to put out a Stevie Wonder Christmas album containing a combination of festive favourites complimented by some in-house original compositions. It was customary for Motown to release Christmas albums for its leading stars to cash in on the seasonal event. In addition it would almost annually bring out compilation of various permutations and combinations from these albums.
In 1968 Stevie graduated with honours from the Michigan School for the Blind thus enabling him to now spend more time developing his music. Ted Hull his personal tutor for the last 5 years stayed on with Stevie for another year until he was 19.
In March the single Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da Day was released and shot to #1 on the R&B charts and top 10 in the pop charts. However as the single climbed the charts, sad news rocked the nation, news that would affect Stevie for many years to come and encourage him in the future to embark in a national crusade. Dr. Martin Luther, civil rights leader, was assisinated in Memphis, Tennessee, as he prepared to lead a march of workers protesting against unfair treatment by their employers.

By March 1968, Motown felt it was about time they put together a Greatest Hits package. The album included his hits so far in addition to the song, I'm Wondering. It was his first album to enter the UK album charts.

With the Greatest Hits album in the charts Stevie rose to the challenge of a suggestion by Berry Gordy that he record an instrumental version of the Bacharach/David song Alfie. The project taken over by Hank Cosby as producer eventually grew into a full fledged album. To avoid confusion with Stevie's current work it was decided to release the album under the pseudonym Eivets Rednow, which is Stevie Wonder spelt backwards. On the album were 4 songs written by Stevie. He played most of the instruments including piano, drums, various keyboards and all the percussion.
The self-titled album, Eivets Rednow, never really took off, most likely because of the unknown artist name and lack of conviction on Motown's part.
Later that year Stevie heard For Once In My Life. Not knowing that it was a Jobete/Motown song he went to Motown with suggesting that he do a cover. Even though it was a ballad and I loved it as that, I felt the tune could be done in the form of rejoicing in meeting someone who needed me. I was excited and recorded it that way. It was release as a single a month before the album shipped. The single reached #2 in the US and provided Stevie with his highest UK position on the charts - #3.
The album when released contained 2 previous singles Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da Day and You Met Your Match. It showed a growth in Stevie's music and his venturing into the realm of production with the tracks You Met Your Match and I Don't Know Why (I Love You). The latter track was arguably the best track on the album, a hard-edged emotional declaration of love. It was released as the next single, with My Cherie Amour on the flipside. The top title though only reached #14 in UK and #16 in the US R&B charts. However it was the B-side that attracted major attention from the radio deejays. The song did not make it onto the last album, though Stevie had written it two years previously. Stevie says that the song was personal, I wrote it when when I was sixteen after me and my sweetheart broke up. It took me thirty minutes to write and was initially titled My Marsha, but Sylvia (Moy) came up with the revised title.
The song did not conform to the standard Motown formula and hence the powers that be never felt it appropriate for release.
Now sensing a possible hit with My Cherie Amour based on public exposure, Motown flipped it to the A side, a move that proved successful. This resulted in the single reaching #4 in both in both US charts and in the UK.
As expected, an album was hastily compiled, titled My Cherie Amour and released in August 1969. It contained many standard songs such as, Light My Fire, The Shadow Of Your Smile and Hello Young Lovers, which Stevie capably handled. He matched these with four of his own compositions. Also on the album was Yeter-Me Yester-You Yesterday destined to be his next single, a song that would peak at #2 in the UK, his biggest hit there, and placing in the US top ten.
By the end of the year Stevie was invited to the White House by President Nixon to receive the Distinguished Service Award.
During the last few years, although working on songs for himself he also wrote sons for many other Motown artists, including Smokey Robinson, Marvin Gaye, The Contours and the Four Tops.

5. The Girl My Heart Beats For
Although he stood six feet and towered over most disc jockeys and fans, people found it hard to drop the word Little from Little Stevie Wonder. A major factor in helping people to drop Little from his name was his marriage to Syreeta Wright in September of 1970. I met Syreeta when Don Hunter and I were working together. After hearing her voice, I thought she could do a particular song. She was working in the arranging department of Motown. Brian Holland had discovered her also. We became very good friends, a love at first sight. She was older than I, but I was determined to get her. As his adolescence came to an end, Wonder took charge of his career. By the time of Signed, Sealed & Delivered, he was virtually self-sufficient in the studio, serving as his own producer and arranger, playing most of the instruments himself, and writing material with his wife, Syreeta Wright. In this phase, he scored three more hit singles: Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours, Heaven Help Us All, and Never Had A Dream Come True.
His next album Where I'm Comin' From, was the last album he would make under his original two five-year contracts with Motown. Where I'm Comin' From may have been Stevie's indirect way of telling executives at Motown what they did not want to hear. Stevie later spoke to Rolling Stone magazine about the album: That was kinda premature to some extent, but I wanted to express myself . A lot of it now I'd probably remix. Never Dreamed You 'd Leave In Summer came from that album, and If You Really Love Me . . . but it's nothin' like the things I write now. I love gettin' into just as much weird shit as possible. But weird music was not acceptable at Motown then.
After Where I'm Comin' From, Steve did not cut any more records until he turned twenty-one and was eligible for the money that had been held in trust for him. More importantly, his contract with Motown ran out and he said he was through with them. They were upset at first, he says, speaking cautiously in deliberate understatement, but they began to understand--later. Whatever peak I had reached doing that kind of music, I had reached. It was important for them to understand we were going nowhere.
When he reached his 21st birthday in 1971 Motown threw a party for him. However the next morning Berry Gordy was surprised to receive a letter from Stevie's lawyer cutting ties with Motown. At this time he was eligible to received the money due to him that accumulated while a minor; despite earning over $30 million, he received only $1 million.
By now his life became affected by different realizations. I realized that there are things that do happen within the business. You must deal with originality to a certain degree, commercialism to a certain degree, but again, all of it has a proper balance.

6. Mind Full Of Music
Now that Stevie had the ability to create without the limitations of Motown, and backed up by financial security, he soared. This period in his life was one of extreme activity, enormous creativity, new directions and seemingly limitless change and growth. Remarking about that time in his life, he says I then asked the question again of where am I going, what am I going to do. I had to see and feel what I wanted to do . . . feel where my destiny was, or the direction of my destiny anyway. I think that when you gradually change you still have a certain thing that you left behind. When you take a very abrupt change, you say, 'Okay, boom, this is what this is going to be about--click, and you do it. It was time for a change musically. Spiritually I had gone as far as I could have gone. To explore the music swirling in his mind he ventured to New York City, a place now buzzing with state-of-the-art recording studios, and the latest technological innovations. He lived in a hotel, but spent most of the time in the studio. It was at this time that he met Robert Margoulef and Malcolm Cecil, both engineers and composers. They had recently released and album called Tonto's Expanding Headband, which used the Arp and Moog synthesizers to create a cacophony of sounds. Stevie says, The synthesizer allowed me to do a lot of things I wanted to do for a long time, but which were just not possible until it came along. It adds a whole new dimension to music.

With this new dimension of sound his new compositions now took on both a more mental flavour and a rock sound, the direct result of the synthesizers. This in no way sacrificed the emotional content of his music, but the ARP and Moog did offer him the dimension he wanted. They express what's inside my mind.

Hence the name of the next album he did, the ground-breaking Music Of My Mind. Working with him Co-writing some of the songs was Syreeta Wright. Stevie sank some quarter of a million dollars of his own money into time at three non-Motown studios in New York and Los Angeles (Electric Lady and Media Sound in New York, and Crystal Industries in Los Angeles). There, playing most of the instruments himself and heavily emphasizing the synthesizers, he independently recorded and produced Music Of My Mind. The instruments he played included piano, drums, organ, harmonica, clavichord, clavinet and of course the Synthesizers.

Stevie says about the project, When you get music and you get creativity and you get love together, it's pretty heavy. The album was a truly remarkable departure from anything else Stevie had done. Yet, more than any of his other records, Music Of My Mind emanates the real personality of Stevie Wonder, the raw energy and emotion he was brimming with. The album really was before its time, and did not get the recognition that it deserved.

Without exception, all the tracks on Music Of My Mind give that feeling of Stevie's wings spreading and his mind venturing in many directions.

Also of note, Music Of My Mind looked as different outside as it sounded inside, and this, too, was due to Stevie's new artistic say-so and sense of freedom. There was this sophisticated look about, very differnt from the tacky cover designs of the Motown controlled albums of the 60's. It was also his first album to include printed lyrics.

The album marked a milestone in the development of a great talent. A man who keeps his promise, Stevie in maturity shines with that same loving and brilliant light that had drawn people to him for a decade. Born a star, he never lets his technical and artistic proficiency overshadow his deep humility. This album is a gift to the spirit from one who really cares.
With this remarkable new material, Stevie went back to talk business with Motown. His second contract with Motown had lapsed some time now. He and his lawyer, Johannan Vigoda, went back to negotiate with Motown, spending six full weeks working out a new contract. The final result was 120 pages long and absolutely unprecedented in what it made possible for Stevie, and, ultimately, for Motown too. Stevie achieved the right to produce and record his music virtually any place, any time, and any way--he had complete artistic control. He also owned his own publishing rights, something no other Motown artist had ever done, and increased royalty rates.
Vigoda, who had previously worked out contracts for such rock luminaries as Richie Havens and Jimi Hendrix, told Rolling Stone, "It was a very important contract for Motown, and a very important contract for Stevie, representing the artists of Motown. He broke tradition with the deal, legally, professionally--in terms of how he could cut his records and where he could cut--and in breaking tradition he opened up the future for Motown. That's what they understood. They had never had an artist in thirteen years, they had singles records, they managed to create a name in certain areas, but they never came through with a major, major artist.
Despite the chagrin and the bad feelings that must have existed for a time on the part of Motown management, the decision was clearly the right one for the company to make.
"I'm unashamed to say Stevie and Marvin [Gaye] changed our approach," Ewart Abner, Motown Records president, told Newsweek. "They loosened us up. We made a lot of money and we didn't have to change. They taught us how to have a little fun." With this "loosening up," Marvin Gaye and Stevie made millions and millions for Motown, indirectly causing the company to change its promotion and distribution system. And most significantly, Motown was at last opened up to the mass white rock audience.

7. Does Love for One Another Have To End
By this time Steve's life was undergoing other changes. His marriage with Syreeta was on the rocks. Their life together was becoming troubled and difficult. She's a Leo, and I'm a Taurus, and, phew, that's like putting two sticks of dynamite together! Though it eventually ended in divorce, they would still work closely together. Stevie wrote the song 'Cause We've Ended As Lovers which was later included on a Syreeta album. The lyrics related some of his thoughts on the divorce: 'Cause we've ended now as lovers
Does it mean that we each other can't be friends
Cause we've ended now as lovers
Does our love for one another have to end
The first single culled from Music of My Mind was Superwoman. The album track was really two songs cleverly merged into one, Superwoman and Where Were You When I Needed You. The former tells of a love going sour because of the ambitions of two persons, pulling the relationship in different directions. And the latter a seperation and desperate plea to mend an inevitable break up. The other song released as a single was Keep On Running. Neither fared very well on the charts, but they were tasters for great things to come.
Alongside his work on Music of My Mind, Stevie also produced an album entitled, Syreeta, for Syreeta. Containing 9 songs 7 written by Stevie and Syreeta, one, What Love Has Joined Together by Smokey Robison, and the Beatles' She's Leaving Home. In addition to doing most of the instrumentation, he also sang the intro verse on To Know You Is To Love You. An excellent album illustrating Stevie's new found freedom and blossoming use of the synthesizers.
Stevie's follow up album to Music of My Mind was soon in coming. It was evident that Stevie had accumulated many songs during his recording stint working on Music of My Mind, and six months after this, Talking Book was ready for the world. The cover photo on Talking Book is of a reflective Stevie sitting on an arid hillside. A very poignant picture taken by Robert Margoulef.
Talking Book is a more finished album than Music of My Mind. It manages to maintain the high vitality of that record while cutting back on the jiving around.
The sum total is a tight, hard-hitting, solidly professional product which went platinum. It was as if, with the first flush of freedom over, Stevie could now relax into full artistic control. The spontaneity had always been there; what he had found now was a little more self-discipline. The album begins with the lovely You Are The Sunshine Of My Life and ends with the endearing I Believe (When I Fall In Love). In between we have slices of funk, ballad, social commentary and jazz.
Superstition was the first single taken from the album. A very hard hitting funky number criticizing those people who are dictated to by such beliefs because
When you believe in things that you don't understand
Then you suffer.

Lucidly he points out how self-destructive superstition and ignorance are. Superstition made it all the way to the top of the charts. This was soon to be followed by You Are The Sunshine of My Life.
If you happen to have a copy of the first pressing of Talking Book, and if you know how to read Braille, you can touch Stevie's own words about the record: Here is my music. It is all that I have to tell you how I feel. Know that your love keeps my love strong - Stevie.
8. People Sinning Just For Fun
As a promotion for Talking Book, Stevie toured the US and Canada with the Rolling Stones. This exposed him to a totally new audience who seemed to love him and his music and resulted in sales of Talking Book soaring wherever he'd played. However there were many difficulties with the tour, involving allotted time and lack of billing for Stevie at certain venues. However Steve still managed to attract attention. The New York Times reporter noted, "Spectacular as the Stones were, my most vivid musical memories are of the charged-up playing and singing of the blind soul singer/musician Stevie Wonder and his crisp band, Wonderlove." Or, as the New York Post put it, "Stevie Wonder is second fiddle to no one." Lifestyle and philosophical differences between Stevie and the Stones also made for some feeling of ambivalence on Steve's part. The Stones' studied decadence, their drug use, sexual promiscuity, and glorification of the seamier side of life were in stark contrast to Steve's values. To him, the Stones came as a shock. By rock standards Stevie is square. He does not drink; he does not smoke and certainly did not do drugs.
He said while on tour, My head hasn't swelled because I had success early. At least I don't think so. Some of it has actually turned me off. I mean, there's a lot of bull that goes down in the business. People blowing money on cocaine when they could be giving it to those who need it. We artists owe more than our music to, like, black people. We should give them some time, and, maybe, some money too.
To a Newsweek reporter, he said, I don't see any reason for taking drugs. . . If I were high it would destroy the character of my music, because I would be tripping out so much on myself as opposed to the things around me, or what I was seeing as opposed to the conclusions I've come to within my mind." He also added, "I can feel the cycle of the sun going up and down, I can feel the world spinning round. But how can you print that? People will say, 'Whoooeee! How high is he now?
Because Stevie speaks through his music you can find his position of drugs on a number of recording. In Bird of Beauty, on the Fulfillingness' First Finale album, he says:

There is so much in life for you to feel
Unfound in white, red, or yellow pills.
In Too High, on the Innervisions album, he takes a different angle, looking directly at dope and how it can destroy and empty people who seek in it an artificial enhancement of life.
In Chemical Love, on the Jungle Fever soundtrack he writes:

Some people find themselves hooked on the weirdest things
That have nothing to do with living
Some people crave for physical love
Some people crave material love
Yet fewer crave for spiritual love
You've got a chemical jones,
You've got a chemical love

It was around this time that Rolling Stone magazine ran a short piece called "Stevie Wonder: Can A Black Man Sing The Whites?" It mentioned that Steve was "talking about working on a Graham Nash session;" and that he'd just gotten through playing clavinet on a song he'd written for Jeff Beck, and also reported that the last time he'd been in England he'd played with Eric Clapton. He told Rolling Stone, I'm not playing with these guys for a money consideration. They have something to say that'll make what I want to say better.
Stevie is nothing if not modest; his humility is genuine, unaffected. But what was happening was that finally his genius was being acknowledged by circles that cut across age, race, and musical style. To Motown's everlasting credit, it had recognized his talent eleven years earlier.

9. So Glad He Let Him Try It Again
I'm so glad that he let me try it again
'Cause my last time on earth I lived a whole world of sin.
I'm so glad that I know more than I knew then.
Gonna keep on tryin', 'til I reach my
Highest ground.

On August 6th, 1973 Stevie played concert in Greeneville, South Carolina. It was on the way back just outside Durham, North Carolina that Stevie's life almost taken from him. Stevie was asleep in the front seat of a car being driven by his friend, John Harris . They were snaking along the road, just behind a truck loaded high with logs. Suddenly the trucker jammed on his brakes, and the two vehicles collided. Logs went flying, and one smashed through the wind shield, sailing squarely into Steve's forehead. He was bloody and unconscious when he was pulled from the wrecked car. For ten days he lay in a coma caused by severe brain contusion, as friends, fans, and relatives prayed.
It was his friend and tour director Ira Tucker who first elicited some response from him: "I remember when I got to the hospital in Winston-Salem. . .man, I couldn't even recognize him. His head was swollen up about five times normal size. And nobody could get through to him. I knew that he likes to listen to music really loud and I thought maybe if I shouted in his ear it might reach him. The doctor told me to go ahead and try, it couldn't hurt him. The first time I didn't get any response, but the next day I went back and I got right down in his ear and sang Higher Ground. His hand was resting on my arm and after awhile his fingers started going in time with the song. I said yeah! Yeeeeaaah! This dude is going to make it !"
It was still a long, slow climb back to health, though. When Stevie regained consciousness, he discovered that he had lost his sense of smell, perhaps permanently. And he was deeply afraid that he might have lost his musical faculty too. Finally Ira Tucker said, "We brought one of his instruments--I think it was the clavinet--to the hospital. For a while, Stevie just looked at it, or didn't do anything with it. You could see he was afraid to touch it, because he didn't know if he still had it in him--he didn't know if he could still play. And then, when he finally did touch it - man, you could just see the happiness spreading all over him. I'll never forget that."
Still, he had to take medication for a year, tired easily, and suffered severe headaches. That he lived at all is miraculous. But that he lived to reach higher and higher ground--personally, musically, spiritually--at least in part because of the accident makes you wonder. Steve's deep faith and spiritual vision make him even doubt that it was an accident: You can never change anything that has already happened, he once said, speaking of the incident. Everything is the way it's supposed to be . . . everything that ever happened to me is the way it is supposed to have been. A confirmation of his belief in destiny.
Michael Sembello, Wonderlove's lead guitarist at the time said, "Well, I think he'd always had some awareness of the spiritual side of life. But the accident really brought it to the surface. Like now I know he really sees--and uses--every concert as the spiritual opportunity it is, to reach people. . . The accident made him recognize God, it changed him a lot. Some times he'd just drift off in conversation, he'd just . . . be some place else. He got really intense after the accident, his ESP got really strong." Steve told the New York Times, The accident opened my ears up to many things around me. Naturally, life is just more important to me now . . . and what I do with my life.
The song Higher Ground, written a couple months before the accident, was truly uncanny. Stevie once said, I would like to believe in reincarnation. I would like to believe that there is another life. I think that sometimes your consciousness can happen on this earth a second time around. For me, I wrote Higher Ground even before the accident. But something must have been telling me that something was going to happen to make me aware of a lot of things and to get myself together. This is like my second chance for life, to do something or to do more, and to value the fact that I am alive.
Before the accident. Steve had been scheduled to do a five-week, twenty-city tour in March-April of 1974. It was postponed, with the exception of one date in Madison Square Garden in late March. That concert began with Stevie pointing to his scarred forehead, looking up, grinning, and giving "thanks to God that I'm alive." The crowd, 21,000 strong, roared, and as a Post critic noted, "it was hard not to be thrilled."
He gave himself about a month and a half of recuperation before heading back to the studio to work on his next album. By mid-November he was on stage again, for the homecoming benefit of Shaw University, where he was a trustee. The university was facing financial difficulties; the performers at the wildly successful fundraising show included LaBelle, Wonderlove, Exhuma, and Pride of the Ghetto, in addition to Steve himself. Later in the month, he was a surprise guest at an Elton John concert in Boston. "A friend of mine is here tonight, he was badly hurt in an accident some time ago. . ." Elton John started to announce to the 18,000-strong audience in the Boston Garden. But, according to Esquire's Burr Snider, Elton never finished the sentence: "The immense cavern began to rumble. It went on and on and it seemed as if it would never subside. When it did, Elton John and Stevie Wonder jammed into Honky Tonk Woman and when Stevie Wonder took a side-shot at Superstition, it seemed as if the Garden would tumble down. I found to my surprise that tears were tracking down my face."
Although he had originally planned to go to Africa that winter, that trip too was postponed. Late January and February found him knocking out audiences in Europe. He played at the annual MIDEM Convention in Cannes, France, and then did two sellout performances at the Rainbow Theatre in London in front of an audience comprising many stars of British rock.
March brought the Grammy awards. The nominations list had been announced in January, and Steve had been nominated in seven categories. He won five awards: Best Pop Vocal Performance-Male (Sunshine Of My Life), Best Rhythm and Blues Vocal Performance--Male (Superstition), Best Rhythm and Blues Song-Writer (Superstition), Best Engineered Recording--Nonclassical (Innervisions), and the most prestigious of the Grammys, Album of the Year--Innervisions.

10. Visions In My Mind
Although Innervisions was recorded before the accident, it was released after, and most people associates it with Stevie's miraculous recovery. Indeed, in many places it is weirdly prophetic. The New York Times review of the album says "Stevie, identifies himself as a gang and a genius, producing, composing, arranging, singing, and, on several tracks, playing all the accompanying instruments (yes, it is impossible, or used to be). But Stevie Wonder, you see and want to know more. At the center of his music is the sound of what is real. Vocally, he remains inventive and unafraid, he sings all the things he hears: rock, folk, and all forms of Black music. The sum total of these varying components is an awesome knowledge, consumed and then shared by an artist who is free enough to do both." It was around this time that Roberta Flack said in Newsweek, of Steve's music, "It's the most sensitive of our decade . . . it has tapped the pulse of the people."
The first track released as a single was Higher Ground a song encouraging people to get up and keep on doing what they need to keep the world turning. He relates it to himself saying that his last time on earth he did not make the best use of life and hence in this life he intends to keep on trying till he reaches the highest ground. The album opens with Too High, Stevie's statement of his position on the use and effects of drugs. Visions describes a utopia as he perceives it, but the next track Living For The City, the albums second single, brings us back to the reality of the harshness of life for blacks in the in the city. Golden Lady a song Stevie said he wrote about Minnie Riperton is a mid-tempo ballad that is seamlessly segued to the end of Living For The City. After Higher Ground, is Jesus Children Of America asking if those that prayed really did so from the bottom of their hearts or if they felt what they were praying. All Is Fair In Love the most pop orientated track on the album sounds as though it was written about the break-up in his marriage with Syreeta. Don't You Worry About A Thing the third US single has Stevie in high spirits and He's Mistra Know-It-All the third UK single ends of the package with a statement warning about the dangers of associating with persons only out to deceive.
All in all, it is possibly the greatest collection of songs put on a single album.
1974 was a busy year for Stevie. He produced a second album for Syreeta, entitled Stevie Wonder Presents Syreeta. Writing all eleven songs, some with Syreeta, his trademark arrangements coming across beautifully complimenting Syreeta's soft sultry voice. Two singles Your Kiss Is Sweet and Spinin' And Spinnin' were released from the album. An essential album for any Stevie Wonder collection.
Syreeta's 1977 album, One To One, featured only the one song written, produced and arranged by Stevie. Harmour Love was released as a single which reached a disappointing #75 on the US R&B charts. A sprightly acoustic guitar track with a reggae feel and Stevie on background vocals that certainly deserved better chart placing.
Also in 1974, Stevie produced and played on the Perfect Angel album from Minnie Riperton, writing two songs, the title track and Take A Little Trip. The single Lovin' You brought Minnie to the public's attention, aptly displaying her multi-octave vocal range capability.
In addition to all this, Stevie wrote and produced the song Tell Me Something Good for the group Rufus featuring Chaka Khan. A #1 R&B and #3 pop chart hit, a song featuring a funky clavinet based track that filled the radio airwaves in the summer of 1974.

11. Smile Please
In the mean time Stevie was busy in the studio putting the finishing touches on his next album, to be called Fulfillingness' First Finale. Its an album that may not have had the raw edge as did its predecessor, but taken song by song, Fulfillingness' is virtually unflawed, full of emotion without being maudlin. Its lyrics range from the political to the spiritual to the romantic, its music from gentle to forceful to jive--a dazzlingly beautiful and innovative collection. An album that truly showed Stevie writing what he felt deep inside - a gift not many can claim.
Fulfillingness' kicks off with the lovely and cheering Smile Please, a song many claim to be the best opening track on any of Stevies albums. The first track taken as a single was You Haven't Done Nothing featuring the Jackson 5. A swipe at politicians and their do nothing attitude for the less fortunate that took Stevie to the top of both pop and R&B charts. Boogie On Reggae Woman, the second single to be culled from the album was a sensual and rythmic number that encouraged the listener to get up on their feet and get down. Stevie showed he was still in top form with the ballads Creepin', Too Shy To Say and It Ain't No Use. His spiritual thoughts were revealed without being preachy but subtley pointing to a higher being ,on the tracks, Heaven is Ten Zillion Light Years Away and They Won't Go. The Brazilian flavoured Birds of Beauty is an enlivening number both musically and mentally, in that it speaks of freeing the mind and body of harmful external influences. The album ends with an emotional plea Please Don't Go that sees Stevie at his finest together with chorus belting out an almost gospel flavoured appeal.
In November 1974 Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley proclaimed the 18th, Stevie Wonder Day for the city. A proclamation had been drawn up. Representatives from the press and photographers had been invited to the Mayor's office. However Stevie was in New York unaware of the ceremony at the mayor's office.
On the 22nd, Stevie finally arrived. Before he could make it to the Mayor's office, however, some seventy-five school children who were touring City Hall caught wind of his presence and engulfed him.
The Mayor's ceremony was full of cliches, with the Mayor praising Steve's musical genius, versatility, concern for other people and social problems, and ability to "transcend boundaries of race, age, and nationality."
Steve's last concert on the Fall Festival Tour was a benefit at Madison Square Garden. In addition to giving a performance which brought raves from all who attended, Stevie donated $50,000 to seven New York charities. The show itself is legendary; the finale was Superstition, with Sly Stone, Eddie Kendricks, and Roberta Flack singing along.
It was certainly a period during which Stevie had a lot to smile about.

12. Isn't She Wonderful
Around this time Stevie had fallen in love with a young woman named Yolanda Simmons. She had joined Stevie's entourage as his secretary-bookkeeper, and in a short time they had fallen in love. Stevie was convinced that he would never fall in love with someone who was not, inside, a beautiful person. I can usually tell about a woman by her conversation, Stevie says, her voice and the way she carries herself. Some women can have a very beautiful outer face and a very ugly inner face.
Yolanda was proud of his talent and pleased with his fame, but she loved Stevie as a person, not as a personality. She radiated the sort of inner beauty that he, perhaps better than sighted people, could identify. In April 1975 their daughter was born. They named her Aisha Zakia, combining African words meaning strength and intelligence. I want to be young with my kids, Stevie has said. WOW, I really want 'em, boy or girl, doesn't matter, that's part of you, the sunshine of your life.
In March 1975 he added five more Grammies to his collection, including Best Album for Fulfillingness', Best Producer and Best Male Vocalist.
By now Stevie had won awards in various music genres, Soul, Pop and Rock. He does not like labeling. I don't like it when one is put into a category of music, he says, so that when he ventures into some other kind of music the press or the public has a hard time relating to it. It seems that every person is put into a certain bag. Being an artist is not being limited to one kind of music. For instance, soul music was derived from gospel and early rhythm and blues. In my mind, soul means feeling. When a person is categorized as a soul artist because of his colour, I don't like it. True artistry is about variety, the real spice of an artist's life.
I have never been labelled in my own mind, says Stevie.
In August of 1975 his contract with Motown was up for renewal again. The new contract a seven year thirteen-million-dollar deal was the largest ever made with a recording star. But Motown expected to get more than that back, beginning with its share of the profits from Stevie's first double album, which was to be released in 1976.

13. What Key, What Key?
Stevie continued to work on his new album. By the spring of 1976 he had decided to call it Songs in the Key of Life. He had also tentatively decided to release it in May. But May came and went, and still no album. By July Motown printed tee-shirts with the message, Stevie's almost ready.
By the summer of 1976 the public and the record stores were clamouring for Songs in the Key of Life, but Stevie was still not satisfied with the album. As hard as he tried, he could not get all the material he wanted to include in the album on four record sides. In the end it would be a double album plus a single, 33-rpm disc containing four songs.
At last, in September 1976, it was ready. Reporters and music critics, everyone who had worked on the album, all of Stevie's publicity people and close friends, and Stevie, Yolanda, and Aisha traveled to a farm in Connecticut for a press preview of the album. While Aisha played with the farm animals and romped in the grass under the watchful eye of her mother, Stevie autographed copies of the album and gave interviews. He hoped the reporters and critics like the album, he said, but it really didn't matter, because he knew he had given it everything he had and that it was the best he could do.
He need not have been concerned about others' reaction to the album. Not only did almost everyone like it, but most people were awed by it. "Brilliant," "Exciting," "Bursting," "the album of the decade," were words and phrases used over and over to describe Songs in the Key of Life. It was like a guided tour through the whole range of musical styles as well as through the life and feelings of Stevie Wonder. It included recollections of childhood, of first love and lost love. It contained songs about faith and love among all peoples and songs about social justice for the poor and downtrodden. It featured Stevie playing a host of instruments and manipulating his voice like only he could.

It took no time at all for Songs in the Key of Life to reach the No. 1 spot on the record charts where it entered on it first week of release.

Songs kicks off with the evocative Love's In need of Love Today. Have a Talk with God co-written with brother Calvin suggests using God in time of need - He's the only free psychiatrist in town. Village Ghetto Land with its string synthesisers provides a haunting feel while describing the life of those living in the ghetto. Contusion an instrumental, written and performed live about 3 years prior, was named after the injury he sustained in the car accident. The first side closes with Sir Duke, a tribute to Duke Ellington and other jazz greats. Side 2 of the vinyl record opens with the happy reminiscing I Wish with its famous bass intro. The first love song on the record, Knocks Me Off My Feet, has Stevie extolling his love but not trying to bore his loved one. The use of the drums to emulate being knocked off his feet is ingenious.

Pastime Paradise condemns those that live in the past harping on all the negatives that are now considered evil and praises those who look to future with the positives that make life better. To add a touch of universality to the record Stevie has the Los Angeles Church Choir and the Hare Krishna devotees chant during the culmination of the song. Summer Soft plays on the theme of the changing seasons in relation to the ups and downs in love. Ordinary Pain closes side 2 with Stevie singing about the pain suffered as a result of a lost love, and then cleverly switches to the other side of the coin from where Kimberly Brewer provides her story.

Side 3 opens with the cries of a baby, though not Aisha, on the song Isn't She Lovely written about the joys of his baby girl. Joy Inside My tears is a very emotional track praising the joy that the love of someone has brought into a sad life. 1976 saw grand celebrations for the US bicentennial independence anniversary. Black Man played on that theme by announcing all the great things achieved by Americans, though of all colour, throughout the years.

Ngiculela - Es Una Historia - I Am Singing leads off Side 4 with Stevie singing in Zulu, Spanish and English about what his music is all about, and that is love from the heart. If Its Magic is a witty song about love, though the word love is never mentioned. As features jazz keyboardist Herbie Hancock on electric piano. Its a song with some of the most beautiful lyrics that Stevie has so graced the world with. An open-ended expression of infinite love. Another Star is a high spirited though sad love song featuring George Benson on guitar and Bobbi Humphreys on flute. At eight minutes long its a wonderful sing-a-long to bring to an end side 4 of the album.

14. Sharing The Knowledge, Fewer Cared
As far back as 1974, Michael Braun approached Stevie to write a theme song for a movie he was making called the Secret Life of Plants. The movie was to be based on a best selling book of the same name authored by Christopher Tompkins and Peter Bird. However after Stevie presented the song, the film producers requested that Stevie do the entire soundtrack to the movie. Having never attempted such a task, Stevie felt it would be a challenge for a blind person to not just score a movie but one with a very unusual subject matter.

With three years in the making, Stevie Wonders Journey Through The Secret Life of Plants was finally released in October of 1979. It did not help that the movie was not generally released, hence the public never had a chance to see the movie and appreciate and understand the soundtrack as intended by Stevie.

As expected the music was a complete evolution in style, surpassing in scale anything he had since produced. He incorporated much symphonic musical styles, blending African, Indian and Japanese music also in the fray, showing the diverse life and understandings of plants from various cultures worldwide.

However being released in an era where disco was the fad, it was not surprising that Secret Life of Plants failed to garner the public acceptance afforded Stevie's albums since Music Of My Mind. As the lyrics to a song, Same Old Story, on the album declares:

And those who knew that shared
Their knowledge fewer cared
About what plants could do

Nevertheless, it was an album of which Stevie could be proud. It has to be his most underrated and misunderstood albums in his repertoire. The stylistic range of the album was impressive, starting with Earth's Creation and The First Garden to the melodic sitar based Voyage to India, to the jazzy Venus Flytrap right through to the two spectacular closing tracks, Tree and Finale, an astoundingly beautiful climax to the record. In between Stevie finds space for some standard ballads that would supposedly avail it to radio station play lists. These were Send One Your Love, Black Orchid and Outside My Window. Syreeta performs lead vocals on Come Back As A Flower, a song on which she wrote the lyrics.

Stevie felt he was growing and being innovative. He could have followed the music scene at the time and brought out a disco album, which I am sure would have been better accepted, but as he says, If you don't take a chance in life, then you really cannot move forward.

A tour to promote the album did not fare too well. Concerts featuring an orchestra and Wonderlove with a large screen portraying clips from the movie in synch with the live music were quite a spectacular affair. However they were received with a lukewarm reception with many venues failing to sell-out. A disappointed Stevie reflected, I have to think why it was not (successful) - were people unable to get into the Secret Life Of Plants? The true meaning of an artist is to be expressive and innovative. A lot of things have been afforded me by the people, so I have to share with them the experiences I have had and am having.

15. Jammin' Til The Break Of Dawn
Stevie could not allow another 2 or 3 years to go by before releasing another album. Hence he was under pressure to get back to the studio to come up with material for a new record.

However while working on tracks for what would be supposedly a more commercial offering, he found time to work on albums for both Jermaine Jackson and Roberta Flack.

Jermaine Jackson then the son-in-law of Berry Gordy, opted to stay with Motown as a solo artist when the Jackson 5 left for Epic records. His previous 2 solo albums were unsuccessful, and Berry Gordy felt it necessary to inject some life into his son-in-law's waning career. When he heard a track Stevie was working on called Lets Get Serious, he thought it would be ideal for Jermaine. The track showed that Stevie's commercial spark was clearly not blunted. Two other songs on the album was also written and produced by Stevie, You're Supposed To Keep Your Love For Me and Where Are You Now. The former was also released as a single, though did not achieve the success as did Let's Get Serious.

On Roberta's album, titled Roberta Flack Featuring Donny Hathaway, Stevie contributed 2 songs. Donny had died the previous year from an unfortunate fall from an office building. The cause has never been verified, as there have been theories ranging from suicide to tripping while under the influence of drugs. One of Stevie's songs on the album, You Are My Heaven, was a Roberta/Donny duet and co-written with Eric Mercury. The other was a disco smash called Don't Make Me Wait Too Long.

Also in 1980, Stevie contributed a song on Quincy Jones' album The Dude. The track Betcha Wouldn't Hurt Me also featured Stevie on Synthesizers.

By May 1980 a press release of a forthcoming album titled Hotter Than July for July release was greeted with much skepticism by the press. As expected July came and went with no new record. However in August, concert dates were announced in the UK at Wembley Stadium, titled Hotter Than July Music Picnic, fuelling speculation of the album's imminent release.

To promote the tour dates, Stevie released the single, Masterblaster (Jammin'), though this was not necessary to ensure the instant sell-out of the 7 nights. On the last night September 7th, Stevie was joined on-stage by Diana Ross and Marvin Gaye causing pandemonium amongst the 8,000 strong audience. An extra date was then added on the 8th September to raise funds for charity.

The album was eventually released in October to much more favourable reviews than were afforded his previous record. It was more assessable to the record buying public, containing a more traditional collection of Stevie songs. It was written produced and arranged by Stevie and recorded and mixed at his own recently purchased studio called Wonderland in Los Angeles. The album kicks off with a soft 'ahh' that builds up to a crescendo and then the guitar crashes in Did I Hear You Say You Love Me. A great intro to an album. All I Do follows, a song written back in 1967, but until then never released featuring the O'Jays, Betty Wright and Michael Jackson on background vocals. Next is Rocket Love a beautiful ballad, featuring a moving string arrangement by Paul Riser. I Ain't Gonna Stand For It, the second single from the includes the Gap Band on background vocals, and inspired drumming by Stevie. It reached #10 on the UK charts, 4 on the US R&B and 11 US pop. As If You Read My Mind ended off side A of the then vinyl record.

Masterblaster opened Side 2, a reggae flavoured number that paid tribute to Bob Marley. It topped the US R&B charts, #5 pop and #2 UK. In Do Like You Stevie writes about his 2 kids, and Cash In Your Face he describes the plight of people looking for housing, but denied because of the colour of their skin. Lately a beautiful ballad, was the third single peaking at #3 UK but not faring too well in the US where it only managed a disappointing #64 pop.

Closing the album was Happy Birthday a song paying homage to Dr. Martin Luther King that would become an anthem for the movement to make his birthday January 15th a National Holiday.

16. Making The Dream A Reality
Stevie worked with king's widow, Coretta Scott king and John Conyers the congressman who sponsored the bill. He attended the January 1981 parade in Washington in support of the bill, addressed the crowd and chanted the Happy Birthday anthem. During the next year a strategy was developed for mobilising national awareness and development of a legislative agenda for presentation on Capitol Hill. In January 1982, despite inhumane weather conditions, Stevie was joined by a 50,000 strong crowd, and supported at the podium by Diana Ross, Gladys Knight, Jesse Jackson and Gil Scott-Heron at a peaceful rally demanding a day of recognition. I know you've been standing in the cold for a long time, Wonder told the crowd, but I hope your spirits are warm. I hope your spirits are hotter than July. Dr. King left an unfinished symphony which we must finish.

Although Stevie was rather inactive in the studio during this period, he did find time to collaborate with the reggae band, Third World and ex Beatle Paul McCartney.

In 1982, Stevie appeared at the annual Reggae Sunsplash Festival in Jamaica. That year the festival paid tribute to Bob Marley who had died a year earlier. Stevie was joined on stage by the group Third World and Rita Marley to perform Masterblaster (Jammin') and Marley's Redemption Song. After their performance Stevie suggested that he write some material for the band's next album. The result was the hit single Try Jah Love and the socially aware, You're Playing Us Much Too Close.

The more high profile collaboration that year was his teaming up with Paul McCartney. McCartney recording his album in Montserrat came up with the song Ebony and Ivory. Thinking it would be a good idea to make it into a duet with a leading black artist he invited Stevie to be part of the project. Though the message of the song was poignant, the critics were not to kind to what they referred to as a trite message. The song however zoomed to the top of the US and UK charts, the first time Stevie was able to reach that position in the UK, albeit on the vehicle of a Paul McCartney song. The pair also co-wrote and cut another song for Paul's Tug of War album called What's That You're Doing? With Stevie on synthesizers and drums and Paul on bass, the pair crafted an exhilarating track with their instruments and voices spontaneously interchanging in what resulted in the best track on the album.

However Motown was getting wary of the lack of material for Stevie's own records and decided to release a greatest hits double album called Stevie Wonder's Original Musiquarium I. The album mainly comprised tracks from the Music of My Mind - Hotter Than July period, with some remixed. It also included 4 new songs, each ending a side of the vinyl LP - Frontline a rock inspired ant-war theme, the jazzy ballad Ribbon In The Sky, the slyly melodious That Girl and the closing ten-minute extravaganza Do I Do, featuring Dizzy Gillespie on trumpet and Stevie rapping during its finale.

Stevie's contract had now come to an end, and there was speculation that Musiquarium was released to fulfil the conditions of the previous deal. The new contract was more low-key than the previous, no speeches, and no disclosures of monetary value.

The eighties saw Stevie maturing and no longer viewed as a driving force in the music industry. In addition the video era was now born, and Stevie strengths were not exactly suited for this medium. He now spent more time on political and social issues and working with other artists than making records for himself.

It was at this time that Stevie bought the radio station, KJLH in Los Angeles and in 1983 started his own record label called Wondirection. The debut release on his label was the The Crown, a rap record produced by Stevie and performed by Gary Byrd who wrote the lyrics, with Stevie supplying the music and adding a beautifully sung bridge. The song was only released as a 12" single and did extremely well in the UK peaking at #6 considering the limited format. However in the US it had very little impact and deterred Byrd from recording a planned follow-up.

Also in 1983 Stevie guested on the song Someday by the Gap Band, playing harmonica. He did the same on El Debarge's ballad In A Special Way and also for Manhattan Transfer's Spice Of Life.

Adding to this, Stevie ventured to the realms of television, when he was the guest host on the Saturday Night Live comedy show. On the show he introduced a new song called Overjoyed, which was to appear 2 years later on the In Square Circle album.

Also in 1983 was the Motown 25th anniversary television special, getting a standing ovation for live performances of I Wish, You Are The Sunshine Of My Life and My Cherie Amour.

By October of that year the bill sponsoring the official holiday for MLK was voted on in the senate and passed in favour of the holiday. Stevie released the following statement, Somewhere Dr. King is smiling, not because his birthday is a holiday, but because he too is convinced that we are moving in the right direction. I know that Dr. King appreciates that this day is a day for all Americans to celebrate love, peace and unity. It is not a cure-all, but it is a healing aid.

The holiday was not to come into effect until January 1986. Stevie was deeply satisfied in winning this battle. He said, you can assassinate the man but you cannot kill the values.

17. Just A Call Of Love
Events of a few months later were to bring sadness to Stevie and many others. On the 1st of April 1984 Marvin Gaye was shot dead by his own father. A few hours before Stevie had written a song called Lighting Up The Candles which Stevie performed at the funeral service

Lighting up the candles
To what use to be
Tender memories in moments of love
Happy times and bad times
All seem wonderful

The planned album, In Square Circle was again delayed, but a surprise soundtrack was on the way. A Gene Wilder comedy, The Woman In Red opened in August 1984 to a soundtrack put together by Stevie ably assisted by Dionne Warwick. The first single I Just Called To Say I Love You was a worldwide smash, giving Stevie his first UK #1 single as a solo artist. It also topped the US charts. The album included a classic Wonder composition, Love Light In Flight, the title track, and the socially aware Don't Drive Drunk. Stevie duets with Dionne on It's You and Weakness both ballads in a pop vein. Dionne solos on Moments Aren't Moments and Wonderlove has an instrumental outing on It's More Than You written by Ben Bridges.

More session work would follow for Stevie during the 1984-5 period. He contributed a harp solo on the King Sunny Ade track Ase for the Aura album, played harmonica on the Chaka Khan hit I Feel For You which also sampled his Fingertips and on Dizzy Gillespie's Closer To The Source. He also appeared on Rockwells album, and contributed the songs Upset Stomach to the soundtrack of the Motown movie, The Last Dragon, and the opening track, Feel It on the British Trio Feelabilia's debut album.

Stevie also wrote two tracks, Do I and Everything's Coming Up Roses for Eddie Murphy's first album of songs. The Eurythmics invited him to add a harmonica solo to their song There Must be An Angel (Playing With My Heart) which would be a UK #1 smash and a top 20 US single. And he contributed the song I Do Love You to the Beach Boys eponymous album.

Stevie then got involved in the USA for Africa project which was based on the efforts by British artists to raise funds for the starving people of Ethiopia. The brainchild of Bob Geldof, a group of British singers and musicians under the collective name of Band Aid released the song, Do They Know It's Christmas?. The American version was conceived by Harry Belafonte, who invited Michael Jackson, Lionel Ritchie and Stevie Wonder to compose an appropriate song. Stevie was initially unavailable for the first part of the project and advised the other two to compose the song in his absence. However when the artists did assemble to perform the song We Are The World, Stevie's presence was critical in working out the complex vocal arrangements. Sitting at the piano he offered suggestions, encouragement and constructive criticism. He even had to guide Bob Dylan, telling him how he should sing his part. The high point of the final vocal performance was Stevie's duet with Bruce Springsteen.

In 1985 Stevie was arrested for demonstrating outside the South African embassy in Washington D.C.. He was held in custody as a symbol of his commitment to the cause: They said I was disturbing the peace. I was singing.

I Just Called To Say I Love You was nominated for both Oscar and Grammy awards. Though it did not win the Grammy, Stevie did take the coveted Oscar home, though with some controversy. In his acceptance speech at the awards Stevie dedicated it to the then imprisoned black South African leader, Nelson Mandela. This resulted in Stevie Wonder's Music being banned in South Africa.

18. Freedom Is Coming
On May 13th, his 35th birthday, he appeared at the United Nations where he was commended for his work against apartheid and discrimination. He addressed the audience in both song and speech.

By September, Stevie's album, In Square Circle was finally ready. The concept was one of dovetailing the themes of love and spirituality fully explained in the albums booklet that Stevie co-wrote with Theresa Cropper. As Stevie explains about the characters in the essay, 'Their hearts minds were recalling the cycles of love while their minds were exploring the square root of the universe.' The essay goes on to explain the meaning of each song in the context of the overall story.

Part-time Lover the first single kicks off this set. It take the catchiest, danceable beat you can think of and mixes it with a great story about cheating, a cool yet eerie synthesizer line and a great doo wop riff from a guy named Luther Vandross and what do you get? Another number one hit. This is definitely lite Stevie but the song is too catchy not to love. Being Stevie though, he ends it with a lesson: The person who was doing the cheating throughout the song finds that their lover was cheating on them too! On I Love You Too Much, Stevie's keyboard playing is still great and it's the main show in this yet another layered work. Whereabouts is not the classic Stevie ballad but it does tend to grow on you with time. Stranger On The Shore Of Love speaks of taking love for granted and eventually losing it. Not one of his most memorable melodies. Never In Your Sun is a sweet song about bringing happiness to people when they're down. Great vocals and a good harmonica solo helps lift the song to another level.

In Spiritual Walkers Stevie sings about us hiding from preachers when they knock on our doors or approach us on the streets, put to an up-tempo dance beat. Land Of La La does have a driving beat, but fails to live up to the standard set by tracks like Living For The City. Go Home is jazzy, funky and cool all at once great horn riffs weave in and out of an even funkier bass line. The song is about a person in love with someone and who is willing to do anything for that person. Yet the person pushes them away. Of course at the end, Stevie being Stevie, that person realizes that they need the other but it's too late.

Overjoyed one of Stevie's classic ballads was an ok hit when originally released but has become one of his most requested and respected songs in his repertoire. The song was written while he was doing Secret Life Of Plants but it didn't fit in with the rest of the album. Well it fits in perfectly here. The rhythm section is the sounds of water, birds chirping and pebbles dropping. Stevie's strings (yes, he does write his string parts. Mr. Riser just orchestrates them for him) are beautiful and very tricky at the climax of the song. Apartheid (It's Wrong) a message song condemning the then still existing regime of apartheid in South Africa closes off the album. It is the best anti-apartheid song written and one of the best political songs of his career. He uses African vocalist singing in their native language as background vocals. The rhythm is literally crazy and hypnotic using African instruments. The last words are shouted/sung, "Freedom is coming...hold on tight!" Just wonderful.

Stevie was also linked to the UK stage extravaganza, Time. He did one song with Cliff Richards, playing all the instruments, a song that made the top twenty in the UK.

In January 1986 Americans celebrated the first ever observance of Martin Luther King Day as a national holiday. Concerts were organised in major cities and some televised. One of the televised events featured Stevie, Elizabeth Taylor, Diana Ross, Quincy Jones and Eddie Murphy.

Later in the year Stevie teamed up with Dionne Warwick, Elton John and Gladys Knight to record a song for AIDS charity. That's What Friends Are For topped the US charts and won a grammy for Best Pop Performance By A Duo or Group category.

19. Things Are Getting Real Funky
To coincide with the 1987 release of Stevie's new album, Characters, he toured the UK and released the single Skeletons.

Stevie was now more involved in worldly affairs like injustices and the like rather than recording. By using his fame and fortune to make people aware of the many wrongs taking place in this world, many say distracted from the quality and frequency of the work at hand. With Characters Stevie wanted to explore the nature of life and the various characters that go to make up people and their relationships. The album kicks off with You Will Know a nice song sprinkled with a beautiful melody, a nice starlight synthesizer sound effect and a great message of knowing God and your place in this great world of his. Overall a pretty good album opener.

Dark And Lovely packs a solid groove. It's another anti-apartheid song featuring some good keyboard work. In Your Corner is probably not the best song Stevie's ever done. A far cry from the classics of previous year, but would probably have some tapping their feet. With Each Beat OF My Heart is an overlooked gem. Stevie mixes a beautiful melody, great background vocal arrangements, a great harmonica solo and a sample of his heartbeat all together to create this beautiful piece of music. A very creative track. One Of A Kind an up-tempo love song in the mould of tracks like I Ain't Gonna Stand For It however not in its class.

Skeletons is a very good political song about the skeletons that can sometimes fall out of a politicians closet. The song was written and released around the time of the Contra-Gate scandal with Oliver North and Reagan. And it worked perfectly in that atmosphere. A funky beat matched with a scratchy keyboard line, Skeletons is very danceable and yet thinkable at the same time:

Oh things are gettin' real funky
Down at the old corral
And it's not the skunks that are stinkin'
It's the stinkin' lies you tell

Get It featuring Michael Jackson is another average dance tune that really failed to pack the punch. Galaxy Paradise is a very different song for Stevie. Something completely out of his style. It makes for interesting listening, using a lot of synthesizer sounds and the starlight. Cryin' Through The Night is another up-tempo song ala One Of A Kind from earlier. Free is certainly an overlooked classic from Stevie. On the original vinyl album, this was the last song and it is one of the best album finales he's ever had. However on the CD it is followed by two rather mediocre tracks which tend to hide its greatness. Come Let Me Make Your Love Come Down features Stevie, Stevie Ray Vaughn and B.B. King doing a song together. Yet it somehow does not live up to the potential you would expect from such a trio. The CD album closes with My Eyes Don't Cry with Stevie doing it all on the synthesizer. Drums, horns, bass, everything.

After his UK gigs, Stevie's tour party rolled into Europe and Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland making him the first Motown artist to perform in Eastern Bloc countries and the first to release an album, Characters, there.

After a relatively quiet three years, with the usual guest appearances on fellow artists' records, Stevie released the single Keep Our Love Alive in 1990. A song mainly in condemnation of apartheid, but generally describing the evils manifest in man, but in usual Stevie style pointing to the solution through love. It fuelled speculation about the release of a new album. However the single did not fare too well in the charts, managing a best position of 24 on the R&B charts. Maybe this resulted in the holding back of the planned album Conversation Piece.

He however found time to write and produce a song for Whitney Houston, We Didn't Know on her album I'm Your Baby Tonight. He also attended the funeral of Stevie Ray Vaughn who died in a helicopter crash, where he, Bonnie Raitt and Jackson Browne sang an emotional rendition of Amazing Grace at the graveside.

20. Me For You, You For Me
In 1991, Stevie was again distracted from his proposed studio project when he was approached by Spike Lee to compose music for is forthcoming film Jungle Fever. Stevie worked day and night to make the deadline for June release. The album based on the theme of interracial love and substance abuse starred Wesley Snipes and Samuel L Jackson.

It seemed only natural that two great artists like Spike Lee and Stevie Wonder would work someday together. The result is a great album from Stevie. After Characters from four years earlier, this album seemed reinvigorated and the music is top notch. Fun Day lives up to its name as the song has a bouncy, airy, carefree feeling to it and it floats along like a nice summer day. Queen Of Black and Each Other's Throat are funky workouts that have some great keyboard action. These Three Words has become a grass roots classic extolling the virtues of expressing your love for others, instead of keeping it locked up. Gotta Have You the first single is a fiery song with Stevie's vocals in great shape. The most original song of the bunch is probably Make Sure You're Sure, a slow jazzy piece which has Stevie backed up with a small piece jazz combo. The performance is so natural you would think it would have led him to doing a jazz album by now.

The Jungle Fever track explores some world beats thereby achieving with music what he is saying with the lyrics - there can be harmony among peoples of different races. I Go Sailing has a similar theme to Birds of Beauty, exploring the mind, turning within to achieve peace. Chemical Love, Stevie's pronouncements of the ills of drugs while bringing in a hint of spirituality with a pulsating synthesized guitar rhythm. The final track was Lighting Up The Candles, a song performed seven years earlier at Marvin Gaye's funeral finally made an album slot. Jungle Fever showed that Stevie had maintained his relevance over the years.

In his usual generous manner, he worked with Diana Ross on her upcoming album. Writing and producing the song, The Force Behind The Power and producing his 1972 ballad, Blame It On The Sun for her. The new Stevie song was so important to her that she re-titled the album from its original Change Of Heart. TheForce Behind The Power returned Diana back to the number one position.

By the time 1995 came around, Stevie announced the release of Conversation Peace now re-titled from Conversation Piece. It generated enormous anticipation and expectation both from fans and the music industry. The final product was a strong and solid album-by any standard. I'm New is tremendous, Taboo To Love as well, For Your Love should have been a top 10, Rain Your Love Down is Classic Stevie, Take The Time Out is very good, and Cold Chill is high quality. The message in the songs are undeniable and Conversation Peace ranks right up there with some of his best:

All for one, one for all
There's no way we'll reach our greatest heights
Unless we heed the call
Me for you, you for me
There's no chance of world salvation
'Less the conversation's peace

Stevie shows off his best on Sensuous Whisper, a jazzy number featuring Anita Baker and Edge of Eternity a good up-tempo track on par with hi work in the 80's. My Love Is With You is a musical drama, definitely effective at telling it's story about gang wars and gun crime. Sorry is a heartfelt but somewhat weaker track with Robert Margoulef doing the engineering. So all in all, an excellent album from Stevie, incorporating many elements of the then hip hop craze but not falling prey to its excesses.

Hot on the heals of Conversation Peace, Motown released a live album of Stevie performing during his recent Natural Wonder tour. Out in time for Christmas 1995 Natural Wonder was Stevie's first live album since Live and Live at The Talk Of The Town in1970. The concert shows were recorded in Japan and Israel using an orchestra conducted by Dr. Henry Panion III. The quality of the recording is excellent, and shines a new light of Stevie's gems. It aptly shows off his amazing voice, great instrumentation and supreme song writing. The album contains all the big hits including great versions of Living For The City, Superstition, Higher Ground, My Cherie Amour, I Wish, and Master Blaster (Jammin'). He also serves up lesser known songs like Pastime Paradise, Village Ghetto Land, Another Star, Stay Gold (Theme from The Outsiders) and Overjoyed. He does a nice tribute to the late Stevie Ray Vaughan in Stevie Ray Blues and a couple new songs, Dancing to The Rhythm and Ms. & Mr. Little Ones.

Though he was then 45, he belts out the classics with the same gusto and vocal clarity as he demonstrated in the seventies.

21. Lifetime Of Achievements
The Billboard Music Awards of 1996, at the Shrine auditorium, saw Stevie performing Pastime Paradise, with Coolio who sampled the song for his hit Gangsta's Paradise. Coolio's version went on to win a Grammy for the Best Rap Performance.

In February Stevie received the prestigious NARAS Lifetime Achievement Award as well as two more Grammys, Best R&B Song and Best R&B Vocals, for his single For Your Love from Conversation Peace.

Also in 1996 Stevie wrote three songs for the soundtrack to motion picture The Adventures of Pinocchio. The beautiful ballad, Kiss Lonely Goodbye, was released as a single but had no impact on the charts. The other songs were Hold On To Your Dreams and Pinocchio's Evolution.

Babyface was another recipient of Stevie's time and talent. Together they wrote and performed How Come, How Long on Babyface's The Day album. The song berating the atrocities of domestic violence was released as a single in the UK in 1997 where it reached #10. He also performed the song live with Babyface at an MTV Unplugged concert to raise funds for the Phoenix House Drug Rehabilitation Center.

Stevie met with his long time friend Elton John in 1998 when they were both invited to the White House in Washington to perform at a reception for England's Prime Minister, Tony Blair. Later in the year he appeared at the War Child charity concert, hosted by Luciano Pavarotti in Italy. Stevie wrote the song, Peace Wanted Just To Be Free for the occasion, resulting in a very arousing duet and finale to the event.

In 1998 he also teamed up with long time friend, Herbie Hancock on a tribute album to George Gershwin. This collaboration earned Stevie another 2 Grammies fot the song St. Louis Blues, taking his Grammy award total to a phenomenal 21.

And to aptly close of the millennium, in 1999 Stevie was honoured by the King of Sweden when he received the prestigious Polar Music Prize in May. At the after show party, Stevie performed the song Blusette with Toots Thielsman.

In December he was selected for the distinguished annual Kennedy Center Honours. At 49 he was the youngest person on which the honour has ever been bestowed upon. Chairman of the Center said, 'Stevie Wonder is a musical genius who has been an integral part of American music for four decades.' The ceremony was followed by a reception hosted at the White House by President Clinton.

With no new album on the horizon, Motown released a deluxe four disc box set titled At The Close Of A Century, together with a 96 page booklet. Though the compilation was planned to include a few new songs, Stevie did not deliver to Motown, any new material on time for its release.

In August 2001 Detroit celebrated its 300th birthday and Stevie was on hand to host a free concert. Stevie provided the thousands on hand with one of his trademark Homecoming Concerts.

A month later saw the tragic 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. To honour the heroes of that event many events were organised. One such event was a two hour telethon shown around the Globe which included many celebrities from various walks of life. Contributing were Tom Hanks, Whoopi Goldberg, George Clooney, Meg Ryan, Sting, Bruce Springsteen and Paul Simon and Stevie. He sang Love's In Need Of Love Today with the group Take 6, and led the massed stars for a rousing America The Beautiful as the programme's finale. Stevie's performance that night won him another Grammy for Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group.

In July 2002 the Songwriters Hall of Fame awarded Stevie a Lifetime Achievement award. Later that year in November Stevie was honoured with the BET Walk of Fame award. After being serenaded by many artists performing his songs, Stevie concluded the show with a new song called I Can't Imagine Love Without You which he promised would be on his forthcoming album due out in May 2003.

However Stevie is still in the studio working on this album. At the Billboard Award Ceremony on December 10th 2003 where he presented Sting with the Billboard Century Award, Stevie stated he will deliver Something new to hear in March...maybe April.

Since 1997 Stevie has mentioned the release of an upcoming album. He has even gone so far as mentioning various possible genres - jazz, gospel, rap and even songs from the vaults.

However Stevie, being the consummate artist that he is, insists on only releasing a product that he is thoroughly happy with, and who are we to argue.

Looking back on his forty-one years in the music industry we see an incomparable body of the highest quality music that he has given to us; a repository of compositions that continue to inspire successive generations of mankind.


A Time To Give And Share
In June 2004 Stevie appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show to announce the imminent release of the much anticipated new album A Time To Love. Sadly a couple weeks later, Syreeta passed away losing her battle against breast cancer. This resulted in further delays to the album. Committed to play the Stockholm Jazz festival at the end of June, Stevie gave an emotional performance dedicating the show to his former wife.

On July 2, 2005, Wonder performed in the USA part of the Live 8 series of concerts in Philadelphia to raise funds for the famines in Africa.

Eventually his first new album in ten years, A Time to Love, was released on October 18, 2005, after having been pushed back from first a May. The album was released electronically on September 27, 2005, exclusively on Apple's iTunes Music Store. The first single, So What the Fuss, was released in April and features Prince on guitar and background vocals from En Vogue. A second single, From the Bottom of My Heart was a hit on adult-contemporary and R&B charts. The album also featured a duet with India.Arie on the title track and duets with Aisha, his daughter. The destructive path left by Hurricane Katrina at that time in New Orleans woke up many to the devastating force of Mother Nature. Contributing to the relief, Stevie released the song Shelter In The Rain as a charity single.

Stevie performed at the pre-game show for Super Bowl XL in Detroit in early 2006, singing various hit singles with various artists, and even four year old son, Kailand on drums, and accompanying Aretha Franklin during "The Star Spangled Banner".

In March 2006, Stevie received national exposure on the popular American Idol television program. Each of 12 contestants were required to sing one of his songs, after having met and received guidance from him. he also performed My Love Is on Fire. In June 2006, Stevie Wonder made a guest appearance on Busta Rhymes' new album, The Big Bang on the track Been through the Storm sing the refrain and playing piano. He also appeared on the last track of Snoop Dogg's new album Tha Blue Carpet Treatment, Conversations, a song which sampled Have a Talk with God from Songs in the Key of Life. In 2006 Wonder staged a duet with Andrea Bocelli on the latter's album Amore, offering harmonica and additional vocals on Canzoni Stonate. Stevie also performed at Washington, D.C.'s 2006 "A Capitol Fourth" celebration, which was hosted by actor star Jason Alexander.

Sad news was to befall the entire family though when on May 31st 2006 Lula Mae Hardaway, Stevie's mother passed away. Being very close to his mother Stevie was devastated, and for the next year seemed quite reclusive.

However on August 2, 2007, Stevie announced the A Wonder Summer's Night 13 concert tour — his first U.S. tour in over ten years. The tour was inspired as he states, by a dream he had of his mother speaking to him insisting he get off his behind and continue to do what he does best, make and play music. The tour eventually extended to Europe and Japan. On the road he announced the possible release of two albums, one a a gospel tribute to his mother called A Gospel Inspired By Lula, and the second an album of songs that reflects how he sees the world, titled Through The Eyes of Wonder.

By this time the 2008 Presidential race in the US was on its way. As an early supporter of Barack Obama, who had approached Stevie for advice and support prior to his announcement to run, Stevie was busy up and down the coutry appearing and performing at various political rallies.

On August 28, 2008, the day Barack Obama accepted his party's nomination to run for President of the United States, Wonder performed at the Democratic National Convention at Invesco Field, Colorado. Songs included were the previously unreleased song, Fear Can't Put Dreams to Sleep and Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours a song that was used regularly during the Obama campaign.

After a successful dueting with Tony Bennett on the perennial For Once In My Life, a song both performers released as singles in 1968, rumours circled that the pair were keeping the door open for a jazz album collaboration with Quincy Jones as producer. Later in 2008, Stevie's harmonica playing could be heard on Raphael Saadiq's 2009 Grammy-nominated Never Give You Up track.

At the end of the year Barack Obama was elected as the first black president of the United States of America and Stevie was announced as the second recipient of the prestigious Library of Congress Gershwin Award for Lifetime Achievement. on February 23rd the award was presented by the newly inaugurated president at the White House, the day after Stevie performed his first public classical piece, titled Sketches of a Life, which was commissioned by the Library of Congress.

Stevie performed on January 18, 2009 at the We Are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial. On Inauguration Day, January 20, Stevie performed the song The Neighborhood Inaugural Ball, one of ten inaugural balls honouring President Barack Obama. He performed his new song All About the Love Again and, with other musical artists, Signed, Sealed, and Delivered in honor of the president.

In July the world was shocked with the news of the death of Michael Jackson. On July 7 Stevie performed Never Dreamed You'd Leave In Summer and They Won't Go When I Go at the Staples Center for Michael Jackson's memorial service. Later in the month Stevie closed the Mandela Day Tribute concert in the USA, commemorating the South African leader's 91st birthday.

Celebrating its 25th anniversary in October, the Rock & Roll hall of Fame hosted a two day concert extravaganza with Stevie as one of the headline artists. Stevie's harmonica could again be heard by year's end, this time on the Rod Stewart cover of Stevie's My Cherie Amour, on the album Soul Book.

A great honour was conferred on Stevie when he was announced as a United Nations Messenger of Peace. On December 3rd The UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon presented Stevie to the world as the latest Messenger of Peace with a special mission of helping people with disabilities. It was not long after, in September 2010 when Stevie urged members of the UN to unlock access to copyrighted material that disabled people need for their education and livelihoods. He pleaded for a deal to facilitate trade in copyrighted books so that they can be translated into readable formats for people with disabilities. Following this plea the organisation subsequently, at a meeting in New Delhi, in October agreed on legislation to create accessible formats of publications for sharing with specialized libraries.

In January the world witnessed the devastating earthquake in Haiti. Hope For Haiti Now was a telethon organised by George Clooney at which Stevie not only performed a medley of A Time To Love and Bridge over Troubled Water, but also found time to man the telephones. An album of performances at the fund raising event was subsequently released.

The American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) in March, honoured Stevie with its first AAPD Image Award at their 2010 Leadership Gala in Washington, DC. In May the Oberlin College conferred an honorary Doctorate on Stevie where he performed to commemorate the opening of the college's new Bertram and Judith Kohl Building.

In March Stevie Wonder was awarded France's top cultural honour, which he dedicated to his deceased mother. I receive this honour in memory of my mother and in memory of all of those that have made it possible for me to stand here today. Later at Feench's equivalent of the Grammys, the Victoires de la Musique ceremony, Stevie was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award.

The Summer of 2010 saw Stevie headlining a number of highly acclaimed festivals around the world. In June were Bonnaroo in the US, followed by Hard Rock Calling at London's Hyde Park followed the next day Glastonbury. A week later he was closing out the North Sea Jazz Festival, in the Netherlands and the Sporting Summer Festival in Monaco.

In October President Obama signed the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act. Present at the signing was Stevie, who has been lobbying for such legislation over the last few years. With this bill, manufacturers would force to comply with laws ensuring that the deaf and visually-impaired will have an easier time using smartphones, accessing TV programs online and using other high-tech devices.

December 2010 saw the 15th Annual House Full of Toys concert. An event Stevie hosts, inviting many varied guests to perform to help raise funds and collect toys for underprivileged children at Christmas time. Earlier on the day of the concert Stevie made an appearance at the Silverlake Music Conservatory in L.A. where he donated $10,000 to further their music development for children. Also on hand was Flea of the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, another of the organisation's supporters.

With no new music from Stevie Wonder since 2005, but many philanthropic works, Stevie's life now seems centred on altruistic endeavours. The world, though losing the delights of his uplifting sounds, is benefitting from his many charitable ventures."

FYI Sgt Jackie Julius SPC Matthew Lamb PFC Richard Hughes SSG Chad Henning PO2 (Join to see) Lt Col Charlie Brown Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen SSG William Jones COL Charles Williams LTC (Join to see) PO3 Bob McCordCWO3 Dennis M.SGT Philip Roncari 1SG Joseph Dartey 1SG John Highfill TSgt George Rodriguez CPT (Join to see) Capt Rich BuckleySFC (Join to see)CW4 G.L. Smith
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
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A talented performer...he started early!
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
Lt Col Charlie Brown
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Thanks for the mention LTC Stephen F.
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Great song but he will always be "Little" Stevie Wonder to me!
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