In 1972, 22-year-old Stevie Wonder released his 15th album, Talking Book. The LP’s lead single, “Superstition,” marked a career turning point for the artist. Like his contemporaries, Wonder wanted to ...
Stevie Wonder had the artistic wind at his back, teeming with creative energy and scaling new musical heights, when he met Jeff Beck in 1972. Their encounter at a New York studio would soon bear fruit ...
If it weren’t for Jeff Beck — the guitar god who died suddenly at 78 on Wednesday after contracting bacterial meningitis — then Stevie Wonder wouldn’t have had one of his biggest hits. Indeed, ...
The funk, the clavinet, that beat. Stevie Wonder laid down more classic tracks than just about anybody, but as far as we're concerned, everything else is battling for second place after "Superstition.
Wonder was already an established star when “Superstition” came around in 1972 and turned the world of R&B music on its head. Written solely by Wonder and co-produced by the singer, Malcolm Cecil and ...
Punch the words ‘iconic keyboard intros’ into a Google search and a whole raft of songs will splurge out in the search results, most of them big rock or pop classics — Seven Seas Of Rhye and Bohemian ...
Stevie Wonder had the artistic wind at his back, teeming with creative energy and scaling new musical heights, when he met Jeff Beck in 1972. Their encounter at a New York studio would soon bear fruit ...