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Stevie Wonder - 12 Albums Collection 1966-1985

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  • Stevie Wonder - 12 Albums Collection 1966-1985








    Stevie Wonder - 12 Albums Collection 1966-1985 Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012 [14CD]
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 3.9 Gb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 1.4 Gb (incl 5%) | Complete Scans ~ 2 Gb
    Genre: Funk, Soul, R&B, Pop Rock | Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20346-UICY-20359 | Time: 10:05:00


    SHM-CD Reissue collection includes: 1966 Up-Tight; 1966 Down To Earth; 1969 My Cherie Amour; 1971 Where I'm Coming From; 1972 Music Of My Mind; 1972 Talking Book; 1973 Innervisions; 1974 Fulfillingness' First Finale; 1976 Songs In The Key Of Life (2CD Set); 1979 Journey Through The Secret Life Of Plants (2CD Set); 1980 Hotter Than July; 1985 In Square Circle.





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    Up-Tight (1966) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 233 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 79 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 122 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20346 | Time: 00:33:23


    Stevie Wonder began demonstrating his production skills and compositional acumen on his first of two albums in 1966. Although still just a teenager, Wonder was already anxious to do more than simply grind out love tunes. He covered Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" and also contributed "Pretty Little Angel" alongside the monster hits "Nothin's Too Good for My Baby" and the title song. It was also a signal Wonder had moved beyond simply paying homage to Ray Charles and now wanted to establish his own musical identity.

    Review by Ron Wynn, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Love A Go-Go 02:46
    02. Hold Me 02:36
    03. Blowin' In The Wind 03:46
    04. Nothing's Too Good For My Baby 02:39
    05. Teach Me Tonight 02:39
    06. Uptight (Everything's Alright) 02:55
    07. Ain't That Asking For Trouble 02:49
    08. I Want My Baby Back 02:49
    09. Pretty Little Angel 02:12
    10. Music Talk 02:52
    11. Contract On Love 02:06
    12. With A Child's Heart 03:08






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    Down To Earth (1966) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 205 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 79 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 134 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20347 | Time: 00:33:20


    Stevie Wonder's third album signaled more artistic growth, but was the first of his career that didn't make much commercial headway. It didn't contain a single big hit, something that wouldn't happen again to Wonder for many, many years. There were moments of uncertainty and awkwardness on such songs as "Angel Baby (Don't You Ever Leave Me)" and "Lonesome Road." Wonder was laying the groundwork for numerous classics that routinely came throughout the 1970s and '80s; his voice was losing its cuteness and beginning to gain the richness and edge that punctuated many of his future albums.

    Review by Ron Wynn, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. A Place In The Sun 02:52
    02. Bang Bang 02:42
    03. Down To Earth 02:50
    04. Thank You Love 02:55
    05. Be Cool Be Calm (And Keep Yourself Together) 02:43
    06. Sylvia 02:34
    07. My World Is Empty Without You 02:53
    08. The Lonesome Road 03:06
    09. Angel Baby (Don't You Ever Leave Me) 02:45
    10. Mr. Tambourine Man 02:30
    11. Sixteen Tons 02:42
    12. Hey Love 02:41






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    My Cherie Amour (1969) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 242 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 86 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 127 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20348 | Time: 00:36:16


    Notable for containing Wonder's then-most recent Top Ten hit, the title track, and its follow-up, "Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday," this album otherwise contains contemporary filler like "Light My Fire," plus a peculiar arrangement of "Hello, Young Lovers" from The King and I that makes it sound like "For Once In My Life."

    Review by William Ruhlmann, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. My Cherie Amour 02:55
    02. Hello Young Lovers 03:15
    03. At Last 02:51
    04. Light My Fire 03:44
    05. The Shadow Of Your Smile 02:44
    06. You And Me 02:46
    07. Pearl 02:47
    08. Somebody Knows, Somebody Cares 02:35
    09. Yester-Me Yester-You, Yesterday 03:08
    10. Angie Girl 03:03
    11. Give Your Love 03:47
    12. I've Got You 02:34






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    Where I'm Coming From (1971) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 241 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 88 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 167 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20349 | Time: 00:37:27


    One month before he turned 21, Stevie Wonder released Where I'm Coming From, the most distinctive record of his young career, and one that looked forward -- in its breadth of material as well as its futuristic production aesthetic -- to his many successes later in the '70s. There's a fabulous song here for nearly every type of fan; the soothing love ballad ("Think of Me as Your Soldier"), a gritty, apocalyptic funk extravanganza ("Do Yourself a Favor"), a kinetic, refreshing nod to the pop charts (the Top Ten hit "If You Really Love Me"), and an agonizing piece of heartache soul ("Never Dreamed You'd Leave in Summer" (slightly reworked for "Superwoman" on his next album Music of My Mind). Still, there are a few echoes of his occasionally pedestrian '60s work, and a pair of songs on the flipside sound especially anachronistic. The first is a piece of inspirational fluff called "Take up a Course in Happiness" with an odd arrangement pitched halfway between Sammy Davis, Jr. and Sgt. Pepper's, the second a jokey pick-up number named "I Wanna Talk to You" (complete with leering old-man vocals). Those two however, are the exceptions; the rules are uniformly excellent. The set closers "Never Dreamed You'd Leave in Summer" and "Sunshine in Their Eyes" are bravura performances, Stevie summoning his purest register to convey heartbreak and hopefulness, respectively, in equal measure. For all the great material included, there was little chance of these songs hanging together as a proper album, and Berry Gordy's misgivings about releasing a record like this on a Motown label were, temporarily, well-placed. Still, Where I'm Coming From was a frequently astonishing album from Motown's new genius of the recording studio.

    Review by John Bush, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Look Around 02:48
    02. Do Yourself A Favor 06:11
    03. Think Of Me As Your Soldier 03:41
    04. Something Out Of The Blue 03:04
    05. If You Really Love Me 03:04
    06. I Wanna Talk To You 05:21
    07. Take Up A Course In Happiness 03:17
    08. Never Dreamed You'd Leave In Summer 02:58
    09. Sunshine In Their Eyes 06:58






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    Music Of My Mind (1972) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 327 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 115 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 191 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20350 | Time: 00:47:57


    With a new contract from Motown in his hand, Stevie Wonder released Music of My Mind, his first truly unified record and, with the exception of a single part on two songs, the work of a one-man-band. Everything he had learned about musicianship, engineering, and production during his long apprenticeship in the Snakepit at Motown Studios came together here (from the liner notes: "The sounds themselves come from inside his mind. The man is his own instrument. The instrument is an orchestra.") Music of My Mind was also the first to bear the fruits of his increased focus on Moog and Arp synthesizers, though the songs never sound synthetic, due in great part to Stevie's reliance on a parade of real instruments -- organic drumwork, harmonica, organs and pianos -- as well as his mastery of traditional song structure and his immense musical personality. The intro of the vibrant, tender "I Love Every Little Thing About You" is a perfect example, humanized with a series of lightly breathed syllables for background rhythm. And when the synthesizers do appear, it's always in the perfect context: the standout "Superwoman" really benefits from its high-frequency harmonics, and "Seems So Long" wouldn't sound quite as affectionate without the warm electronics gurgling in the background. This still wasn't a perfect record, though; "Sweet Little Girl" was an awkward song, with Stevie assuming another of his embarrassing musical personalities to fawn over a girl.

    Review by John Bush, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Love Having You Around 07:24
    02. Superwoman 08:07
    03. I Love Every Little Thing About You 03:55
    04. Sweet Little Girl 04:59
    05. Happier Than The Morning Sun 05:18
    06. Girl Blue 03:34
    07. Seems So Long 04:24
    08. Keep On Running 06:40
    09. Evil 03:33






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    Talking Book (1972) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 278 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 104 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 170 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20351 | Time: 00:43:31


    After releasing two "head" records during 1970-71, Stevie Wonder expanded his compositional palate with 1972's Talking Book to include societal ills as well as tender love songs, and so recorded the first smash album of his career. What had been hinted at on the intriguing project Music of My Mind was here focused into a laser beam of tight songwriting, warm electronic arrangements, and ebullient performances -- altogether the most realistic vision of musical personality ever put to wax, beginning with a disarmingly simple love song, "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" (but of course, it's only the composition that's simple). Stevie's not always singing a tender ballad here -- in fact, he flits from contentment to mistrust to promise to heartbreak within the course of the first four songs -- but he never fails to render each song in the most vivid colors. In stark contrast to his early songs, which were clever but often relied on the Motown template of romantic metaphor, with Talking Book it became clear Stevie Wonder was beginning to speak his mind and use personal history for material (just as Marvin Gaye had with the social protest of 1971's What's Going On). The lyrics became less convoluted, while the emotional power gained in intensity. "You and I" and the glorious closer "I Believe (When I Fall in Love It Will Be Forever)" subtly illustrate that the conception of love can be stronger than the reality, while "Tuesday Heartbreak" speaks simply but powerfully: "I wanna be with you when the nighttime comes / I wanna be with you till the daytime comes." Ironically, the biggest hit from Talking Book wasn't a love song at all; the funk landmark "Superstition" urges empowerment instead of hopelessness, set to a grooving beat that made it one of the biggest hits of his career. It's followed by "Big Brother," the first of his directly critical songs, excoriating politicians who posture to the underclass in order to gain the only thing they really need: votes. With Talking Book, Stevie also found a proper balance between making an album entirely by himself and benefiting from the talents of others. His wife Syreeta and her sister Yvonne Wright contributed three great lyrics, and Ray Parker, Jr. came by to record a guitar solo that brings together the lengthy jam "Maybe Your Baby." Two more guitar heroes, Jeff Beck and Buzzy Feton, appeared on "Lookin' for Another Pure Love," Beck's solo especially giving voice to the excruciating process of moving on from a broken relationship. Like no other Stevie Wonder LP before it, Talking Book is all of a piece, the first unified statement of his career. It's certainly an exercise in indulgence but, imitating life, it veers breathtakingly from love to heartbreak and back with barely a pause.

    Review by John Bush, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life 02:59
    02. Maybe Your Baby 06:50
    03. You And I 04:38
    04. Tuesday Heartbreak 03:02
    05. You've Got It Bad Girl 04:58
    06. Superstition 04:26
    07. Big Brother 03:33
    08. Blame It On The Sun 03:25
    09. Looking For Another Pure Love 04:43
    10. I Believe (When I Fall In Love It Will Be Forever) 04:52




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    Innervisions (1973) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 311 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 106 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 176 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20352 | Time: 00:44:16


    When Stevie Wonder applied his tremendous songwriting talents to the unsettled social morass that was the early '70s, he produced one of his greatest, most important works, a rich panoply of songs addressing drugs, spirituality, political ethics, the unnecessary perils of urban life, and what looked to be the failure of the '60s dream -- all set within a collection of charts as funky and catchy as any he'd written before. Two of the highlights, "Living for the City" and "Too High," make an especially deep impression thanks to Stevie's narrative talents; on the first, an eight-minute mini-epic, he brings a hard-scrabble Mississippi black youth to the city and illustrates, via a brilliant dramatic interlude, what lies in wait for innocents. (He also uses his variety of voice impersonations to stunning effect.) "Too High" is just as stunning, a cautionary tale about drugs driven by a dizzying chorus of scat vocals and a springing bassline. "Higher Ground," a funky follow-up to the previous album's big hit ("Superstition"), and "Jesus Children of America" both introduced Wonder's interest in Eastern religion. It's a tribute to his genius that he could broach topics like reincarnation and transcendental meditation in a pop context with minimal interference to the rest of the album. Wonder also made no secret of the fact that "He's Misstra Know-It-All" was directed at Tricky Dick, aka Richard Milhouse Nixon, then making headlines (and destroying America's faith in the highest office) with the biggest political scandal of the century. Putting all these differing themes and topics into perspective was the front cover, a striking piece by Efram Wolff portraying Stevie Wonder as the blind visionary, an artist seeing far better than those around him what was going on in the early '70s, and using his astonishing musical gifts to make this commentary one of the most effective and entertaining ever heard.

    Review by John Bush, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Too High 04:36
    02. Visions 05:23
    03. Living For The City 07:22
    04. Golden Lady 04:59
    05. Higher Ground 03:42
    06. Jesus Children Of America 04:10
    07. All In Love Is Fair 03:41
    08. Don't You Worry 'Bout A Thing 04:44
    09. He's Misstra Know-It-All 05:35






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    Fulfillingness' First Finale (1974) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 285 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 102 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 183 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20353 | Time: 00:42:37


    After the righteous anger and occasional despair of the socially motivated Innervisions, Stevie Wonder returned with a relationship record: Fulfillingness' First Finale. The cover pictures his life as an enormous wheel, part of which he's looking ahead to and part of which he's already completed (the latter with accompanying images of Little Stevie, JFK and MLK, the Motor Town Revue bus, a child with balloons, his familiar Taurus logo, and multiple Grammy awards). The songs and arrangements are the warmest since Talking Book, and Stevie positively caresses his vocals on this set, encompassing the vagaries of love, from dreaming of it ("Creepin'") to being bashful of it ("Too Shy to Say") to knowing when it's over ("It Ain't No Use"). The two big singles are "Boogie on Reggae Woman," with a deep electronic groove balancing organic congas and gospel piano, and "You Haven't Done Nothin'," an acidic dismissal of President Nixon and the Watergate controversy (he'd already written "He's Misstra Know-It-All" on the same topic). As before, Fulfillingness' First Finale is mostly the work of a single man; Stevie invited over just a bare few musicians, and most of those were background vocalists (though of the finest caliber: Minnie Riperton, Paul Anka, Deniece Williams, and the Jackson 5). Also as before, the appearances are perfectly chosen; "Too Shy to Say" can only benefit from the acoustic bass of Motown institution James Jamerson and the heavenly steel guitar of Sneaky Pete Kleinow, while the Jackson 5 provide some righteous amens to Stevie's preaching on "You Haven't Done Nothin'." It's also very refreshing to hear more songs devoted to the many and varied stages of romance, among them "It Ain't No Use," "Too Shy to Say," "Please Don't Go." The only element lacking here, in comparison to the rest of his string of brilliant early-'70s records, is a clear focus; Fulfillingness' First Finale is more a collection of excellent songs than an excellent album.

    Review by John Bush, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Smile Please 03:28
    02. Heaven Is 10 Zillion Light Years Away 05:02
    03. Too Shy To Say 03:28
    04. Boogie On Reggae Woman 04:57
    05. Creepin' 04:22
    06. You Haven't Done Nothin' 03:22
    07. It Ain't No Use 04:00
    08. They Won't Go When I Go 05:58
    09. Bird Of Beauty 03:48
    10. Please Don't Go 04:07






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    Songs In The Key Of Life (1976) 2CD Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 775 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 251 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 250 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20354-20355 | Time: 01:45:05


    Songs in the Key of Life was Stevie Wonder's longest, most ambitious collection of songs, a two-LP (plus accompanying EP) set that -- just as the title promised -- touched on nearly every issue under the sun, and did it all with ambitious (even for him), wide-ranging arrangements and some of the best performances of Wonder's career. The opening "Love's in Need of Love Today" and "Have a Talk with God" are curiously subdued, but Stevie soon kicks into gear with "Village Ghetto Land," a fierce exposé of ghetto neglect set to a satirical Baroque synthesizer. Hot on its heels comes the torrid fusion jam "Contusion," a big, brassy hit tribute to the recently departed Duke Ellington in "Sir Duke," and (another hit, this one a Grammy winner as well) the bumping poem to his childhood, "I Wish." Though they didn't necessarily appear in order, Songs in the Key of Life contains nearly a full album on love and relationships, along with another full album on issues social and spiritual. Fans of the love album Talking Book can marvel that he sets the bar even higher here, with brilliant material like the tenderly cathartic and gloriously redemptive "Joy Inside My Tears," the two-part, smooth-and-rough "Ordinary Pain," the bitterly ironic "All Day Sucker," or another classic heartbreaker, "Summer Soft." Those inclined toward Stevie Wonder the social-issues artist had quite a few songs to focus on as well: "Black Man" was a Bicentennial school lesson on remembering the vastly different people who helped build America; "Pastime Paradise" examined the plight of those who live in the past and have little hope for the future; "Village Ghetto Land" brought listeners to a nightmare of urban wasteland; and "Saturn" found Stevie questioning his kinship with the rest of humanity and amusingly imagining paradise as a residency on a distant planet. If all this sounds overwhelming, it is; Stevie Wonder had talent to spare during the mid-'70s, and instead of letting the reserve trickle out during the rest of the decade, he let it all go with one massive burst. (His only subsequent record of the '70s was the similarly gargantuan but largely instrumental soundtrack Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants.)

    Review by John Bush, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    CD1:

    01. Love's In Need Of Love Today 07:06
    02. Have A Talk With God 02:42
    03. Village Ghetto Land 03:25
    04. Contusion 03:45
    05. Sir Duke 03:54
    06. I Wish 04:12
    07. Knocks Me Off My Feet 03:36
    08. Pastime Paradise 03:27
    09. Summer Soft 04:14
    10. Ordinary Pain 06:23


    CD2:

    01. Isn't She Lovely 06:34
    02. Joy Inside My Tears 06:29
    03. Black Man 08:29
    04. Ngiculela - Es Una Historia - I Am Singing 03:48
    05. If It's Magic 03:12
    06. As 07:08
    07. Another Star 08:28

    A Something's Extra Bonus:
    08. Saturn 04:53
    09. Ebony Eyes 04:08
    10. All Day Sucker 05:05
    11. Easy Goin' Evening (My Mama's Call) 03:56




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    Journey Through The Secret Life Of Plants (1979) 2CD Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 510 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 216 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 166 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20356-20357 | Time: 01:29:57


    Stevie Wonder broke a three-year silence, one that followed a series of six classic albums released within six years, with this double album, the score/soundtrack to a little-seen environmental documentary directed by Wild Bunch co-screenwriter Walon Green. From the release of Songs in the Key of Life through the release of Plants, Wonder had been active, actually, but only as a collaborator, working with Ramsey Lewis, the Pointer Sisters, Minnie Riperton, Syreeta, Ronnie Foster, and Michael Jackson. Even so, three years was a considerable lag between albums. Anticipation was so high that this release peaked at number four on the Billboard 200 and R&B album charts. It quickly slipped to footnote status; when Wonder’s 1972-1980 albums were reissued in 2000, it was left out of the program. Plants is a sprawling, fascinating album. Though it is dominated by synthesizer-heavy instrumental pieces with evocative titles, there is a handful of full-blown songs. The gorgeous, mostly acoustic ballad “Send One Your Love” was a Top Ten R&B single, while the joyous “Outside My Window” registered in the Top 60. Beyond that, there’s the deep classic “Come Back as a Flower,” a gently lapping, piano-led ballad featuring Syreeta on vocals. Otherwise, there are playfully oddball tracks like “Venus’ Flytrap and the Bug,” where Wonder chirps “Please don’t eat me!” through robotizing effects, and “A Seed’s a Star,” which incorporates crowd noise, a robotized monologue, and a shrieking Tata Vega over a funkier and faster version of Yellow Magic Orchestra. The album is not for everyone, but it suited its purpose and allowed its maker an amount of creative wiggle room that few major-label artists experience.

    Review by Andy Kellman, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    CD1:

    01. Earth's Creation 04:06
    02. The First Garden 02:32
    03. Voyage To India 06:30
    04. Same Old Story 03:44
    05. Venus' Flytrap And The Bug 02:25
    06. Ai No, Sono 02:05
    07. Seasons 02:54
    08. Power Flower 05:30
    09. Send One Your Love (Instrumental) 03:05
    10. Race Babbling 08:53

    CD2:

    01. Send One Your Love 04:02
    02. Outside My Window 05:29
    03. Black Orchid 03:47
    04. Ecclesiastes 03:48
    05. Kesse Ye Lolo De Ye 02:59
    06. Come Back As A Flower 04:58
    07. A Seed's A Star / Tree Medley 05:54
    08. The Secret Life Of Plants 04:15
    09. Tree 05:48
    10. Finale 07:03




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    Hotter Than July (1980) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 295 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 110 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 208 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20358 | Time: 00:45:49


    Four years after the pinnacle of Stevie Wonder's mid-'70s typhoon of classic albums, Hotter Than July was the proper follow-up to Songs in the Key of Life (his Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants concept record was actually a soundtrack to an obscure movie that fared miserably in theaters). It also found Wonder in a different musical climate than the one that savored his every move from 1972 to 1977. Disco and new wave had slowly crept their way into the mainstream record-buying public, and hindered the once-ample room for socially and politically charged lyrics. However, Wonder naysayed the trends and continues to do what he did best. Solid songwriting, musicianship, and production are evident in the majority of Hotter Than July. Wonder also carries on his tradition of penning songs normally not associated with his trademark sound, from the disco-tinged "All I Do" (originally planned to be released by Tammi Terrell almost ten years previously) to the reggae-influenced smash "Master Blaster (Jammin)," which went straight to the top of the R&B charts. While admittedly there are a few less-than-standard tracks, he closes the album on an amazing high note with one of the most aching ballads in his canon ("Lately") and a touching anthem to civil rights pioneer Martin Luther King, Jr. ("Happy Birthday"). While most definitely not on the same tier as Innervisions or Songs in the Key of Life, Hotter Than July is the portrait of an artist who still had the Midas touch, but stood at the crossroads of an illustrious career.

    Review by Rob Theakston, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Did I Hear You Say You Love Me 04:07
    02. All I Do 05:06
    03. Rocket Love 04:39
    04. I Ain't Gonna Stand For It 04:39
    05. As If You Read My Mind 03:41
    06. Master Blaster (Jammin') 05:07
    07. Do Like You 04:25
    08. Cash In Your Face 03:59
    09. Lately 04:05
    10. Happy Birthday 05:56




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    In Square Circle (1985) Japanese SHM-CD Reissue 2012
    EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 290 Mb (incl 5%) | Mp3 (CBR320/Stereo) ~ 110 Mb (incl 5%) | Scans ~ 170 Mb
    Label: Universal Music Japan | # UICY-20359 | Time: 00:45:52


    Although it went platinum, nothing stands as better evidence of how cyclical the pop experience is than the response to In Square Circle. Wonder actually wrote some superb songs, and several, like "Overjoyed" and "I Love You Too Much," were superior to the hit single "Part-Time Lover." But that one zoomed to the top spot and became the album's definitive tune in the minds of many.

    Review by Ron Wynn, Allmusic.com

    Tracklist:

    01. Part-Time Lover 04:12
    02. I Love You Too Much 05:26
    03. Whereabouts 04:18
    04. Stranger On The Shore Of Love 04:59
    05. Never In Your Sun 04:03
    06. Spiritual Walkers 05:13
    07. Land Of La La 05:11
    08. Go Home 05:17
    09. Overjoyed 03:42
    10. It's Wrong (Apartheid) 03:26



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