Stevie Wonder: At the Close of a Century | ||||
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Compilation album by | ||||
Released | November 23, 1999 [1] | |||
Recorded | 1962–1997 | |||
Genre | R&B, soul | |||
Label | Motown | |||
Producer | Harry Weinger, Stevie Wonder, Robert Margouleff, Malcolm Cecil, Mickey Stevenson, Clarence Paul, Hank Cosby, Don Hunter, Ron Miller | |||
Stevie Wonder chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [2] |
Los Angeles Times | [3] |
Rolling Stone | [4] |
At the Close of a Century is a box-set album of Stevie Wonder's greatest hits from the 1960s through the 1990s. The box set spans four CDs and the songs are placed in chronological order. It features nearly all of his most critically acclaimed songs, singles and album tracks alike. It reached #100 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart in 2000. The box set encompasses a total of 70 songs, including every track from Wonder's 1973 album Innervisions except for "Jesus Children of America."
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Original album | Length |
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1. | "Fingertips (Pts. 1 & 2)" | Henry Cosby, Clarence Paul | Recorded Live: The 12 Year Old Genius , 1963 | 6:55 |
2. | "Uptight (Everything's Alright)" | Stevie Wonder, Sylvia Moy, Cosby | Up Tight , 1966 | 2:53 |
3. | "Nothing's Too Good for My Baby" | Cosby, Moy, William "Mickey" Stevenson | Up Tight | 2:38 |
4. | "Blowin' in the Wind" (Bob Dylan cover) | Bob Dylan | Up Tight | 3:43 |
5. | "A Place in the Sun" | Ron Miller, Bryan Wells | Down to Earth , 1966 | 2:45 |
6. | "Hey Love" | Morris Broadnax, Paul, Wonder | Down to Earth | 2:45 |
7. | "I Was Made to Love Her" | Wonder, Cosby, Moy, Lula Mae Hardaway | I Was Made to Love Her , 1967 | 2:37 |
8. | "Until You Come Back to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)" | Broadnax, Paul, Wonder | Looking Back , 1977; originally recorded in 1967 | 3:01 |
9. | "I'm Wondering" | Wonder, Cosby, Moy | Non-album single, 1967 | 2:55 |
10. | "Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day" | Wonder, Moy, Cosby | For Once in My Life , 1968 | 2:46 |
11. | "You Met Your Match" | Hardaway, Don Hunter, Wonder | For Once in My Life | 2:38 |
12. | "For Once in My Life" | Miller, Orlando Murden | For Once in My Life | 2:50 |
13. | "I Don't Know Why" | Hardaway, Hunter, Paul Riser, Wonder | For Once in My Life | 2:45 |
14. | "My Cherie Amour" | Cosby, Moy, Wonder | My Cherie Amour , 1969 | 2:50 |
15. | "Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday" | Miller, Wells | My Cherie Amour | 3:04 |
16. | "Never Had a Dream Come True" | Cosby, Moy, Wonder | Signed, Sealed & Delivered , 1970 | 3:13 |
17. | "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours" | Lee Garrett, Hardaway, Wonder, Syreeta Wright | Signed, Sealed & Delivered | 2:40 |
18. | "Heaven Help Us All" | Miller | Signed, Sealed & Delivered | 3:15 |
19. | "We Can Work It Out" (The Beatles cover) | John Lennon, Paul McCartney | Signed, Sealed & Delivered | 3:17 |
20. | "If You Really Love Me" | Wonder, S. Wright | Where I'm Coming From , 1971 | 2:56 |
21. | "Never Dreamed You'd Leave in Summer" | Wonder, S. Wright | Where I'm Coming From | 2:56 |
22. | "Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You)" | Wonder | Music of My Mind , 1972 | 8:07 |
23. | "I Love Every Little Thing About You" | Wonder | Music of My Mind | 3:55 |
All tracks are written by Stevie Wonder, except "I Believe (When I Fall in Love It Will Be Forever)", written by Wonder and Yvonne Wright
No. | Title | Original album | Length |
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1. | "Superstition" | Talking Book , 1972 | 4:26 |
2. | "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" | Talking Book | 2:55 |
3. | "You and I" | Talking Book | 4:34 |
4. | "I Believe (When I Fall in Love It Will Be Forever)" | Talking Book | 4:52 |
5. | "Too High" | Innervisions , 1973 | 4:36 |
6. | "Visions" | Innervisions | 5:23 |
7. | "Living for the City" | Innervisions | 7:23 |
8. | "Golden Lady" | Innervisions | 4:47 |
9. | "Higher Ground" | Innervisions | 3:42 |
10. | "All in Love Is Fair" | Innervisions | 3:43 |
11. | "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing" | Innervisions | 4:45 |
12. | "He's Misstra Know-It-All" | Innervisions | 5:36 |
13. | "You Haven't Done Nothin'" | Fulfillingness' First Finale , 1974 | 3:29 |
14. | "Heaven Is 10 Zillion Light Years Away" | Fulfillingness' First Finale | 5:02 |
15. | "Too Shy to Say" | Fulfillingness' First Finale | 3:29 |
16. | "Boogie On Reggae Woman" | Fulfillingness' First Finale | 4:55 [5] |
17. | "Creepin'" | Fulfillingness' First Finale | 4:20 |
All tracks are written by Stevie Wonder, except "All I Do", written by Wonder, Paul and Broadnax
No. | Title | Original album | Length |
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1. | "Sir Duke" | Songs in the Key of Life , 1976 | 3:51 |
2. | "I Wish" | Songs in the Key of Life | 4:12 |
3. | "Knocks Me Off My Feet" | Songs in the Key of Life | 3:36 |
4. | "Pastime Paradise" | Songs in the Key of Life | 3:27 |
5. | "Isn't She Lovely" | Songs in the Key of Life | 6:36 |
6. | "Ngiculela ~ Es Una Historia ~ I Am Singing" | Songs in the Key of Life | 3:48 |
7. | "If It's Magic" | Songs in the Key of Life | 3:12 |
8. | "As" | Songs in the Key of Life | 7:09 |
9. | "Another Star" | Songs in the Key of Life | 8:22 |
10. | "Send One Your Love" | Stevie Wonder's Journey Through "The Secret Life of Plants" , 1979 | 4:01 |
11. | "All I Do" | Hotter than July , 1980 | 5:16 |
12. | "Rocket Love" | Hotter than July | 4:39 |
13. | "I Ain't Gonna Stand for It" | Hotter than July | 4:39 |
14. | "Master Blaster (Jammin')" | Hotter than July | 5:11 |
15. | "Lately" | Hotter than July | 4:05 |
16. | "Happy Birthday" | Hotter than July | 5:58 |
All tracks are written by Stevie Wonder, except "How Come, How Long", written by Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds and Wonder
No. | Title | Original album | Length |
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1. | "That Girl" | Stevie Wonder's Original Musiquarium I , 1982 | 5:13 |
2. | "Ribbon in the Sky" | Stevie Wonder's Original Musiquarium I | 5:40 |
3. | "Do I Do" | Stevie Wonder's Original Musiquarium I | 10:30 |
4. | "Love Light in Flight" | The Woman in Red soundtrack, 1984 | 6:54 |
5. | "I Just Called to Say I Love You" (Single version) | The Woman in Red soundtrack | 4:22 |
6. | "Overjoyed" | In Square Circle , 1985 | 3:42 |
7. | "Part-Time Lover" | In Square Circle | 4:12 |
8. | "Go Home" | In Square Circle | 5:19 |
9. | "You Will Know" | Characters , 1987 | 5:02 |
10. | "Skeletons" | Characters | 5:24 |
11. | "Gotta Have You" | Jungle Fever soundtrack, 1991 | 6:26 |
12. | "These Three Words" | Jungle Fever soundtrack | 4:54 |
13. | "For Your Love" | Conversation Peace , 1995 | 5:01 |
14. | "How Come, How Long" (Babyface feat. Stevie Wonder) | The Day , 1996 | 5:15 |
Stevland Hardaway Morris, known professionally as Stevie Wonder, is an American singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer. One of the most acclaimed and influential musicians of the 20th century, he is credited as a pioneer and influence by musicians across a range of genres that include R&B, pop, soul, gospel, funk, and jazz. A virtual one-man band, Wonder's use of synthesizers and other electronic musical instruments during the 1970s reshaped the conventions of contemporary R&B. He also helped drive such genres into the album era, crafting his LPs as cohesive and consistent, in addition to socially conscious statements with complex compositions. Blind since shortly after his birth, Wonder was a child prodigy who signed with Motown's Tamla label at the age of 11, where he was given the professional name Little Stevie Wonder.
Songs in the Key of Life is the eighteenth studio album by American singer, songwriter and musician Stevie Wonder. A double album, it was released on September 28, 1976, by Tamla Records, a division of Motown. It was recorded primarily at Crystal Sound studio in Hollywood, with some sessions recorded at the Record Plant in Hollywood, the Record Plant in Sausalito, and The Hit Factory in New York City; final mixing was conducted at Crystal Sound. The album has been regarded by music journalists as the culmination of Wonder's "classic period" of recording.
Talking Book is the fifteenth studio album by American singer, songwriter, and musician Stevie Wonder, released on October 27, 1972, by Tamla, a subsidiary of Motown Records. This album and Music of My Mind, released earlier the same year, are generally considered to mark the start of Wonder's "classic period". The sound of the album is sharply defined by Wonder's use of keyboards and synthesizers.
Stevie Wonder's Journey Through "The Secret Life of Plants" is an album by Stevie Wonder, originally released on the Tamla Motown label on October 30, 1979. It is the soundtrack to the documentary The Secret Life of Plants, directed by Walon Green, which was based on the book of the same name by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird. It contains two singles that reached the Billboard Hot 100 charts: "Send One Your Love" and the minor hit "Outside My Window". The single "Black Orchid" reached No. 63 in the UK.
Music of My Mind is the fourteenth studio album by American singer, songwriter, and musician Stevie Wonder. It was released on March 3, 1972, by Tamla Records, and was Wonder's first to be recorded under a new contract with Motown that allowed him full artistic control over his music. For the album, Wonder recruited electronic music pioneers Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff as associate producers, employing their custom TONTO synthesizer on several tracks. The album hit No. # 21 in the Billboard LP charts, and critics found it representative of Wonder's artistic growth, and it is generally considered by modern critics to be the first album of Wonder's “classic period”.
"I Wish" is a song by American singer Stevie Wonder. It was released in late 1976 as the lead single from his eighteenth album, Songs in the Key of Life (1976). Written and produced by Wonder, the song focuses on his childhood from the 1950s into the early 1960s about how he wished he could go back and relive it. The single hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and soul singles chart. At the 19th Grammy Awards, Stevie Wonder won the Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male for this song.
American musician Stevie Wonder has released 23 studio albums, three soundtrack albums, four live albums, 11 compilations, one box set, and 91 singles. His first album, The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie, was released in 1962 when he was 12 years old, and his most recent, A Time to Love, was released in 2005. Wonder has had ten US number-one hits on the pop charts, as well as 20 R&B number one hits, and has sold over 100 million records, 19.5 million of which are albums; he is one of the top best-selling music artists of all time with combined sales of singles and albums. Wonder has 30 main album releases, all of which are single albums, apart from Songs in the Key of Life, which was released as a double album with a bonus four track EP. There are 11 official compilation albums; in addition, a box set, The Complete Stevie Wonder, was released in 2005. Wonder is eighth on the list of artists with the most number-ones on the US Billboard Hot 100.
Where I'm Coming From is the 13th studio album by Stevie Wonder. The album was released by Motown Records on April 9, 1971 and peaked on the Billboard Pop Albums at #62, and on the Billboard R&B Albums Chart at #7. All nine songs were written by Wonder and Motown singer-songwriter Syreeta Wright, his first wife. It was the last album produced under his first contract with Motown Records. Including live albums, this is Stevie Wonder's fifteenth album overall, and thirteenth studio album.
"Higher Ground" is a song written by Stevie Wonder which first appeared on his 1973 album Innervisions. The song reached number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 1 on the US Hot R&B Singles chart. Wonder wrote and recorded the song in a three-hour burst of creativity in May 1973. The album version of the song contains an extra verse and runs 30 seconds longer than the single version. The unique wah-wah clavinet sound in the song was achieved with a Mu-Tron III envelope filter pedal. The bass line is provided by a Moog synthesizer and using overdubs, Wonder played all instruments on the track, including drums and percussion.
Characters is the twenty-first studio album by American singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder, released in late 1987. The album features six singles including the Grammy-nominated "Skeletons" (#19) and "You Will Know" (#77), which both reached number one on the Billboard R&B Singles chart. The album also contained a duet with Michael Jackson, "Get It" (#80), that was a minor hit.
"We Didn't Know" is a mid-tempo duet by American recording artists Whitney Houston and Stevie Wonder, and was released as the sixth and final single from Houston's third album I'm Your Baby Tonight (1990). The single was released on April 14, 1992 by Arista Records. Wonder wrote and produced the song. The single peaked at number 20 on Billboard's R&B Singles chart. There was no music video made for the song. This is the first and only single from the album that was issued without a music video.
"Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever" is a 1966 song written by Ivy Jo Hunter and Stevie Wonder. It was performed by the Four Tops via the Motown label. In addition to co-writing the song, Wonder also instrumentally contributed drums to the track.
Looking Back, also later known as Anthology, is a triple LP anthology by American soul musician Stevie Wonder, released in 1977 on Motown Records. Since its release in 12-inch triple LP format, it has not been reissued and is considered a limited edition. The album chronicles 40 songs from Wonder's first Motown period, which precedes the classic period of his critically acclaimed albums.
"How Come, How Long" is a song written, produced and performed by Babyface. It was released as the third single from his fourth album, The Day (1996). It is a duet with American singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder.
The Complete Stevie Wonder is a digital compilation featuring the work of Stevie Wonder. Released a week before the physical release of A Time to Love, the set comprises almost all of Wonder's officially released material, including single mixes, extended versions, remixes, and Workout Stevie Workout, a 1963 album which was shelved and replaced by With a Song in My Heart. The set also contains a digital (PDF) booklet and three music videos: "Overjoyed", "Part-Time Lover" and "So What the Fuss".
"I Ain't Gonna Stand for It" is the second single from Stevie Wonder's 1980 album, Hotter Than July. It reached number four on the Billboard R&B singles chart and number 11 on the Hot 100. It also hit number 10 on the UK Singles Chart. The song is famous for Wonder's imitation of a seasoned country-and-western crooner and his inspiring drumming. Charlie and Ronnie Wilson of The Gap Band provide backing vocals on the song. It was covered by Eric Clapton in 2001.
"Gotta Have You" is a 1991 song by American rhythm and blues singer Stevie Wonder. The song was the first release from the 1991 soundtrack to the film Jungle Fever. Wonder wrote the song, and co-produced it with Nathan Watts. It peaked at No. 3 on the Hot R&B Singles chart.
"All in Love Is Fair" is a song by American singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder recorded for his sixteenth studio album, Innervisions (1973). Written and produced by Wonder, it was released as a 7" single in Brazil in 1974. The song is a pop ballad with lyrics that describe the end of a relationship through the use of clichés. Critical reaction to the song has been varied: Matthew Greenwald of AllMusic wrote that it was among Wonder's "finest ballad statements", but Robert Christgau felt that the singer's performance was "immature". Wonder has included it on several of his greatest hits albums, including the most recent, 2005's The Complete Stevie Wonder.
Golden Empire is a 1985 compilation album of unreleased songs and remixed versions of songs previously released by Ike & Tina Turner. In 1986, it was reissued on CD with 10 additional tracks. All tracks were produced, engineered, and arranged by Ike Turner; remastered and remixed by Striped Horse Records chief Carlo Nasi and Philadelphia International veteran engineer Don Murray. Between 1985 and 2005, a total of four singles were released from the album.
Yvonne Lowrene Wright was an American songwriter and vocalist best known for co-writing with Stevie Wonder in the 1970s. Their songs appear on the albums Music of My Mind, Talking Book, Fulfillingness' First Finale, and Stevie Wonder's Journey Through "The Secret Life of Plants".