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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.
"Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You)" is a 1972 soul track by Stevie Wonder. It was the second track on Wonder's Music of My Mind album, and was also released as the first single. The song reached a peak of number 33 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
Wonder's "classic period"—the polite phrase for when Stevie spent five years ferociously dunking on the entire history of popular music with the releases of Music of My Mind, Talking Book, Innervisions, Fulfillingness' First Finale, and Songs in the Key of Life [...] We've never heard anything like it since, and barring another reincarnation ...
Yvonne Lowrene Wright (October 31, 1951 – January 26, 2016) [1] [2] was an American songwriter and vocalist best known for co-writing with Stevie Wonder in the 1970s. [3] [4] Their songs appear on the albums Music of My Mind, [5] [6] Talking Book, [7] Fulfillingness' First Finale, [8] and Stevie Wonder's Journey Through "The Secret Life of Plants".
When Stevie Wonder first played the music to “Tears of a Clown” for Smokey Robinson at a Motown Records Christmas party, Robinson thought its opening motif sounded like circus music. The pair ...
The double album covers Wonder's "classic period" running from 1972 to 1980, compiling tracks that appeared on every album from Music of My Mind through Hotter than July. It also included four new songs, each tagged on as the last track on each album side: "Front Line"; "Ribbon in the Sky"; "That Girl"; and "Do I Do".
Just months after speaking at the Democratic National Convention (DNC), Stevie Wonder is expressing frustration with what’s going on in Washington and says he doesn’t “follow politics ...
Stevie Wonder was on hand to pay tribute to the late Tony Bennett, kicking off the in memoriam segment. Before his performance, he recalled Bennett's contribution to music and his love for art ...