The Essential Jazz Collection: The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie

The Essential Jazz Collection: The Jazz Soul of Little Stevie

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byBuceEde&RoWySevieWode'sdebualbum,eleasedwhehewas11,issillaamazigmusicaldocume,showcasighisskillsasapecussiois(dumsadb......

by Bruce Eder & Ron WynnStevie Wonder's debut album, released when he was 11, is still an amazing musical document, showcasing his skills as a percussionist (drums and bongos), chromatic harmonica player, keyboardist (piano and organ), and composer -- and he was prodigious in all four categories. All of these skills are highlighted throughout this record, and Wonder's youthful, exuberant voice had a maturity suggesting that greatness was around the corner. Perhaps most surprising to contemporary listeners will be the emphasis on instrumentals, which made this a fairly unusual album by Motown standards to begin with -- apart from a few shouts in the background in some of the freer-form tracks, there's not a vocal to be heard on this album, yet the sounds are rich and diverse enough that one never misses them. What's more, a lot of what's here is extremely sophisticated instrumental music for its time, and the jazz reference in the title is not a matter of optimistic convenience or self-aggrandizement -- a lot of this is legitimate jazz. The original Motown CD (out-of-print as of 2007) is also very appealing, as it was one of the few genuinely good-sounding compact discs to emerge from that first wave of Motown CDs in the late 1980's.