Featured Playlist

- Stevie Wonder Essentials
- 33 Songs
- ASTROWORLD · 2018
- Talking Book · 1972
- Songs in the Key of Life · 1976
- Songs in the Key of Life · 1976
- The Christmas Collection: The Best of Stevie Wonder · 1967
- Signed Sealed and Delivered · 1970
- The Definitive Collection · 2002
- The Christmas Collection: The Best of Stevie Wonder · 1967
- Songs in the Key of Life · 1976
- A Legendary Christmas · 2018
Essential Albums
- The R&B icon's magnum opus.
- With infinite love for life, he still can’t help but absorb the sadness of the world.
- A career highpoint in a career marked with many peaks.
- 1972
- 1972
Artist Playlists
- Soulful songs in the key of life from Motown's funky genius.
- Signed, sealed, delivered: He's yours.
- He started out as a prodigy. Now, he's a legend.
- In honor of Black Music Month, revisit the source material for some of modern music’s biggest hits.
- His enormous heart fuels all his musical explorations.
- Everything's alright when singing from this songbook.
Singles & EPs
- 2020
Live Albums
Compilations
Appears On
More To Hear
- Estelle celebrates the icon Stevie Wonder's 73rd birthday.
- His epic performance of “Superstition” brought people and Muppets together.
- The story behind this song is the power of music personified.
- Before “Gangsta’s Paradise” there was “Pastime Paradise.”
- 50th Anniversary of Stevie Wonder's 'Music Of My Mind.'
- Sabi celebrates Elton John and Stevie Wonder.
- Essentials from Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson and Prince.
More To See
About Stevie Wonder
An impassioned vocalist, prodigious multi-instrumentalist, and visionary producer, Stevie Wonder is a truly transformative figure in the history of popular music. That he’s accomplished it without his sight is both the most astonishing and least remarkable thing about him. First emerging as a child star in the early ’60s, covering Ray Charles standards under the name Little Stevie Wonder, Stevland Hardaway Judkins (born in Saginaw, Michigan, in 1950) would, by decade’s end, graduate to the more sophisticated soul of Motown-defining singles like “For Once in My Life,” showing future teen idols like Justin Timberlake and Justin Bieber how to gracefully age out of kinder-pop novelty. As Black Power politics seeped into the early-’70s cultural landscape, Stevie became a symbol of both the movement’s righteous indignation and its hope for a more socially just world. His staggering run of classic albums—from 1972’s Talking Book to 1976’s Songs in the Key of Life—helped lend legitimacy to the LP format for black soul/R&B pop artists who, with few exceptions, were wrongly relegated to singles status. With them, he showed how speaking up and getting down were not mutually exclusive ideals, fashioning a singular style of psychedelic funk where even the grittiest tracks, such as “Higher Ground,” were infused with spiritual uplift. (And in writing, performing, and producing much of the material all on his own, he established the model of artist-as-auteur embraced by funk pioneers like Prince and rap icons like Kanye West.) But even in this fruitfully experimental phase, Stevie was still producing eternal wedding slow-dance standards like “You Are the Sunshine of My Life” and “Isn’t She Lovely,” and as the ’80s beckoned, he effortlessly adapted to the times with the synth-slicked soul of “Part-Time Lover” and the irresistible adult-contemporary serenade “I Just Called to Say I Love You.” While his output slowed after the ’90s, he remains a ubiquitous, towering figure in pop: Whether he’s singing at Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration or blowing harmonica on Mark Ronson’s 2015 hit album, Uptown Special, a Stevie Wonder appearance carries all the grandeur and gravitas of a papal blessing.
- HOMETOWN
- Saginaw, MI, United States of America
- BORN
- May 13, 1950