Harman Patil (Editor)

Looking Back (Stevie Wonder album)

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Released
  
November 30, 1977

Length
  
103:57

Release date
  
30 November 1977

Recorded
  
1962–71

Artist
  
Stevie Wonder

Label
  
Motown/Universal Records

Looking Back (Stevie Wonder album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbc

Looking Back (1977)
  
Stevie Wonder's Journey Through "The Secret Life of Plants" (1979)

Genres
  
Soul music, Rhythm and blues, Funk, Middle of the road

Producers
  
Clarence Paul, William Stevenson, Henry Cosby, Stevie Wonder

Similar
  
Stevie Wonder albums, Soul music albums

Stevie wonder looking back


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.

Contents

Overview

Between 1963 and the end of 1971, Wonder placed over 25 songs on Billboard Hot 100. Twenty-four of those — including such radio staples as "Fingertips, Pt. 2", "Uptight (Everything's Alright)", "I Was Made to Love Her", "For Once in My Life", "My Cherie Amour", and "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours" — appear on Looking Back. Wonder's recordings in the '60s stand apart from most Motown acts partially because he was paired with producers and writers who very rarely worked with the Temptations, Supremes, etc. In his early years, Wonder was often produced by Clarence Paul and/or William Stevenson and, during the golden years, by Henry Cosby. Then in 1970, Wonder started producing himself, beginning with Signed, Sealed & Delivered. Most of his singles were written by Wonder himself in tandem with a variety of others, or by Ron Miller. The hits alternated between stomping barn-burners and mid-tempo, understated ballads.

Before the long-awaited Wonder box set, At the Close of a Century, was issued, this triple-album set was the ultimate early Wonder collection. It contains every major hit and many other vital singles from 1962–1971, showing his evolution from Ray Charles' disciple to assembly-line hitmaker to individualistic artist. Unlike its other anthologies, which have been carved down from three-volume vinyl LPs to double-disc sets, Motown simply deleted this one altogether, although vigilant collectors may be able to obtain it through used record stores. It wouldn't be until 1999's At the Close of a Century that another Stevie Wonder anthology which included material from this period would be released.

This compilation marks the first release of Stevie Wonder's 1967 original recording of "Until You Come Back To Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)," which was a 1973 hit for Aretha Franklin. It's also the only collection of his to feature material from his instrumental album Eivets Rednow.

Critical reception

In a contemporary review, Russell Gersten of The Village Voice wrote that, although it suffers from some poorly chosen material and omissions, the album is ultimately an "essential record" that "requires a bit more imagination and knowledge to appreciate than most anthologies, but the raw ingredients are there. Wonder worked in an era of excesses, and his fight to find meaning is—in its own modest way—uplifting." The newspaper's Robert Christgau shared a similar sentiment and said that Looking Back is at the same time "flawed, long overdue, and essential." He included it in his 1980 list of singles and albums recommended for "a basic record library".

In a retrospective review for Allmusic, writer Rob Bowman gave Looking Back five stars and said that Wonder's songs from the 1960s were unique from most other Motown artists because he had a hand in writing them and his producers rarely collaborated with acts such as the Temptations or the Supremes. J. D. Considine, writing in The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992), gave the album four-and-a-half out of five stars and felt that it is a significantly better compilation than Greatest Hits Vol. 2 (1971) because of how it highlights both his studio albums up to that point and several non-LP singles.

Personnel

  • Stevie Wonder - vocals, piano, harmonica, keyboards, clavinet, drums, bongos, percussion
  • The Andantes - background vocals
  • Syreeta Wright - vocals
  • Marvin Gaye - drums
  • Larry Moses - bass
  • The Funk Brothers - instrumentation
  • Songs

    1Thank You (For Loving Me All The Way)2:30
    2Contract on Love2:02
    3Fingertips2:52

    References

    Looking Back (Stevie Wonder album) Wikipedia