When Paul Simon accepted his Grammy for “Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover”, he thanked Stevie Wonder, who was presenting at the ceremony, “For not making an album this year.”
You might as well entitle this "What Makes This _Artist_ Great?" because Stevie is one of the most gifted musicians/writers of all time regardless of genre.
This song is all about the groove. Back when I first learned Stevie not only played the drums, but played them like this, I wanted to quit. How could a blind keyboard player sound like this on MY instrument? Later in life I realized that Stevie is, first and foremost, a musician and a songwriter - and that's just what happens when your entire existence is based on music. And also that making music isn't a competition...it's an experience that is to be shared and to be inspired by others who do the same.
1PUTTZ you don’t have to be the best at something to make something great. Imagine if all the artists who came after the Beatles said “well, I can’t possibly be as good as the Beatles so I won’t even try.”
He was also famous for his harmonic playing. I remember watching him on one of the late night talk shows when he was still being billed as "Little Stevie Wonder" and seeing the expression on my Dad's face. He couldn't get over how good this little kid was. Hey Rick, he was from Rochester too.
Stevie was a legit freak of a musician. One of those genius that's very rare like Brian Jones who could just grab an instrument and play it, and play it better then people who've been playing for years.
He should. I wonder (no pun intended) if there is a course studying the compositions of Stevie Wonder offered? If not, a documentary series on his sessions would be awesome. I have the Ultimate Album Series DVDs. I wish there were more.
When Stevie played Seattle's Key Arena in Dec 2014, he started by apologizing that he had a cold. He still played almost *4* hours, incl the entire Songs In the Key of Life + another huge set that ended with a massive performance of "Superstition,' with a 32-piece band! One of the most incredible things I've ever experienced!
The only problem with this song is: 1- [ ] Too Short 2 - [ ] It ends 3 - [ ] All of the above The groove, the SOUND, the voice... that wonder and magic in Mr. Wonder - cheers!
Check out the Sesame Street live version here on RUclips. They extend the jam for about 6 min. I had always wondered why it was so short, too. Wish there was an "album cut" with a longer jam.
Growing up in the Soviet Union in the 80s, Stevie’s music was the breath of fresh air that ultimately blew the iron curtain to pieces. Never underestimate the power of funk y’all!
@@sadmachinesaudio6462 It was actually just his voice that pierced it. LOL! Rick should do a WMTSG on True Survivor. If you've never heard it go check it out and you'll thank me later. LOL!
How is it possible that people DO NOT KNOW how great this man is? Of course, he played every instrument, produced, mixed, sang, etc, etc, ETC. This ONE MAN is a national treasure. He writes, plays every instrument, sings like a dream, and has the heart of an angel. Stevie is in a class by himself. I love this man. I'm old enough to remember "Little Stevie Wonder". When my daughter was old enough to really appreciate music, I played Stevie for her. She sat with a pencil and paper. A very serious child, she took her music to heart. She was almost eight...I played Innervisions for her. I was shocked when she listened to Living For The City. I told her that every voice she heard was Stevie's voice. Her notes were copious and she had underlined how Stevie had changed the chords from innocent to dark, sad, and dangerous. She hears him age, become angry and hopeless. "Mama! That last part is so SAD! The chorus sings "NO! NO! NO NO! NO NOOOO!!" "What did you learn from this song?" "He was a good young man. He was black and, they took his soul!" Out of the mouths of children...
I came home from school one afternoon, put the radio on and this was getting it's first airing on radio 1. I just knew I was listening to a musical masterpiece. You know I took it for granted that I'd always hear music of this quality for the rest of my life. Genius is an overused word in the music world, but in this case it's true. The world's been a better place having Stevie Wonders music in it.
Mr Beato - I have heard that song since it came out (I'm an old fart). Been listening to it for decades. Always loved the horns, bass, klav, etc. After your rundown, I realized I missed 75% of the _underneath_ stuff. Thought I knew what was going on with the horns, klavinet, and bass. Nope! Thank you, sir. You have made this song new again.
He had already released like 19 albums and won album of the year 3 times by 1977, which he would have only been 27 at the time. He is truly a musical enigma
There's a video online of him playing it for a documentary I saw years back. Kind of amazing considering he had to sit down at the kit, feel around for the individual pieces and then play it. I believe he also joked that some times he'd hit the mics on the kit by accident. Stevie's the best, period. :)
Between the ages of 22 and 26, Stevie did: Music of My Mind, Talking Book, Innervisions, Fullfillingness First Finale Songs In The Key of Life. I don't thing anyone has ever had a run like than.
Growing up in Detroit myself I like many Detroiters feel such a connection to Stevie but when I read all these wonderful comments I’ve realized how much he has connected to everyone in this world! God Bless him and thank you Lord for Blessing us with his music!! Stevie is a world treasure!! 🎼 ❤🎵❤ 🎶 🎹
@@brianmiller1077 I remember watching that live! I was probably 7 or 8 years old. Didn't get it since I wasn't listening to either musician. But when I did, I really got it! Lol!
@@DrJohnnyJ for the small number of musicians you or I have met, no he’s not underrated. But to the other 7 billion people on the planet…..I would say yes he is. I did say “as well known as he is.” ….. which means however famous or celebrated he is, he should be infinitely more celebrated in the general public.
When you’re a teenager you took this music for granted, as the background music of the time. Then you get older and realize how lucky you were. Thanks CKLW AM 800!
I would. Who’s more versatile at this quality level? It’s Stevie and Prince and really nobody else. The jazz and classical greats couldn’t write, sing and play this many instruments.
Scott Howard - It took me decades to admit that Prince was even worth listening to, much less one of the greatest of all times! After seeing his Super Bowl halftime show, playing Purple Rain while it was raining, and seeing him play “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” with Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Steve Winwood, and Dhani Harrison, I was a true fan. The Super Bowl show honestly brings me to tears every time I watch it! So much emotion in the lyrics, the vocals, the playing, the weather, his moving, just an incredible performance! Then I started seeing that he was always like that! Un-real artist gifted beyond belief. As is Stevie. Absolutely a couple of GOATs!
@@skythemusic That's why I said probably, because I think Prince is in the same league as Stevie, the elites of songwriters along with a select few others. Rip my dear Prince, and may God grant Stevie a very long and healthy life
I think it’s prince, personally. The main difference for me is the proficiency across genres (stevie’s output, at least during his peak years) is arguably stronger, but I can’t imagine him doing a barn burner rock song like “let’s go crazy” on the same album as a ballad like “purple rain” and a dance/synth track like “when doves cry.” Either way, I’m so grateful that both of them exist because their music is just so incredible!
As a young kid at Motown Stevie used to like "hang out" with the session band called The Funk Brothers. When the band was done with a session Stevie told the piano player he really liked what he did on the tune they just had recorded. The piano player, Joe Hunter, helped Stevie learning how to play the piano and then 1 year later Joe's service's were no longer required!! In a documentary Joe said after that year Stevie knew more than he did and he guessed it was the same thing when he learned to play them drums!
Genius. Stevie is the funkiest of the funky - and this is 100% him except for horns which he no doubt arranged. I never dreamed this was a Moog bass, and also had no idea Stevie played drums on it.
@Bad Monkey - thankfully that's why we don't listen to music with the parts isolated. In context with all the other parts, it sounds amazingly badass, I think because the guitar parts in there are played pretty low, so they compensate for the high-end of the bass and give it a 'real' sound which it doesn't actually have.
@@errbt - Were there not? Was it all synth? Well, in any case, the higher slightly jangly bits with the effects (such as the one with the big chorus effect that Rick isolated near the beginning of the video).
Superstition is easily his most iconic song. A WMTSG on Stevie Wonder is quite a treat for today I believe. Still blows me away that he composed and played on the majority of this track
@@jennycraigadventures3314 I really can't honestly say what I'd call his most iconic. I could see Superstition being it though. My personal favorite is My Cherie Amour but if you asked 9 out of 10 people walking down the street to name one Stevie song off the top of their head I'd say Superstition might be the first one that came to mind. I wouldn't be surprised by that at least.
Rick's passion for music mixed with his mastery of the disparate elements that magically join together to create song is unparalleled. What an absolute treasure.
To me, the horns were always the most impressive detail of this song and I totally agree with you, the "misaligned/non quantised" feel makes this exactly what it is: perfection.
That non quantized element is something I miss in music very much. When you listen to say nothing by 60s and 70s music for a few days or a week you can hear all these off bits in pieces in all these amazing songs. We probably never noticed them years ago, but as we grew so accustomed to over perfection in contemporary music our ears have become too used to the over quantization.
@@datatwo7405 Actually I never really thought about that before I started to watch Rick's Videos. I was listening to only 60s and 70s music for a very long time, even grew up listening to mostly Beatles only and always thought that it's much better than most of todays music, never really wondered why. Until I saw that John Bonham quantizing video that he did yesterday. That literally opened me up and I like the old stuff even more now :D
"Superstition" is the only song that I've written to RIck about asking him to do a "What makes this song great" about so I'm over the moon (I'm sure a thousand other viewers asked as well)
Well I can listen to Motorhead or ACDC, Elton John, the Beatles, Funkadelic Curtis, Smokey, lots of Stevie Ray (my fav), BB King, Leroy Hutson the list goes on. BUT this has to be the The Most Funkiest Song ever written in the history of mankind, from the very start that so very simple yet so extremely captivating intro drum beat just stops you immediately in your tracks and you just cant help but groove to that amazing key riff that follows. Always loved this song from the moment I heard it...
I've been saying it for years. That whole era from 1967 through about 1978 was a Renaissance Period for Music Period. Stevie Wonder. Jeff Beck. Zep at the height of their game. Stanley Clark, Joni, and Jaco, Weather Report. Little Feat, Steely Dan. Man you really just can't top that stuff.
I totally agree Martin! I've always been preaching that '67 to '77 is the greatest span for variety of output and peak creativity in music. It's all in there from ALL genres in that time frame. 90% of the music I consistently listen to is in that time span. Although, I will add that some music from '80-82 is really good too!
I was fortunate enough to have experienced this period of music first hand. These were my teenage years and I was completely spoiled by all of the great music.
One of my favorite songs of all time. A monster groove that just can't quit. In fact, as a listener, you don't want it to EVER quit! That basic groove pretty much stays the same, but Rick is pointing out all these little minor twists and variations that maintain your interest. As a producer, you strive for that, to get that "feel" and keep it interesting. I've always thought the horns were the "secret sauce" to this song, but thank you Rick, now I get it: the real weapon is that Moog bass!
I never realized how the basic bass/drum groove on the verses relates to Chic's "Good Times" and all the other late-70s hits that were copying Chic. My ear was always drawn to the clavinet polyrhythms and missing that underlying simple bass melody. Was Stevie channeling Larry Graham? What's the pre-history of the "Good Times" bass line? The distinctive thing seems to be playing a series of repeating quarter notes of the same pitch over a relatively simple backbeat (which builds up some tension), then having a little funky "release" in the bass line to balance out the simple repetitive part.
@@RawandCookedVegan the SRV version, I love Reese Wynans' working hard to cover the clavinet and horn parts. Reese Wynans is a very underrated keyboardist!
One of my favorite male vocalists of all time. So much control, so butter smooth...Stevie Wonder is amazing. This song has one of the funkiest riffs ever made too, I loved this song as a toddler and it just stuck with me. You know it's a good song when it speaks to your soul like that
I always say I don't have "A" favorite song. But in reality, it's this tune. It's simply perfect in every way. It's simultaneously simple and yet complex. The groove is unreal. And Stevie plays that clav like it's a guitar. Just perfect. Thanks for covering this one, Rick!!
You say that until, you hear Sir DukE, My Cherie Amour', Signed Seal Delivered, Inst she lovely, Ribbons in Tne Sky, Super Woman, Master Blaster Jamin, I Can't Help It...Until You Come back To Me, Tell Me something Good....Etc etc etc...Stevie!!
There has never been a better recording/performance of any song. Ever. Beethoven, Jobim, some Greek lyre player, Ellington, a Tuvan throat singer, and Ogg with big rock in Year 1 would all groove to this. Thanks, Rick, for breaking it down!
I bought this single within weeks of its release, and on the label I wrote "the greatest song ever made." I was only a 13 year-old, but this song was so obviously brilliant even to a kid.
Jonathan Pollard I saw the tour in Chicago, Superstition was a big hit already and was Stevie’s last tune in his set. The man took a killer solo on every instrument in the the band. Probably the best performance I’ve ever witnessed. The Stones had some nerve coming on after that.
One my favorite songs of all time. I first heard it while on the school bus in middle school. About halfway through we all looked at each other and said, "Wow, this is a really good song!". Stevie was on fire the whole rest of the decade, he could do no wrong.
I have been playing drums for 26 years, and this is the first time I've heard those drum fills at 5:23 and 8:37 isolated. I have played lots of different variations of it over the years, but it is nice to finally hear the actual part. Back to the practice room to learn it for the next gig 😎
Check out the video "VULF /// How To Play Superstition Piano Tutorial" for some great insight on how to play it and how to process it to get it to sound right. Jack needs to do more videos like that
Yes!!! Thanks for doing this one, Rick. Stevie Wonder's musical abilities are other-worldly! You could do a "What Makes This Album Great" on "Songs in the Key of Life." In my opinion (and Prince's), it is one of the greatest studio albums ever made by a musician.
@@Funkybassuk that's a tough statement right there. I know people that like Innervisions better but its hard to say the album is better. Song for song Innervisions runs out and SITKOL still is going with great music. Both epic epic albums though!!!
One of my favorite Stevie Wonder songs is "Golden Lady." Has a lot of subtle nuances that are easily missed--especially the sax parts. But just a great, great song.
What makes this song great: Stevie Wonder - like basically every track he's somehow involved in! I must say - what I really appreciate about your WMTTG series, Rick: The great diversity of genres you are covering - and your true personal interest for each one you manage to convey. Keep it up, cheers
Love it!!!! I've heard, and played, this track hundreds of times over the years, and yet hearing the parts isolated has brought out even more details for me. Rick, you're a star!
The stems are freely available for you to dissect yourself if you'd like. Google it. He let them out to play a few years ago for educational purposes... Very enlightening.
This is what happens when you combine intellect and genuine Heart and Soul.. There is so much passion in Stevie's music that it seems to come from another dimension.. So Good, so good.. Thanks Rick ! Lary
Drums were Stevie’s first instrument - no kidding.... Stevie was and is a musical treasure that many today kind of overlook I think. Such a giant! When Paul Simon won the Grammy for best album in 1975 I think it was, he thanked Stevie for not putting out an album that year. Stevie has won the 2 previous years and would win again the next year with Songs in the Key of Life.
I read that stevie was on tour one summer and was in a car wreck between shows and it very serious and needed time to rehab some injuries thus no mew music for a short period till "songs"
Most impressing besides the composition itself is that he recorded almost everything with such an energy... imagine recording first this drums... this energy seems like a live band playing... crazy
I believe that SW is without a doubt one of the most important musicians in the history of music. When you think of all the difficulties he has to overcome, the history of his family, his blindness, and how he turned all that in joy and music, man... And he is so profficient at anything he touches, be it drums, keyboards, you name it. I bet the guy can rip apart a fender too. Thanks for this Rick!!!
The older I get, the more I realize how mature my musical taste was even as a little kid. This has been one of my favorite songs since I was 8 years old (57 y 8 mo now). Great job, Rick
There are very very few musicians that could be hailed as visionary geniuses but Stevie Wonder is definitely one. Awesome talent and often imitated but never bettered. Love this song.
Saw Stevie perform this tune at a music festival at the LA Forum. He had everybody on their feet singing and dancing. Best concert I've ever been to! Such a high energy talented performer!
I literally got chills listening to you break this down where we could hear some of the components that are not easy to pick up. One of my favorite songs of all time just took on new layers of awesomeness. What a genius Stevie is.
Stevie's awesomeness is many-splendored, though as a vocalist, he is in my personal top 10. But as good as his singing is, as the instruments build one by one in this fabulous intro, when Stevie's vocal begins, I get the feeling that he regards his voice as just another instrument, no greater or lesser than the others.
Working on listening to all Rick's master analyses, but of course you may be right. Using the criteria of complex, amazing, unbelievable, genius production, this could be one of the top songs of all time. I like Rick's equipment aided breakdowns, but what gives me chills is when it is listened to altogether. Rick is so right about the age of the song. Completely amazing for how early it was. Imagine how many other gifted artists were powerfully influenced by this song, and Stevie Wonder (overall).
My old cover band regularly played this song in the first set (i.e. before people started dancing), and I used to enjoy watching how the men in particular would be in conversation, drink in hand, barely listening, and yet their heads would start doing a subtle funk bop even without them realizing it: their bodies couldn't help but acknowledge the funk!
When I was playing in a conference dinner stage band, we'd come back after main course and noodle around for a tune or two then break this one out just as dessert was being served. Would get them every time - folks would dance even at venues without a dance floor 😂
Thank you for the insightful breakdown of this song. I just spent an hour in a doctor's office, listening to waiting-room muzak: modern, soulless, autotuned, sound-alike female pop-stars. I needed an hour or so of R&B to clear my head of the poison.
When Paul Simon accepted his Grammy for “Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover”, he thanked Stevie Wonder, who was presenting at the ceremony, “For not making an album this year.”
😀
That's Paul alright! Saw him a couple years ago. Still spry, choice band, great voice, & witty
I love Paul Simon almost as much as Stevie Wonder. I think Simon is a great American storyteller and poet.
Ya know what Bob? I actually remember that.
Mind-blowing trivia for the day: "Superstition" was Stevie's 24th top-40 hit. He was 22.
So at that time, he had more Top 40 hits than he had years on this planet. Amazing!
That's incredible.
His first hit was a No. 1 when he was 12. (Called "Fingertips," a live harmonica instrumental.")
Only Stevie could write so many hits in such a short time he’d been on this earth!
no Top 40 hits during the last 30 years though, he just switched priorities there.
You might as well entitle this "What Makes This _Artist_ Great?" because Stevie is one of the most gifted musicians/writers of all time regardless of genre.
Truth.
Amen
OF ALL TIME! Yes! and his voice.. Oh. how i wish i could hit those notes.
G-d bless Stevie Wonder!
When you think you can't like a song any more, and Beato points out some things you've missed for decades...
Thanks man!
This is the most excited I've see Rick doing this series. Only Stevie does that.
No kidding. Holy crap. Awesome.
Beautiful!
Seriously
No kidding!
This song is all about the groove. Back when I first learned Stevie not only played the drums, but played them like this, I wanted to quit. How could a blind keyboard player sound like this on MY instrument? Later in life I realized that Stevie is, first and foremost, a musician and a songwriter - and that's just what happens when your entire existence is based on music. And also that making music isn't a competition...it's an experience that is to be shared and to be inspired by others who do the same.
We need a huge like button on this comment...
Beautifully put, friend.
Well said!
1PUTTZ you don’t have to be the best at something to make something great. Imagine if all the artists who came after the Beatles said “well, I can’t possibly be as good as the Beatles so I won’t even try.”
Amen brother.
"Hey Stevie, you need a drummer, bassist, keyboard player, singer, engineer, producer on this?" - "Nah, I'm good thanks"
Haaaahaha!!😂😂
Facts 😂😂😂👍👍👍
Stevie is like “Hold My Beer 🍺”
I saw what you did there.
bet Stevie didn't😂
@@blommsnruins01u9 have ya ever seen his wife? Neither has he...rimshot.
Stevie Wonder is a gift from heaven, and we're all blessed to share the earth with him.
Testify!
@@CarlosAnglada Yes!
I saw Stevie Wonder open for the Rolling Stones at the Inglewood Forum 1972 when I was 17 years old. Stevie was truly amazing. Will never forget.
No doubt
@@jonathanrcoffin On that tour the Stones were late for the Boston Garden and Stevie played for hours! He was 22 & kicking ass!
No idea Stevie did everything but the horns - what a freakin genius...
He was also famous for his harmonic playing. I remember watching him on one of the late night talk shows when he was still being billed as "Little Stevie Wonder" and seeing the expression on my Dad's face. He couldn't get over how good this little kid was. Hey Rick, he was from Rochester too.
Stevie was a legit freak of a musician. One of those genius that's very rare like Brian Jones who could just grab an instrument and play it, and play it better then people who've been playing for years.
@@RedDeadFaction what do you mean 'was'
Oh, and by the way . . . he just happens to be blind. Just amazing!
@@fedoragibson3059 my bad... you're right... apologies
Child prodigy, musical genius, incredible vocal ability - one of the greatest composers of all time
Honestly you could do a whole series on stevie wonder and his musicianship
Agreed Stevie is awesome
He should. I wonder (no pun intended) if there is a course studying the compositions of Stevie Wonder offered? If not, a documentary series on his sessions would be awesome. I have the Ultimate Album Series DVDs. I wish there were more.
Obsidian he should!!!
Obsidian YES, YES, YES!!!
I would love that! Stevie is the King!
You know the song is badass when Rick is air drumming!
Oh fancy seeing you here :)
@@doritos-r6 "... What's wrong with Jesus gettin' His Rock on? Lest you forget...I, too, know how to hang!" -- Jesus, ('Jesus Christ Superstar')
Just about THE Best part of every one of his videos
And when he goes "whoooo". Unmistakable sign of great music
FACTS
When Stevie played Seattle's Key Arena in Dec 2014, he started by apologizing that he had a cold. He still played almost *4* hours, incl the entire Songs In the Key of Life + another huge set that ended with a massive performance of "Superstition,' with a 32-piece band! One of the most incredible things I've ever experienced!
Only 1:15 into it and we already have air drumming. Always a good sign :-)
Rick’s air drumming is better than at least half of drummers’ actual skills today.
Rick playing air drums is my all time fave!! 😍😍😍😍😍
Rick is a master of air drums, and the accompanying stank face.
Makes me smile every time. Don't forget the "WOOO, Love it" !
Don't forget the air drum face.
The only problem with this song is:
1- [ ] Too Short
2 - [ ] It ends
3 - [ ] All of the above
The groove, the SOUND, the voice... that wonder and magic in Mr. Wonder - cheers!
Probably why I have to listen to it a few times in a row.
One of the songs to put on endless loop.
Check out the Sesame Street live version here on RUclips. They extend the jam for about 6 min. I had always wondered why it was so short, too. Wish there was an "album cut" with a longer jam.
Amen to all of that!
🤣🤣🤣🤣 right
When I was a child, I saw Stevie Wonder play SUPERSTITION on Sesame Street. I thought he was the coolest musician I had ever seen and heard.
plot twist: he was the coolest musician you would ever see.
That version is on RUclips and yea it’s fantastic
Child you was not wrong 💯
Me too.
And indeed he was.
I got chills when he isolated Stevie's vocals
Growing up in the Soviet Union in the 80s, Stevie’s music was the breath of fresh air that ultimately blew the iron curtain to pieces. Never underestimate the power of funk y’all!
Yeah right dude The Scorpions did that with Winds of Change. It was the whistle. LOL!
@@SimpleManGuitars1973 And the Berlin Wall was dismantled by Looking for Freedom by David Hasselhoff. Or so he says.
@@sadmachinesaudio6462 It was actually just his voice that pierced it. LOL! Rick should do a WMTSG on True Survivor. If you've never heard it go check it out and you'll thank me later. LOL!
Dude I totally though you were saying that Stevie wonder grew up in the Soviet Union and I was so confused lmao
Funkify yo life! More funk please!
How is it possible that people DO NOT KNOW how great this man is? Of course, he played every instrument, produced, mixed, sang, etc, etc, ETC. This ONE MAN is a national treasure. He writes, plays every instrument, sings like a dream, and has the heart of an angel. Stevie is in a class by himself. I love this man. I'm old enough to remember "Little Stevie Wonder". When my daughter was old enough to really appreciate music, I played Stevie for her. She sat with a pencil and paper. A very serious child, she took her music to heart. She was almost eight...I played Innervisions for her. I was shocked when she listened to Living For The City. I told her that every voice she heard was Stevie's voice. Her notes were copious and she had underlined how Stevie had changed the chords from innocent to dark, sad, and dangerous. She hears him age, become angry and hopeless. "Mama! That last part is so SAD! The chorus sings "NO! NO! NO NO! NO NOOOO!!" "What did you learn from this song?" "He was a good young man. He was black and, they took his soul!" Out of the mouths of children...
I think ."Living For The City" shows him at his most authentic. He gives it 100% and is so full of righteous anger.
I came home from school one afternoon, put the radio on and this was getting it's first airing on radio 1. I just knew I was listening to a musical masterpiece. You know I took it for granted that I'd always hear music of this quality for the rest of my life. Genius is an overused word in the music world, but in this case it's true. The world's been a better place having Stevie Wonders music in it.
well said
Mr Beato - I have heard that song since it came out (I'm an old fart). Been listening to it for decades. Always loved the horns, bass, klav, etc. After your rundown, I realized I missed 75% of the _underneath_ stuff. Thought I knew what was going on with the horns, klavinet, and bass. Nope! Thank you, sir. You have made this song new again.
100% Me too!
You could do a whole series on Stevie. There’s so much great about him you would never run out of material. A true legend.
He had already released like 19 albums and won album of the year 3 times by 1977, which he would have only been 27 at the time. He is truly a musical enigma
I didn't know Stevie played the drums. Man is so talented. This song brings back happy memories of my childhood. Thank you Rick.
He was already playing drums at 13. There are tons of footage of him rocking the drums on TV.
@@deadstar44 Yeah I guess it had just slipped my mind. He played soooo many instruments. A genius.
Stevie plays everything.
There's a video online of him playing it for a documentary I saw years back. Kind of amazing considering he had to sit down at the kit, feel around for the individual pieces and then play it.
I believe he also joked that some times he'd hit the mics on the kit by accident.
Stevie's the best, period. :)
this beat is unbeatable. it‘s just got everything the song needs. funk, drive, swing, time, emphasis...
Stevie was 22 years old when this song was recorded.....amazing....
ok . i just feel a whole lot dumber
Utter genius.
Thanks for pointing that out... if you think about it ... superhuman
He started as a kid, so he easily had his "10.000" hours in....
Between the ages of 22 and 26, Stevie did:
Music of My Mind, Talking Book,
Innervisions, Fullfillingness First Finale
Songs In The Key of Life. I don't thing anyone has ever had a run like than.
If I need a smile I just watch Rick air drumming.
Thanks Rick.
Stevie is pure genius on that we can all agree.
Right Stevie is a freaking genius..!
Stevie was the best until he went all Casio on us.
true dat
12 year old genius
What makes this song great? Stevie Wonder does.
PREACH!
Great comment. Just great.
@@bigballz4u You take life waay to serious
Ian Chameleon
Go away, fool!
I only just learned that he is in fact one of my favourite drummers! I'd been wondering who played drums on this track...
Growing up in Detroit myself I like many Detroiters feel such a connection to Stevie but when I read all these wonderful comments I’ve realized how much he has connected to everyone in this world! God Bless him and thank you Lord for Blessing us with his music!! Stevie is a world treasure!!
🎼 ❤🎵❤ 🎶 🎹
I'm a metal guy. I can't help but move my head just like Rick is, when this song comes on my play list. Freaking love it!
Why Stevie Wonder's golden age DOMINATED the grammies. Epic analysis revealing genius at work.
Paul Simon winning a Grammy for "Still Crazy after all these Years" - I'd like to thank Stevie Wonder ... for not releasing an album"
@@brianmiller1077 I remember watching that live! I was probably 7 or 8 years old. Didn't get it since I wasn't listening to either musician. But when I did, I really got it! Lol!
Stevie is just a monster genius. As well known as he is, he’s still vastly underrated. He should be on Rushmore
Truth!
Underrated? Not by any musician I have ever met.
@@DrJohnnyJ for the small number of musicians you or I have met, no he’s not underrated. But to the other 7 billion people on the planet…..I would say yes he is. I did say “as well known as he is.” ….. which means however famous or celebrated he is, he should be infinitely more celebrated in the general public.
Nah, put him on the 100 dollar bill.
A national treasure.
When you’re a teenager you took this music for granted, as the background music of the time. Then you get older and realize how lucky you were. Thanks CKLW AM 800!
cklw and keener 13 great detroit radio in the 60s and early 70s.
Remember those and my favorite Bill Bailey on WDRQ
Today's music is very bad
So true, so true.
You know it! Detroit Born and Razed!
Stevie Wonder. Probably the greatest all around musician who ever walked on earth
I would. Who’s more versatile at this quality level? It’s Stevie and Prince and really nobody else. The jazz and classical greats couldn’t write, sing and play this many instruments.
Scott Howard - It took me decades to admit that Prince was even worth listening to, much less one of the greatest of all times!
After seeing his Super Bowl halftime show, playing Purple Rain while it was raining, and seeing him play “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” with Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Steve Winwood, and Dhani Harrison, I was a true fan.
The Super Bowl show honestly brings me to tears every time I watch it! So much emotion in the lyrics, the vocals, the playing, the weather, his moving, just an incredible performance! Then I started seeing that he was always like that!
Un-real artist gifted beyond belief. As is Stevie. Absolutely a couple of GOATs!
@@skythemusic That's why I said probably, because I think Prince is in the same league as Stevie, the elites of songwriters along with a select few others. Rip my dear Prince, and may God grant Stevie a very long and healthy life
I think it’s prince, personally. The main difference for me is the proficiency across genres (stevie’s output, at least during his peak years) is arguably stronger, but I can’t imagine him doing a barn burner rock song like “let’s go crazy” on the same album as a ballad like “purple rain” and a dance/synth track like “when doves cry.” Either way, I’m so grateful that both of them exist because their music is just so incredible!
Well, I'd rate David Bowie for that position :)
Keep harping, Rick! We need to keep hanging on to, standing up for, giving our hearts to, the matchless power, grace and joy of live, real, Feel.
Rick enjoyed this one a little more than the others, and it is warranted.
With the groove and pocket on the track you can’t help but enjoy 😊
As a young kid at Motown Stevie used to like "hang out" with the session band called The Funk Brothers. When the band was done with a session Stevie told the piano player he really liked what he did on the tune they just had recorded. The piano player, Joe Hunter, helped Stevie learning how to play the piano and then 1 year later Joe's service's were no longer required!! In a documentary Joe said after that year Stevie knew more than he did and he guessed it was the same thing when he learned to play them drums!
You could make a video like this for every song on ‘Songs in the key of life’. Stevie Wonder is so incredibly talented, it’s almost extraterrestrial.
Genius. Stevie is the funkiest of the funky - and this is 100% him except for horns which he no doubt arranged. I never dreamed this was a Moog bass, and also had no idea Stevie played drums on it.
@Bad Monkey - thankfully that's why we don't listen to music with the parts isolated. In context with all the other parts, it sounds amazingly badass, I think because the guitar parts in there are played pretty low, so they compensate for the high-end of the bass and give it a 'real' sound which it doesn't actually have.
Stevie plays the drums on every song that he recorded.
@@KindredBrujah Guitar parts? There are no guitar on this song.
@@errbt - Were there not? Was it all synth? Well, in any case, the higher slightly jangly bits with the effects (such as the one with the big chorus effect that Rick isolated near the beginning of the video).
@@KindredBrujah That's all clavinet.
Man, every time a WMTSG pops up, I have to carve out 20-30 minutes of my day for Rick. Have learned so much from these breakdowns and isolated tracks.
Agree the horns parts really bring it to another level.
Superstition is easily his most iconic song. A WMTSG on Stevie Wonder is quite a treat for today I believe. Still blows me away that he composed and played on the majority of this track
so is Master Blaster, Living for the City, My Cherie Amour and quite a few others, very few artists do 'Iconic' as well as SW.
@@annuvynarawn392 My Cherie Amour is my favorite but Sir Duke is glorious as well. Just tons of classics really.
For me, “I Wish” is his most iconic song, followed closely by “Superstition” and “Higher Ground”.
@@jennycraigadventures3314 I really can't honestly say what I'd call his most iconic. I could see Superstition being it though. My personal favorite is My Cherie Amour but if you asked 9 out of 10 people walking down the street to name one Stevie song off the top of their head I'd say Superstition might be the first one that came to mind. I wouldn't be surprised by that at least.
RC32 he has many of them
**This IS the music that made growing up in the '70s so beyond amazing!!!** LOVE STEVIE...LOVE YOU!!!!!! 💗💗💗
Me too .. my parents played this music all the time back in the 70’s..
Rick's passion for music mixed with his mastery of the disparate elements that magically join together to create song is unparalleled. What an absolute treasure.
To me, the horns were always the most impressive detail of this song and I totally agree with you, the "misaligned/non quantised" feel makes this exactly what it is: perfection.
and the moog bass playing... man some of those riffs yeeeouch!
Agree. Especially the way the guys are "rolling" the valves of the horns in that one small section, almost a fluttered vibrato. Very cool.
C J
Quantising, is the devil! It's the destroyer of "soul".
That non quantized element is something I miss in music very much. When you listen to say nothing by 60s and 70s music for a few days or a week you can hear all these off bits in pieces in all these amazing songs. We probably never noticed them years ago, but as we grew so accustomed to over perfection in contemporary music our ears have become too used to the over quantization.
@@datatwo7405 Actually I never really thought about that before I started to watch Rick's Videos. I was listening to only 60s and 70s music for a very long time, even grew up listening to mostly Beatles only and always thought that it's much better than most of todays music, never really wondered why. Until I saw that John Bonham quantizing video that he did yesterday. That literally opened me up and I like the old stuff even more now :D
"Superstition" is the only song that I've written to RIck about asking him to do a "What makes this song great" about so I'm over the moon (I'm sure a thousand other viewers asked as well)
Me too!
Count me in
Well I can listen to Motorhead or ACDC, Elton John, the Beatles, Funkadelic Curtis, Smokey, lots of Stevie Ray (my fav), BB King, Leroy Hutson the list goes on. BUT this has to be the The Most Funkiest Song ever written in the history of mankind, from the very start that so very simple yet so extremely captivating intro drum beat just stops you immediately in your tracks and you just cant help but groove to that amazing key riff that follows. Always loved this song from the moment I heard it...
D Sam , as soon as I read ... “BUT this...”, you didn’t need to write anymore. i hear you. THIS SONG.
I’ll bet. The song is a universe unto itself.
Back in the 70s Stevie Wonder was just hitting home run after home run. The man was and still is a genius...
I've been saying it for years. That whole era from 1967 through about 1978 was a Renaissance Period for Music Period.
Stevie Wonder. Jeff Beck. Zep at the height of their game. Stanley Clark, Joni, and Jaco, Weather Report. Little Feat, Steely Dan.
Man you really just can't top that stuff.
Martin Weeks god I hope he does a Joni song
I totally agree Martin! I've always been preaching that '67 to '77 is the greatest span for variety of output and peak creativity in music. It's all in there from ALL genres in that time frame. 90% of the music I consistently listen to is in that time span. Although, I will add that some music from '80-82 is really good too!
He has now. Amelia. One of her greatest. Don’t know if it was there when you posted.
I was fortunate enough to have experienced this period of music first hand. These were my teenage years and I was completely spoiled by all of the great music.
@@philkouly4717 Yep Me too. One of the best periods of my life
One of my favorite songs of all time. A monster groove that just can't quit. In fact, as a listener, you don't want it to EVER quit! That basic groove pretty much stays the same, but Rick is pointing out all these little minor twists and variations that maintain your interest. As a producer, you strive for that, to get that "feel" and keep it interesting. I've always thought the horns were the "secret sauce" to this song, but thank you Rick, now I get it: the real weapon is that Moog bass!
He's been a favorite of mine since I was a kid. His entire discography is flawless. True musical genius.
Steve is a genius. It has an antidepressant effect. One of my all time fav
That Moog bass has some stank on it. Hell, the whole groove does. That’s why this song is genius.
I never realized how the basic bass/drum groove on the verses relates to Chic's "Good Times" and all the other late-70s hits that were copying Chic. My ear was always drawn to the clavinet polyrhythms and missing that underlying simple bass melody. Was Stevie channeling Larry Graham? What's the pre-history of the "Good Times" bass line? The distinctive thing seems to be playing a series of repeating quarter notes of the same pitch over a relatively simple backbeat (which builds up some tension), then having a little funky "release" in the bass line to balance out the simple repetitive part.
One of the best songs from that entire era. Genius. The groove. The funk. Changed music forever.
I am a vocalist. I never get tired of Stevie’s masterpiece, “Songs in the Key of Life.” ❤️🎶
If you don't like this song, there is something wrong with you.
Helen Keller likes this song.
Craig Kendall No Doubt. I love Jeff Beck's and Stevie Ray Vaughan's versions as well. Just a great song!
Max Well 😂😂😂🤣
@@seanswinton6242 I didn't know SRV did a variation, will check it out, thanks.
@@RawandCookedVegan the SRV version, I love Reese Wynans' working hard to cover the clavinet and horn parts. Reese Wynans is a very underrated keyboardist!
Those horns blow me away every time: simply amazing.
“What makes this song great?”
Answer:
It’s “Superstition” by Stevie Wonder.
Rick Can you do A thousand Miles by Vanessa Carlton?
That song is a pop classic. Yeah it’s cheesy but who cares when the production is so good
came here to say that. Feels like the whole video is a long way to say that. And I;m not even complaining.
Pawn Hearts who?
Spazzoid Studio
“Making my way downtown”
Yeah thats what I was gonna say. It’s just Stevie Wonder
You know the groove is tight and the funk is strong when Rick is wearing his “stank face” for half the video.
😖 would this qualify as the stank face?
Kimberly Taylor 😖...Looks stanky to me 😀
Greatness is based on how many times Ricks says "Wooo!"
It could be gas.
LMAO!
One of my favorite male vocalists of all time. So much control, so butter smooth...Stevie Wonder is amazing. This song has one of the funkiest riffs ever made too, I loved this song as a toddler and it just stuck with me. You know it's a good song when it speaks to your soul like that
I always say I don't have "A" favorite song. But in reality, it's this tune. It's simply perfect in every way. It's simultaneously simple and yet complex. The groove is unreal. And Stevie plays that clav like it's a guitar. Just perfect.
Thanks for covering this one, Rick!!
You say that until, you hear Sir DukE, My Cherie Amour', Signed Seal Delivered, Inst she lovely, Ribbons in Tne Sky, Super Woman, Master Blaster Jamin, I Can't Help It...Until You Come back To Me, Tell Me something Good....Etc etc etc...Stevie!!
Ricks enthusiasm is contagious...this song is just isane.
There has never been a better recording/performance of any song. Ever. Beethoven, Jobim, some Greek lyre player, Ellington, a Tuvan throat singer, and Ogg with big rock in Year 1 would all groove to this. Thanks, Rick, for breaking it down!
I bought this single within weeks of its release, and on the label I wrote "the greatest song ever made." I was only a 13 year-old, but this song was so obviously brilliant even to a kid.
1972 Rolling Stones Tour, Seattle concert. Opening act - “Now introducing Stevie Wonder!” The Stones had a big problem following that.
Jonathan Pollard I saw the tour in Chicago, Superstition was a big hit already and was Stevie’s last tune in his set. The man took a killer solo on every instrument in the the band. Probably the best performance I’ve ever witnessed. The Stones had some nerve coming on after that.
One my favorite songs of all time. I first heard it while on the school bus in middle school. About halfway through we all looked at each other and said, "Wow, this is a really good song!". Stevie was on fire the whole rest of the decade, he could do no wrong.
There is no award or recognition that adequately acknowledges Stevie Wonders musical, cultural importance. God bless him forever
Je ne comprends bien l’anglais mais vous parlez de ce morceau d’une façon où je vous comprend,merci.
This song never gets old. It’s in my top all time favorites up there with Steely Dan’s “Do it Again”
I have been playing drums for 26 years, and this is the first time I've heard those drum fills at 5:23 and 8:37 isolated. I have played lots of different variations of it over the years, but it is nice to finally hear the actual part. Back to the practice room to learn it for the next gig 😎
One of my favorite Stevie Wonder songs . Along with Sir Duke and Isn't she lovely.
My Cherie Amour, I Just Called To Say I Love You, Living For The City, I Wish. Need I go on? LOL!
Master blaster, Do I Do, you are the sunshine of my life, ribbons in the sky...too many to name
I think a greatest hits album would be what, 5 disks? More?
If wanting to go on a romantic dinner date with that clavinet riff is wrong I don't want to be right! 😘 😘 😘
That Luther Ingram song is awesome too
@@theragingdolphinsmaniac4696 It is. I bought "70's Hits That Didn't Blow You Mind" CD just for that song.
@@shawnerz98 We're old guys...we still buy CDs :)
Check out the video "VULF /// How To Play Superstition Piano Tutorial" for some great insight on how to play it and how to process it to get it to sound right. Jack needs to do more videos like that
@@theragingdolphinsmaniac4696 werd
I think that’s my pick for best song of all time
Yes!!! Thanks for doing this one, Rick. Stevie Wonder's musical abilities are other-worldly! You could do a "What Makes This Album Great" on "Songs in the Key of Life." In my opinion (and Prince's), it is one of the greatest studio albums ever made by a musician.
BluesyCOG7 i‘m with you.
An absolutely genius album.....
@@Funkybassuk two different albums. Not a question of which one is better.
@@Funkybassuk that's a tough statement right there. I know people that like Innervisions better but its hard to say the album is better. Song for song Innervisions runs out and SITKOL still is going with great music. Both epic epic albums though!!!
One of my favorite Stevie Wonder songs is "Golden Lady." Has a lot of subtle nuances that are easily missed--especially the sax parts. But just a great, great song.
That is FUNKY Rick, but you are having way to much fun lol!
*too much
Not _to much_
"I ain't never had too much fun!"- George Frayne IV
He's not allowed to have too much fun? im confused at this comment. Guess you're just robotically meant to nod your head in silence
Seems like the appropriate amount of fun to me.
@@jayandgem I think having the “grammar police” correct someone is just as annoying as seeing incorrect grammar 😂
What makes this song great:
Stevie Wonder - like basically every track he's somehow involved in!
I must say - what I really appreciate about your WMTTG series, Rick: The great diversity of genres you are covering - and your true personal interest for each one you manage to convey. Keep it up, cheers
"Let's talk about the chorus here. Let me play it."
Proceeds to air drum. I love it.
The amazing thing is that every instrument is actually contributing to the groove instead of merely riding on top of it. Great analysis, Rick.
Let’s not miss Rick’s pure joy in breaking it down for us. Stevie is a true “wonder” but this channel is a true “treasure” thanks Rick
Love it!!!!
I've heard, and played, this track hundreds of times over the years, and yet hearing the parts isolated has brought out even more details for me.
Rick, you're a star!
The stems are freely available for you to dissect yourself if you'd like. Google it. He let them out to play a few years ago for educational purposes... Very enlightening.
The definition of “Genius “. Drums are insane on this track.
As famous as Stevie Wonder is, I still think he's one of the most underrated musicians of our time. Great analysis, thanks Rick!
@@lptomtom If anything he is rightly rated a genius. Can go much higher than that.
Yeah I don't think its possible to overrate Stevie. That voice, all the instruments he plays so well, that vision and the musical talent
I have never met anyone that doesn’t like at least one Stevie Wonder song so I’m not sure if he’s underrated.
I have waited for this for so long
Been a drummer for many years and only now did I pay attention to the intricacies of how he plays the drums a force of nature indeed.
This is what happens when you combine intellect and genuine Heart and Soul.. There is so much passion in Stevie's music that it seems to come from another dimension.. So Good,
so good.. Thanks Rick ! Lary
Stevie is a such a Madman on this track... Lary
Drums were Stevie’s first instrument - no kidding.... Stevie was and is a musical treasure that many today kind of overlook I think. Such a giant! When Paul Simon won the Grammy for best album in 1975 I think it was, he thanked Stevie for not putting out an album that year. Stevie has won the 2 previous years and would win again the next year with Songs in the Key of Life.
Tom Monk Haaaaa, I remember that night and laughing like a mad man. That was such a cool, true and funny thing to say.
It’s was big fun watching this review. My friends and I wore that song out. Stevie was killing it. That album was incredible.
@@skipbauchmam5995 I too was watching as a teenager. I'll never forget it. One of the best things I ever heard in an acceptance speech.
I read that stevie was on tour one summer and was in a car wreck between shows and it
very serious and needed time to rehab some injuries thus no mew music for a short period till "songs"
Think Marvin Gaye was a drummer too right?
Most impressing besides the composition itself is that he recorded almost everything with such an energy... imagine recording first this drums... this energy seems like a live band playing... crazy
The percussionist for this masterpiece was simply amazing.
Edit: Stevie played that part, too?
Mind-blowing!
It's been almost 50 hears since I first heard this record and it still gives me goosebumps.
Stevie Wonder's "Innervisions" and "Fulfillingness' First Finale" are two of the greatest albums ever recorded!
Thank you, Rick! This was GREAT!
I believe that SW is without a doubt one of the most important musicians in the history of music. When you think of all the difficulties he has to overcome, the history of his family, his blindness, and how he turned all that in joy and music, man... And he is so profficient at anything he touches, be it drums, keyboards, you name it. I bet the guy can rip apart a fender too. Thanks for this Rick!!!
oh and dont forget that he is one of the best harmonica players ever!!!!!
and dont forget that he is one of the greatest harmonica players ever!!!!
Yes, one of my favorite songs of all time. Impossible to hear this and not start bobbing your head. What a great groove.
The older I get, the more I realize how mature my musical taste was even as a little kid. This has been one of my favorite songs since I was 8 years old (57 y 8 mo now). Great job, Rick
There are very very few musicians that could be hailed as visionary geniuses but Stevie Wonder is definitely one. Awesome talent and often imitated but never bettered. Love this song.
_"visionary geniuses"_ I see what you did there! LOL
Saw Stevie perform this tune at a music festival at the LA Forum. He had everybody on their feet singing and dancing. Best concert I've ever been to! Such a high energy talented performer!
I literally got chills listening to you break this down where we could hear some of the components that are not easy to pick up. One of my favorite songs of all time just took on new layers of awesomeness. What a genius Stevie is.
There is something particularly entertaining about watching someone of Rick's tremendous caliber gleefully playing air drums
Stevie's awesomeness is many-splendored, though as a vocalist, he is in my personal top 10. But as good as his singing is, as the instruments build one by one in this fabulous intro, when Stevie's vocal begins, I get the feeling that he regards his voice as just another instrument, no greater or lesser than the others.
Songs in the key of life stayed on my turntable for weeks in 76 , simply brilliant!
Far and away the best song of this series. Even Rick is like "whooo"!
Working on listening to all Rick's master analyses, but of course you may be right. Using the criteria of complex, amazing, unbelievable, genius production, this could be one of the top songs of all time. I like Rick's equipment aided breakdowns, but what gives me chills is when it is listened to altogether. Rick is so right about the age of the song. Completely amazing for how early it was. Imagine how many other gifted artists were powerfully influenced by this song, and Stevie Wonder (overall).
Stevie Wonder has always been phenomenal with synths and chords, and the brass are just always on point
My old cover band regularly played this song in the first set (i.e. before people started dancing), and I used to enjoy watching how the men in particular would be in conversation, drink in hand, barely listening, and yet their heads would start doing a subtle funk bop even without them realizing it: their bodies couldn't help but acknowledge the funk!
When I was playing in a conference dinner stage band, we'd come back after main course and noodle around for a tune or two then break this one out just as dessert was being served. Would get them every time - folks would dance even at venues without a dance floor 😂
Thank you for the insightful breakdown of this song. I just spent an hour in a doctor's office, listening to waiting-room muzak: modern, soulless, autotuned, sound-alike female pop-stars. I needed an hour or so of R&B to clear my head of the poison.