
The Sovereign Music series at Berklee gets wonderful with
The Great American
Songbook: The Music of Stevie Wonder,
February 25, at the Berklee Performance Center
The Sovereign Bank Music Series at Berklee continues with The Great American
Songbook: The Music of Stevie Wonder on Sunday, February 25, at 8:15 p.m. at the
Berklee Performance Center, 136 Massachusetts Ave., Boston.
General admission
tickets are $25.00 and available now at the Performance Center box office, or
through
Ticketmaster
at 617-931-2000. For more information, call the
Berklee box office
at 617-747-2261.
Under the direction of faculty members Ken Zambello and Richard Evans, and
associate vice president for special programs Rob Rose, students will perform
such Wonder classics as “I Wish,” “I Was Made to Love Her,” “Ribbon in the Sky,”
“Sir Duke,” “Uptight,” "Higher Ground," “All in Love is Fair,” and “My Cherie
Amour,” among many others from the rich catalog of R&B and pop chart toppers by
one of the most treasured songwriters of all time.
Berklee's Great American Songbook concerts are presented annually to pay tribute
to songwriters whose work has endured over generations and who continue to
inspire listeners, and other writers, across the globe. Cole Porter and Duke
Ellington have been the subjects of previous songbook concerts at Berklee.
Wonder, one of the most beloved icons of American music, has won 23 GRAMMY
Awards, and has been called a genius since he first entered a recording studio
as a young boy. His music richly mixes R&B, pop, soul, funk, rock, jazz,
reggae, and African influences with words that always express joy whether he is
singing about love or heartbreak, or spiritual or social issues. Known as much
for his sound as his songs, Wonder's pioneering use of synthesizers during the
'70s revolutionized R&B and made it possible for him to work almost as a
one-man-band in the recording studio.
Also see information at the Berklee website.