A Time To Love - Press Release
LA Times
Wonder's Hear and Tell for the Press
Saturday October 1, 2005
It's an indelicate question to ask: Does a new Stevie Wonder album
really matter?
Wonder is a dignified and wildly talented musician who recorded
albums in the 1970s of such sublime accomplishment that he became an
almost holy figure in pop culture. But that was a long time ago, and,
for a man of just 55, Wonder has found himself busy lately collecting
lifetime achievement awards.

The
man himself is eager to prove he is a figure of the present, and earlier
this week that led to the staging of a fascinating event. Journalists
from around the world gathered in a plush theater on the Warner Bros.
lot in Burbank and (after nearly two hours of cooling their heels) in
walked the musician who has more Grammy trophies on his mantel than any
other solo pop star.
After a quick apology -- a murmur about a vague "family emergency"
-- Wonder took a seat and explained that he had come to play all 15
songs off of his upcoming album, "A Time 2 Love," and, in the silences
between, he planned to tell the story of the songs. The approach is not
entirely novel (Kanye West, for instance, staged a similar "listening
party" with lecture not long ago), but the stature of Wonder and the
fact that he has worked for a decade on this one project gave the
session a type of intrigue that is uncommon for similar promotional
exercises.
Wonder opened with a preamble: "It's been an ongoing project. It's
something I started 10 years ago.... It's something that has come from
life experiences. The joy. The pains. The moments of sorrow. The moments
of happiness."
That type of earnest spirit elevated 1970s Wonder albums such as
"Innervisions" and "Songs in the Key of Life" to magical heights. But
then that approach also gave his later work an airy, New Age polish, and
songs such as "I Just Called to Say I Love You" scored great chart
success but were skewered by critics for being closer to Hallmark
commercials than Hall of Fame material.
The new album is a mix of the "different" Stevie Wonders.
"Passionate Raindrops" and "Can't Imagine Love Without You" fall in line
with the sounds of his more polished recent hits. "Please Don't Hurt My
Baby" is a sharp-edged groove about an infidelity that threatens to
capsize a husband's home life, and if it sounds like a throwback to the
smokestack rhythms of the old days, there's good reason.
"I started working on this way back, a long time ago ... when I was
17 or 18 years old," Wonder said. "And I kept messing with it and
messing with it." The final result got a strong reaction in the room for
its musical tension and the appeal of its call-and-response between the
illicit lovers. The album has other wild-card sounds: "Positivity," for
example, sounds like a Jackson 5 song with its youthful perspective and
infectious pop phrasing.
It's clear his label and circle of supporters expect this album to
be a return to form. The album is not in stores until Oct. 18, but all
15 songs were made available this week as a download through iTunes,
Napster, Yahoo! and other leading online music merchants. The unusual
move was made in large part to ensure the music would be eligible for
Grammy consideration this year.
Wonder never specifically answered the question of why the album
took a decade to assemble, but in his musings he returned repeatedly to
discussing the demands and pleasures of family (he has seven children,
the youngest born just this May). He also flashed signs of a
perfectionist's standard that is predicably steep. "I was never afraid
to release this album," he said sharply at one point, making it clear he
did not belong in the Axl Rose club of artists with vapor lock in the
studio.
Most of the day, though, Wonder was beaming and cracking wise, at
one point calling for a show of hands from anybody in the crowd who
wanted to hear only snippets of songs and -- seeing none -- announcing
that he would play all songs in their entirety.
Over the course of a decade he had plenty of outside influences to
pull on. Besides noting that he has drawn on film, television and the
press for sparks of inspiration, Wonder mentioned the names or work of
Dr. Dre, Luther Vandross and Rodgers and Hart as shading specific
tracks. The Dre influence as well as a possible nod to Lauryn Hill's
music (which itself is clearly rooted in a fondness for Wonder's
songbook) was apparent in the haunting orchestral work and vocal weaving
on the album's layered opening track, "If Your Love Will Not Be Moved."
The album's arching theme is about love in its various permutations
in a modern world that has darkened trapdoors at every turn. Wonder was
candid in revealing his own painful tumbles. Before "Shelter in the
Storm," for instance, Wonder's voice dropped to a near whisper as he
described the terminal illnesses of his first wife, Syreeta Wright, and
his brother, Larry Hardaway. They both died in the last two years.
He told Wright they would sing the song together when she recovered.
"We never got a chance to do that," Wonder said.
Family tales and personal asides were sprinkled throughout the
three-hour music session and monologue. Wonder read aloud some of his
lyrics from a Braille device and noted how one song had a melody that
came to him during a family argument while another was recorded on his
birthday with his daughter Aisha Morris, who made her first appearance
on a Wonder track as the cooing infant and title subject of "Isn't She
Lovely" off the 1976 album "Songs in the Key of Life."
"To do this now with her, after that and all the things that have
happened, it's very special for me," Wonder said. "I still think about
that even now. There are certain timbres in her voice I still hear. Her
voice is better than mine. I'm getting mad."
There also are contributions on the new album from Paul McCartney,
Prince, Bonnie Raitt, India.Arie and many other notables who (like
McCartney) might only chime in here with some guitar work or other side
role but do so to acknowledge that the return of a true music icon is no
minor matter.
Wonder has been part of pop culture since he was 12 and, on Tuesday,
it was remarkable how defiantly youthful his voice remains, whether it's
being blasting out of a speaker in song or whispering family stories
into a microphone. Wonder is not as slim as he once was, but with that
1,000-watt smile he seems very much like the young man who was a
lightning rod for music in the 1960s and 1970s. His music is still
hopeful too. Although he conceded that, in the days of "Innervisions,"
he expected all of us to be on higher ground by this point in the 21st
century.
For one moment, he seemed weary. "And, you know, as much as we have
grown, we have grown very little." A short time later, though, as the
clock ticked toward hour three, the irrepressible smile flashed again.
"This day didn't have to happen," Wonder said before putting down the
microphone, "and I'm thankful."