Bitrate: 256
mp3
Ripped by: ChrisGoesRock
Artwork Included
Source: Japan 24-Bit Remaster
Where I'm Coming From is a 1971 album by Stevie Wonder. The album was released by Motown Records on April 12, 1971 and debuted on the Billboard Pop Albums at #62, and on the Billboard R&B Albums Chart at #10.
Motown's founder Berry Gordy had maintained tight control over his company's productions, but as the artists' careers progressed, they began to feel the need for the allowance of social consciousness and artistic freedom in their recordings.
Although Wonder had begun producing his own recordings, Motown still retained control over the content of his albums. Tensions increased as Wonder approached his twenty-first birthday; his contract had a clause which allowed Wonder to void it upon becoming a legal adult.
When the president of Motown approached Wonder about renegotiating his contract, Wonder refused and asked for his contract to be voided.
Anticipating this event, Wonder took advantage of the fact that Motown would be forced to accept whatever he gave to them, and was able to produce Where I'm Coming From without any outside interference from the company. In particular, the song "I Wanna Talk To You", which portrayed a racially-charged dialog between a black man and an old southern white man (Wonder portrayed both characters) is also a covert reference to his breakaway from Gordy and Motown (particularly apparent in the ad-libbed line "I'm gonna take my share...!")
Where I'm Coming From, which departed drastically from the Motown Sound employed in previous Stevie Wonder albums, yielded the U.S. number-eight hit single, "If You Really Love Me".
The soft ballad "Never Dreamed You'd Leave In Summer" (a predecessor to the later recording "Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You?)") was also successful. Much of the rest of the album was social commentary and war-themed songs.
The album foreshadows Wonder's "classic period" albums with its production approach and range of material. Wonder further developed the use of the Hohner clavinet that was to be fully explored on the classic period albums. Like Wonder's earlier albums, several tracks on Where I'm Coming From use Motown studio musicians the Funk Brothers, and also make use of string orchestras.
Released at around the same time as Marvin Gaye's What's Going On album, with similar ambitions and themes, they have been compared; in a contemporary review by Vince Aletti in Rolling Stone, Gaye's album was seen as successful, while Wonder's album was seen as failing due to "self-indulgent and cluttered" production, "undistinguished" and "pretentious" lyrics, and an overall lack of unity and flow.
01. "Look Around" – 2:45
02. "Do Yourself a Favor" – 6:10
03. "Think of Me as Your Soldier" – 3:37
04. "Something Out of the Blue" – 2:59
05. "If You Really Love Me" – 3:00
06. "I Wanna Talk to You" – 5:18
07. "Take Up a Course in Happiness" – 3:11
08. "Never Dreamed You'd Leave in Summer" – 2:53
09. "Sunshine in Their Eyes" – 6:58
1. Stevie Wonder
or
2. Stevie Wonder
or
3. Stevie Wonder
Thank you for sharing all things, Stevie Wonder...appreciated.
ReplyDeleteGracias
ReplyDeleteThanks Chris.
ReplyDeleteSorry for this...
ReplyDeleteHi Chris. Please, any chance to reup Budgie first and Squawk - SHM CD. Tnks in advance.
Thanks for this. I tend to think of Stevie Wonder after this point, but there are gems here.
ReplyDeleteWow, I've been thinking of this all week and here it is! Big thanks.
ReplyDelete