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Man of the People

Stevie Wonder, Bank of America Pavilion, September 20, 2007
By BRETT MILANO  |  September 24, 2007
INSIDEstevie5
JUST WONDERING: On his first tour in 13 years, Stevie was both impeccable and predictable.

Given the scope of Stevie Wonder’s accomplishments in the ’60s and ’70s, you’d expect him to be writing symphonies by now. Instead, he’s become a veteran superstar, doing what veteran superstars do: making new albums that don’t sell, and playing his greatest hits in concert.

On his first tour in 13 years, which came to Bank of America Pavilion last Thursday, Wonder was both impeccable and predictable. He sang great (with no noticeable loss of range), played great (mostly keyboards, some harmonica), and had charisma, even getting away with a guys-versus-gals sing-along. There was a surprising, unguarded moment at the start when he talked of the devastating effect his mother’s death had on him. (This led, it seems, to his canceling a tour last year.) He gave the people the material they wanted: a good three-quarters of the show came from the classic stretch of albums between 1972’s Talking Book and 1977’s Songs in the Key of Life, with just four songs from the ’60s and only a single tune from 2005’s A Time To Love. There were plenty of extended vamps but there wasn’t any real jamming, certainly none of the out-there instrumentals that can be heard on ’70s live bootlegs.

At that time, his touring outfit was Wonderlove, one of the great quartets in funk history. But last week he brought a full 11-piece band (with multiple percussionists, keys, and back-up singers), and they gave everything a comfortable “just like the records” feel. Once-topical hits like “Living for the City” haven’t lost their relevance, and the stray semi-obscurity (the exquisite “Golden Lady”) was welcome. What was missing on Thursday — and what’s been missing from his latter-day output — was any sense of fresh musical ground being opened, new statements being made, or even much reinterpretation of the oldies. It would be a disservice to Wonder’s history to expect anything less.

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Comments
Man of the people
I wish I still lived in Boston! Those who experienced the joy and wonder of seeing Stevie return to the stage after 13 years are beyond blessed. If you were there, please tell me about it... In Harmony, Aura Lee Lafayette, Indiana (Far, Far from Boston)
By Aura Lee on 09/25/2007 at 11:46:52
Man of the people
Aura Lee and others, I was lucky enough to see Stevie in Boston last week and I still feel annointed, blessed, and in his words, overjoyed!!! The whole show I felt like I couldn't even believe I was seeing him and hearing him and being blessed with his beautiful sounds and his soul and his heart. I can die , I don't want to but if I had to I can die in peace!!!
By chrissyinboston on 09/28/2007 at 3:05:17
Man of the people
Lou Dobbs has dedicated entire hour shows about how badly the economy was doing...this when unemployment was less than 5 percent, the deficit was cut in half, the stock market was a record highs, and when tax revenue was a historical highs....he is a LIAR. very simple. a LIAR....either that, or he's completely ignorant of the fiscal foundation of the nation. -but I find it more plausible that he's just a partisan democrat bush hater willing to try and fool the ignorant viewers of cnn
By dev rios on 11/15/2007 at 8:53:19
Man of the people
There is no reason why an eccentric billionaire should not run for President. Our form of government depends on candidates for office, something the political parties try to limit and discourage. The people would do better to support ordinary Americans as candidates for office. People in thenews media would like for a billionaire to run for office because such a candidate might spend almost as much as a party candidate. What I do not understand is why being able to spend large amounts of money qualifies a person for public office.
By rbwinn on 11/15/2007 at 10:37:18
Man of the people
dev rios actually believes the official unemployment numbers! Ironic he calls others ignorant. Real unemployment is over 12%. See at "Unemployment: Official, Effective, Real" at http://www.exponentialimprovement.com/cms/unemploy.shtml and at Shadow Government Statistics, http://www.shadowstats.com/cgi-bin/sgs/article/id=341. The "trade deficit" is exploding exponentially ... explosions do not end well. See "The Death of the Middle Class" at http://www.exponentialimprovement.com/cms/deathmidclass.shtml. Dobbs is absolutely correct. Plus, Bush got hatred the old-fashioned way; he earned it.
By scubafox on 11/16/2007 at 12:10:48
Man of the people
Lou Dobbs being being called a candidate in 2008 or is he just a hype for new time slot ratings. Dobbs positions make clssifying him as a liberal or conservative difficult. He says that he is an independent populist and criticizes both parties. His nightly tirade against attacks on the middle class, defective imports, loss of middle class american jobs,special interest campaign contributions,the mortgage crisis, and demise of true public education would make him an attractive candidate. However, his views on illegal immigrants that he calls illegal aliens has hit the major juglar artery for his popularity. Dobbs debates this issue with the utmost passion that appears to be a lightening rod for the proponents of open borders. Only time will tell if Dobbs or New York billionaire Mayor Bloomberg decide to do a Ross perot or Ralph Nader in 2008. Or are thes two guys doing coffee shop talking for attention and ego boosts?
By john Gatti Jr. on 11/25/2007 at 11:36:06
Man of the people
www.LouDobbsforPresident.org Seriously! He's the man people want and need.
By CheshireCat on 01/26/2008 at 9:10:07

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