Sold Date:
June 6, 2022
Start Date:
June 1, 2022
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Vinyl: EX+ Play Graded. Sounds Excellent! Tamla Labels are Clean and Bright, with side 2 being lighter than side 1. This is the 1973 Tamla 1st Pressing! T6326S1. Essential Funk 'N Soul. Essential R&B. Stevie's Magnum Opus. A Concept Album where Stevie miraculously does all the instruments and almost all of the voices (including the characters that come in and out of Living In The City(!) Fusing social realism with spiritual idealism, Stevie's First Masterpiece! One of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time!!! allmusic gives it 5 stars!!!
See Review Below!
In the Dead Wax: Both sides have matrices, etched. Complete Dead Wax information cheerfully given upon request.
Cover: EX+ (see photos) Gatefold. Nice full color matte on cover. Stunning visionary art by Efram Wolff. Front and back of cover artwork and text are rich, clear and bright, with minimal shelf wear. Seams, corners and spine are solid and clean. No splits. No writing. Spine print is crystal clear.First or early pressings nearly always have more immediacy, presence and dynamics. The sound staging is wider. Subtle instrument nuances are better placed with more spacious textures. Balances are firmer in the bottom end with a far-tighter bass. Upper-mid ranges shine without harshness, and the overall depth is more immersive. Inner details are clearer.
On first and early pressings, the music tends to sound more ‘alive’ and vibrant. The physics of sound energy is hard to clarify and write about from a listening perspective, but the best we can describe it is to say that you can 'hear' what the mixing and mastering engineers wanted you to hear when they first recorded the music.
When Stevie Wonder applied his tremendous songwriting talents to the unsettled social morass that was the early '70s, he produced one of his greatest, most important works, a rich panoply of songs addressing drugs, spirituality, political ethics, the unnecessary perils of urban life, and what looked to be the failure of the '60s dream -- all set within a collection of charts as funky and catchy as any he'd written before. Two of the highlights, "Living for the City" and "Too High," make an especially deep impression thanks to Stevie's narrative talents; on the first, an eight-minute mini-epic, he brings a hard-scrabble Mississippi black youth to the city and illustrates, via a brilliant dramatic interlude, what lies in wait for innocents. (He also uses his variety of voice impersonations to stunning effect.) "Too High" is just as stunning, a cautionary tale about drugs driven by a dizzying chorus of scat vocals and a springing bassline. "Higher Ground," a funky follow-up to the previous album's big hit ("Superstition"), and "Jesus Children of America" both introduced Wonder's interest in Eastern religion. It's a tribute to his genius that he could broach topics like reincarnation and transcendental meditation in a pop context with minimal interference to the rest of the album. Wonder also made no secret of the fact that "He's Misstra Know-It-All" was directed at Tricky Dick, aka Richard Milhouse Nixon, then making headlines (and destroying America's faith in the highest office) with the biggest political scandal of the century. Putting all these differing themes and topics into perspective was the front cover, a striking piece by Efram Wolff portraying Stevie Wonder as the blind visionary, an artist seeing far better than those around him what was going on in the early '70s, and using his astonishing musical gifts to make this commentary one of the most effective and entertaining ever heard.