“Sweet Sounds of Heaven” by The Rolling Stones featuring Lady Gaga & Stevie Wonder is a richly layered song that touches upon spirituality, the joys and pains of life, and the redemptive power of...
Stevie Wonder is a gifted American singer who has many years of experience in the music industry. He was born in the state of Michigan in 1950. Stevland Hardaway Judkins, which is his real...
Stevie Wonder, as one of the most-respected musicians in industry history, has dropped a number of well-known classics throughout his lengthy career. As a testament to the genius behind his artistry, said tracks deal with...
Chaka Khan has insinuated, apparently on more than one occasion, that “I Feel for You” isn’t necessarily her type of song, i.e. one in which the vocalist is presented as a hot girl. But the fact is that, despite being one of the...
“Finish Line” is a bit open-ended, as perhaps to be expected by this point in the careers of Elton John and his collaborator, Stevie Wonder. For instance, it is not abundantly clear the nature of...
“Where Is Our Love Song” is similar in sentiment to a well-known track Stevie Wonder dropped in 1976 which is comprehensively entitled “Love’s In Need of Love Today”. And thematically, it represents a stance that...
Stevie Wonder’s “Can’t Put It In The Hands of Fate” is a social-protest song. On the surface, it centers on the Black Lives Matter movement which captivated America during the year 2020. And in that regard, of course...
As is pointed out towards the end of this article, “Ebony and Ivory” is mega-simplistic in its approach. It is based on one of the easiest-to-decipher metaphors perhaps in the history of number-one hits. You see...
There has been some minor debate concerning the meaning of Stevie Wonder’s “Pastime Paradise”. The issue is not its overall message, which is pretty clear. And that is the addressee(s) of the song should focus more on the...
This song is an expression of the joy Stevie Wonder felt at the birth of his first child, a daughter by the name of “Aisha”. Indeed we can see that in the first verse that...