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33 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A head scratcher..better compilations are available, December 23, 2001
First things first: Stevie Wonder's album output of the '70s is among the finest continuous strings in the history of popular recorded music. Of that there cannot be any argument. What can be argued is that there has never been a wholly satisfactory compiliation that summarizes his entire career, save for the 4CD set "End of a Century". Admittedly, it's a difficult task, since you need to cover the '60s Motown "factory" era, which yielded a lot of great pop/R&B singles, the '80s and '90s which yielded a few delights, though they are too sparsly scattered, and the '70s which are hard to distill at all, since the original albums are so consistently strong.That said, this collection is just not very good. The sequencing is ridiculous (starting with the disposable "Part Time Lover"?) and the track selection is questionable (a lot of grade A tracks were left off so that...what?...they could include "Ebony and Ivory"?) Ounce for ounce, Original Musicquarium, a good if too-short compilation of the '70s is a better bet. You could couple Original Musiquarium with a '60s hits compilation (unfortunately, there's not good definitive '60s set, but I guess you could go with Greatest Hits Vol I [too bad Motown & Stevie haven't seen fit to reissue the excellent 3LP "Looking Back" which DID cover the '60s stuff properly) and get most of the essential Stevie Wonder. But at that point, you'd still be missing the few highlights from the 80s and 90s. For example, the brilliant Overjoyed (good tune and dig that incredible phrasing) and Stevie's terrific cover of Bob Marley's "Redemption Song" which is available on no other compilation but this one. At the end of the day, the Stevie Wonder compilation catalogue is still something of a mess (due in no small part to the fact that Stevie has veto power over any Motown reissue), and IMHO you're left with only two good alternatives: The 4 CD "End of a Century", which is quite good, even if it is also completely obvious in track selection, or the 2CD Original Musiquarium. Or, heck, go back and buy the '70s albums, since they are truly all worth owning in their entirty anyway, then maybe break down and buy In Circle Square because you HAVE to own Overjoyed. Maybe.
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