Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community  

Go Back   Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community > Interests > Tilted Music


 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 04-06-2009, 07:08 PM   #1 (permalink)
Psycho
 
essendoubleop's Avatar
 
How did Stevie Wonder "write" music?

I'm a HUGE Stevie Wonder fan, have all his albums. Still, I can't fathom that someone who is unable to see could write over 30+ albums worth of original music. Especially since the music writing process requires so much editing and incorporating many layers of elements.

My guess is that he receives a LOT of assistance from various musicians around him who take his main musical ideas and transcribe them into musical notation, then lead him along when it's time to coordinate all the pieces. I still can't come up with a good explanation for how he's also able to write lyrics accompanying the pieces.

Regardless, his talent is otherworldly.
essendoubleop is offline  
Old 04-06-2009, 07:15 PM   #2 (permalink)
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
 
Willravel's Avatar
 
He probably didn't write sheet music, at least not the sheet music you or I might know. Braille music has existed for many years, but it's likely he simply used his ears.

You can play piano purely by ear, without ever seeing any music.
Willravel is offline  
Old 04-07-2009, 01:44 AM   #3 (permalink)
Living in a Warmer Insanity
 
Tully Mars's Avatar
 
Super Moderator
Location: Yucatan, Mexico
Not like he's the first blind person ot write music.

Hell, Beethoven did it deaf.
__________________
I used to drink to drown my sorrows, but the damned things have learned how to swim- Frida Kahlo

Vice President Starkizzer Fan Club
Tully Mars is offline  
Old 04-07-2009, 03:12 AM   #4 (permalink)
Leaning against the -Sun-
 
little_tippler's Avatar
 
Super Moderator
Location: on the other side
Steview Wonder was a child prodigy and got signed by Motown at age 11. He was teamed up with producer songwriter Clarence Paul. He released his first 2 albums aged 12. At about age 17 he began co-writing his songs and having greater control over his music. By age 21 he had written or co-written every song on his latest album. At about the same time, he took music theory classes for the first time. He started his own recording company and recorded and produced an entire album where he played almost all the instruments you can hear. It's called 'Music of my Mind'.

His most acclaimed albums are: Talking Book, Innervisions, and Songs in the Key of Life.

I can imagine he did his own song creating by ear, then record himself. Maybe later he found a way of writing it out, or someone did it for him. Stevie Wonder was gifted at several instruments (piano, drums, harmonica), so I can imagine he had no trouble playing what he wanted on a few other instruments to give musicians a base of what he wanted.

Stevie Wonder is awesome.
__________________
Whether we write or speak or do but look
We are ever unapparent. What we are
Cannot be transfused into word or book.
Our soul from us is infinitely far.
However much we give our thoughts the will
To be our soul and gesture it abroad,
Our hearts are incommunicable still.
In what we show ourselves we are ignored.
The abyss from soul to soul cannot be bridged
By any skill of thought or trick of seeming.
Unto our very selves we are abridged
When we would utter to our thought our being.
We are our dreams of ourselves, souls by gleams,
And each to each other dreams of others' dreams.


Fernando Pessoa, 1918
little_tippler is offline  
Old 04-07-2009, 03:55 AM   #5 (permalink)
warrior bodhisattva
 
Baraka_Guru's Avatar
 
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
John Milton "wrote" the epic poem Paradise Lost while blind. He dictated it to his daughters.

History is filled with extraordinary people who contributed much to this world despite a "disability."

Stevie Wonder is no exception.
__________________
Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing?
—Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön

Humankind cannot bear very much reality.
—From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot
Baraka_Guru is offline  
Old 04-07-2009, 10:59 AM   #6 (permalink)
Who You Crappin?
 
Derwood's Avatar
 
Location: Everywhere and Nowhere
Jean-Dominique Bauby dictated his memoirs by blinking.
Derwood is offline  
Old 04-07-2009, 02:01 PM   #7 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by essendoubleop View Post
I'm a HUGE Stevie Wonder fan, have all his albums. Still, I can't fathom that someone who is unable to see could write over 30+ albums worth of original music. Especially since the music writing process requires so much editing and incorporating many layers of elements.

My guess is that he receives a LOT of assistance from various musicians around him who take his main musical ideas and transcribe them into musical notation, then lead him along when it's time to coordinate all the pieces. I still can't come up with a good explanation for how he's also able to write lyrics accompanying the pieces.

Regardless, his talent is otherworldly.
I write music all the time without notation. MIDI sequencers have been around since at least the late '70s/early '80s.
vanblah is offline  
Old 04-09-2009, 06:26 AM   #8 (permalink)
Psycho
 
essendoubleop's Avatar
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by vanblah View Post
I write music all the time without notation. MIDI sequencers have been around since at least the late '70s/early '80s.
So you're suggesting he played music into MIDI sequencers to write his music? That still wouldn't explain the 20 albums or so he wrote in the 60s and 70s.
essendoubleop is offline  
Old 04-09-2009, 07:40 AM   #9 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by essendoubleop View Post
So you're suggesting he played music into MIDI sequencers to write his music? That still wouldn't explain the 20 albums or so he wrote in the 60s and 70s.
Yes. I am suggesting that. But you'll note that I didn't say that was the ONLY way he wrote music. I didn't think I needed to explain much else as it has already been discussed.

However,

Before MIDI sequencing became the norm there were multi-track recording devices. He could play the drum part, piano/keys parts, bass parts, sing the vocal parts, and probably guitar parts to some extent one track at a time.

Before mulit-tracking became the norm (late 60's) it was pretty much just get a bunch of guys together and jam while recording with one microphone (or a couple of mics if there was a mixing board). Then rework those jams into a song. Or when there was already a strong structure he would probaby just explain the groove to the players and go from there.

It's really amazing to watch session players work. They don't (as a rule) use sheet music or need anything other than their own musical style to work out a song.

Very, very few pop/rock artist take the time to actually score and notate the song.
vanblah is offline  
Old 04-09-2009, 02:22 PM   #10 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Popular music is usually improvisational, and almost always originates as sound before it is written down on paper. Some is never written down and some is written only with a few guidelines.
Stevie Wonder probably didn't "write" music in the same sense that Beethoven wrote music. Not meaning that as a criticism. He certainly did --create is probably a more accurate word than write-- some fine music. There are many ways to create music. Musical notation on staff or score paper is only one way.

Lindy
Lindy is offline  
Old 04-09-2009, 06:12 PM   #11 (permalink)
You're going to have to trust me!
 
MacGuyver's Avatar
 
Location: Massachusetts
Also See: Ray Charles


I'm sure that anyone who is blind didn't actually write music in the way that we know it. They just sat in the studio and recorded tracks based of chord structures and whatever else by ear. Then someone who really cared about having it written down took the time to write it out.
__________________
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then, is not an act, but a habit.
---Aristotle

Deeds, not words, shall speak [for] me.
---John Fletcher
MacGuyver is offline  
Old 04-26-2009, 06:29 AM   #12 (permalink)
Addict
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by vanblah View Post


It's really amazing to watch session players work. They don't (as a rule) use sheet music or need anything other than their own musical style to work out a song.
Well kind of. Depending on the session.

Usually tv and movie sessions require a score to be read. A cool example was in the old Guitar Player magazines where Tommy Tedesco would show the score used as well as explain the session of different tv and movie themes played on.

In alot of sessions the musicians will be given a lead sheet( chord symbols and melody line - or in Nashville numbers to correlate the degree of the chord to be played. ie Chords C, F, G = 1, 4, 5). Having said that, the musicians still have alot of room to do their own thing in their style provided it meshes with the context of what is going on.

Rock sessions are the most free flowing. I think Reb Beach of the groups Winger and Whitesnake said once he never saw a sheet of music in his time doing rock sessions, but probably was to do with not having the ability to read music and also much of the playing was off the cuff and at the discretion of the player.

But with people like Stevie Wonder and tons of other artists, the need to score your music was really not necessary since someone at the publishing house was already going to do it for sheet music sales. And besides at that level, musicians don't need the sheet music, they just need the key and an idea of the arrangement to do their thing.
percy is offline  
Old 04-26-2009, 07:57 AM   #13 (permalink)
Young Crumudgeon
 
Martian's Avatar
 
Location: Canada
I don't get this thread. It seems to imply that a blind man should have difficulty writing music. Lots of musicians (myself included) don't write as they work out how a song's going to sound. For me, the notation is more like an afterthought than anything. A lot of musicians don't even bother with it at all, particularly within the rock/blues/pop arena.
__________________
I wake up in the morning more tired than before I slept
I get through cryin' and I'm sadder than before I wept
I get through thinkin' now, and the thoughts have left my head
I get through speakin' and I can't remember, not a word that I said

- Ben Harper, Show Me A Little Shame
Martian is offline  
Old 04-26-2009, 03:18 PM   #14 (permalink)
Banned
 
Zeraph's Avatar
 
Location: The Cosmos
For you musicians out there, or for those who know a lot about the process, how do they usually write the lyrics (if they have it)? Do they start by like, just writing a paragraph and then try singing it a few different ways? Do the instrumentals tend to come first or last? I'm sure there are different techniques, but what's the standard for each genre?
Zeraph is offline  
Old 04-26-2009, 04:40 PM   #15 (permalink)
Junkie
 
In my experience there is no "right" way to do it. In every band I've ever been it has come any way it can. Lyrics first, music first, same time ... whatever.

I'm actually at Dockside Studios right now working out a few things. Check it out:

docksidestudios.com

Doug
vanblah is offline  
Old 05-20-2009, 04:55 PM   #16 (permalink)
change is hard.
 
thespian86's Avatar
 
Location: the green room.
Quote:
Originally Posted by vanblah View Post
In my experience there is no "right" way to do it. In every band I've ever been it has come any way it can. Lyrics first, music first, same time ... whatever.
That's right. An artist's process is their own. I usually write music through improvisation. I'll begin playing something I dig and I'll just get the recorder and get the rhythm and usually I'll improv some melody on top of it. Lyrics at the same time sometimes. It depends. Then I'll rework it, play it live a few times, rework it depending on how it works live.

When I write it's usually just a blast of whatever. Sean Connery said it best in Finding Forrester: first you write.
__________________
EX: Whats new?
ME: I officially love coffee more then you now.
EX: uh...
ME: So, not much.
thespian86 is offline  
Old 05-21-2009, 07:49 AM   #17 (permalink)
You had me at hello
 
Poppinjay's Avatar
 
Location: DC/Coastal VA
As a former music minor, I can write down all sorts of correct shit about theory and progress a chord like nobody's business. I can't improv worth shit though, which is the mark of a decent musician. I was in my 30's when I finally figured out that if I play with the key of the song, I could improv. Even then, not decently.

Paul McCartney wrote a symphony and does not know how to read sheet music.

Town Criers back in the dark ages had set songs they followed and embellished on, as well as Catholic masses that were learned by rote and not written down. Music is basically a folk tale, passed from generation to generation. About 99% of the music created through history was created by people who never read a stanza or clef.

Given Stevie's potential compenstation to the ear, it probably made him an even better composer.

Beethoven, by the way, heard his music through the vibrations in his feet when he could no longer hear. He never lost the ability to imagine.
__________________
I think the Apocalypse is happening all around us. We go on eating desserts and watching TV. I know I do. I wish we were more capable of sustained passion and sustained resistance. We should be screaming and what we do is gossip. -Lydia Millet

Last edited by Poppinjay; 05-21-2009 at 07:51 AM..
Poppinjay is offline  
 

Tags
music, stevie, write


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:48 PM.

Tilted Forum Project

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62