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Innervisions

  • Based on 1,994 reviews
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Arrives Monday, Dec 30
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Description

Stevie Wonder's 1973 album, Innervisions, won the Grammy for Album of the Year and features the hit singles "Higher Ground," "Living for the City," and "Don't You Worry `bout a Thing."

Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Language ‏ : ‎ English


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 12.32 x 12.36 x 0.31 inches; 8.32 ounces


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Tamla


Original Release Date ‏ : ‎ 1991


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ February 12, 2007


Label ‏ : ‎ Tamla


Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1


Best Sellers Rank: #1,363 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl) #9 in Funk (CDs & Vinyl) #9 in Motown (CDs & Vinyl) #20 in Soul (CDs & Vinyl)


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • good remastered copy
One of my favorite recordings of Stevie Wonder. The music still sounds good after all the years this was produced. Still have the original vinyl copy in mint condition.
Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2024 by pigtail

  • Stevie is timeless
A must have soul album!!!
Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2024 by Carsten

  • Innervisions can conquer any darkness
This is arguably Stevie Wonder's finest album, far outpacing Talking Book, Fulfillingness' First Finale, and Songs in the Key of Life, all of which were exemplary works of his "classic" period on their own terms. But INNERVISIONS is all of a piece, almost a concept album in its musical unity---it plays like a symphony of nine movements. That Stevie was the sole composer and sole musician on six of the nine tracks marks this as an intimate work of art. Stevie used the synthesizer---still fairly revolutionary, and never before used in the r & b genre (whatever that means)---to create much of the symphonic sound on the album. Stevie opens INNERVISIONS with the constantly accelerating "Too High," which is a cautionary anti-drug song on one level, a warning against romantic infatuation on another, and a musically tight exploration of Jazz-Rock Fusion on a third. Stevie follows this with the deeply spiritual "Visions," ethereal in its musings on the human condition. The angelic "Visions" is followed by what may be Stevie's grandest tour-de-force, "Living For The City" a burning indictment of racism that is sadly, still all too timely. Even with it's perhaps overly cinematic middle scene, the moral outrage of "Living For The City" still brings tears to a listener's eyes. Stevie wastes no time taking us back to the heights of ecstasy with "Golden Lady," both romantic and dramatic in its composition and execution. Stevie Wonder, blind from birth, sees his Golden Lady with a clarity that anyone can envy. The second side of the album opens with the questing, spiritual "Higher Ground," an energetic song that both complements and fulfills the musings of "Visions." "Jesus Children of America" is a social commentary in which Stevie challenges the unthinking obedience of the Evangelical Movement which was just re-emerging in force when INNERVISIONS was released in 1973. "All In Love Is Fair" is a surprisingly standard love song imbued with the vocal smoothness that defines this album. If not memorable, it is still pleasant to listen to. "Don't You Worry "Bout A Thing" is a syntho-tech pop number with a heavy Latin backbeat, reminiscent of "Higher Ground"'s exuberant energy. Stevie's sense of humor is nowhere more evident on this album. "He's Misstra Know-It-All" is a political statement camouflaged as a song about a transparent huckster, aimed squarely at the wooden Richard Nixon and his increasingly limited worldview which was blossoming into Watergate even as Stevie wrote INNERVISIONS. With its mixture of love songs, songs of spiritual seeking, and political anthems, INNERVISIONS is the most eclectic work of the mature Stevie's "classic" period. If you only choose one of his albums make it this one. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2012 by Konrei

  • Rebuilding my collection
Sold everything when moving to Alaska. Of all things sold, my stereo system and 376 count cd collection was by far the hardest thing that I watched walk out the door. This cd is one of the 1st essentials in the rebuild. For me, one of his best. It arrived well packaged, and in excellent condition.
Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2024 by gloria

  • Obviously great music. This is a review of the vinyl LP quality.
Purchased from RAREWAVES-IMPORTS. Shipped from overseas, so it took some time, but a reasonable amount of time. Played without any cleaning, it sounded great. I used my Okki Nokki vacuum cleaner for the 2nd listen, and it's an excellent quality pressing, very little surface noice, and excellent tone quality. That's not the case with a lot of LPs I've purchased from Amazon, so this is a seller I'll continue to use. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2024 by P. Wilson

  • Innervision
One of the greatest Stevie Wonder albums. Remastered it sound very good.
Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2024 by Pierre Sarrazin

  • Just beginning my Stevie Wonder learning, and this is top notch
Last year I confessed to a couple friends -- a professional R&B player and his daughter, both of whom are die-hard Stevie Wonder fans, that I just didn't get it. (I grew up knowing Wonder only from his 70s/80s pop radio hits, like Part Time Lover, Isn't She Lovely, We Are the World*, I Just Called to Say I Love You -- and as a fan of post-punk and new wave those songs didn't interest me at all.) After listening to the daughter berate me for the next couple days, I said ok I will check him out sometime in the future. I bought Songs in the Key of Life. One of the best albums I've ever heard, despite having "Isn't She Lovely", which is better in its full album form but still not my thing. It's like the White Album if done by a master of R&B. So I took the next step and picked up "Innervisions". This is a great, trippy, angry, experimental, smooth, deep album. I'm not there yet, I don't feel like I'm in touch with where he's coming from at all, but it's a huge window on someone else's world and it's addictive and brilliant. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2019 by Paul in Guangzhou

  • Classic Stevie Wonder, close to his peak
This 1973 album shows Stevie Wonder at close to his peak of creativity and accessibility. It won the 1974 "Album of the Year" Grammy. (When Paul Simon won the 1976 Grammy, he famously thanked Wonder for not having released an album that year; Wonder went on to win again the following year with "Songs in the Key of Life".) Lots of touchstone moments on this album. It kicks off with "Too High", a funky evocation of how it feels to be too high. "Living for the City", a huge hit which hit No. 8 on the U.S. Billboard chart, is a consciousness-raising expose of hard times in the city, with a memorable spoken word minidrama of a black naif arriving and promptly getting set up and busted for drugs. ("New York! Just like I pictured it! Skyscrapers and everything!") "Golden Lady" is a luscious slow-dance tune. And "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing" is another Top 20 hit with a groove and soaring melody. A must-add to your music library for less than ten bucks. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2012 by RealityWizard

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