From Uncut’s June 2005 challenge (Take 97). In a world unique interview, Uncut visited the soul legend in his studio as he labored on his then-upcoming album, A Time 2 Love…
By the small hours of Saturday morning, L.A.’s Koreatown district is hushed and nonetheless. The odd automobile rattles alongside Western Avenue, however many of the Friday nightclubbers have dispersed and headed dwelling. “Little Seoul”, if one can name it that, is slowing down.
Unbeknownst to the few locals nonetheless awake, the soul legend as soon as often known as Little Stevie Surprise is difficult at work within the studio that sits slap-bang within the midst of this inconceivable neighbourhood the place few indicators or billboards are in English. The blind genius who recorded at the least 5 of essentially the most exceptional albums within the historical past of American music is rounding off one other night time behind the large SSL console of Wonderland, placing ending touches to a observe from his forthcoming A Time 2 Love.
Surprise at work is all the things you may think. His head sways backward and forward as he mumbles melodiously alongside to “Please Don’t Harm My Child“, the observe he’s engaged on tonight. The well-known gums of his open smiling mouth present above his higher tooth. His braided hair is bunched behind him, tiny seashells dangling at its ends. He’s dressed solely in black that matches his sun shades.
A TV monitor above the console exhibits a gaggle of girls carrying denim and corn-rows and standing spherical a microphone lowered from the ceiling. Essentially the most senior of them, Shirley Brewer, has sung with Stevie since 1972’s Speaking Ebook; hers is the hollering voice that is available in midway by way of ‘Peculiar Ache’ on his 1976 masterpiece Songs In The Key Of Life. Just like the others, Shirley is making an attempt to grasp an idiosyncratic vocal line that includes compressing ten syllables into roughly two seconds. Surprise makes the ladies repeat the road repeatedly – not like some punishing tyrant, identical to a producer who hears every misplaced micro-nuance and wishes to listen to it executed proper. He demonstrates it to them as soon as once more, semi-scatting the road into their headphones. Finally they get it down, sensuously purring the road “Earlier than you had been usin’ it like a toy” in a approach that makes all too plain what “it” is.
Surprise is sort of a child brother round these girls. It’s not laborious to think about the 12-year-old Little Stevie on the buses that took the famed Motown Revue round America within the early ’60s – the pint-sized japester who’d steal up behind Diana Ross and pinch her petite derriere. He strolls over to one of many singers and extracts a packet of Frito-Lays from her pocket. Earlier than inserting one into his mouth he lifts it to his nostril. “Oooh, odor like soiled ft,” he says within the voice of a Mississippi cotton-picker. “Odor like Uncle Charlie’s feets…” The women squeal with delighted displeasure. He repeats the phrase a number of extra instances after which gobbles down the Frito-Lay.
Wonderland is a airtight haven of a studio. The household of workers that Stevie has created round him makes for an environment that’s insular however all the time pleasant. Even the safety guys are teddy bears. Laughs come thick and quick right here, and one of the infectious belongs to bassist Nathan Watts, who has performed with Surprise for 30 years. “I ought to be in The Guinness Ebook of Information for longest-serving bass participant,” he says. It’s Watts’ birthday at the moment, which is why he’s hanging round lengthy after his providers had been final required, laying aside the lengthy drive again to his dwelling in Chino Hills.
Stephanie Andrews, president of Stevie’s manufacturing firm, can be sitting in tonight. A tiny lady with a fairly, light-skinned face, she has purchased an ice-cream birthday cake for Watts, whose cuddly physique – squeezed right into a pair of high-waisted denim shorts – suggests such treats aren’t precisely strangers to his eating regimen. Surprise himself packs a good paunch underneath his unfastened shirt as he emerges to affix the impromptu get together, which inevitably entails the rendition of ‘Blissful Birthday’, his jubilant 1980 tribute to assassinated civil rights chief Martin Luther King.
When the cake has been devoured, Surprise challenges one of many singers to a sport of air hockey on a desk that sits within the studio’s major recreation room. Regardless of not with the ability to see the plastic puck, Stevie repeatedly wins the sport, demonstrating what he would likely name his Taurean have to triumph in any respect prices. Then it’s time to return to work.
“We’re making an attempt to remain within the realm of getting issues occurring at an affordable time of day,” Surprise replies when requested if his periods all the time run this late. “Typically we do work lengthy hours, however very hardly ever will we work and sleep right here for a complete week.”
It seems that music has reverberated inside these partitions for a number of a long time. Again within the ’40s, Wonderland was McGregor’s, a studio utilized by Benny Goodman, Nat ‘King’ Cole and others. The inside of the constructing is like one thing out of Roman Polanski‘s Chinatown, with intricate tiling and wooden panels.
While you wander around the again of the studio, outdoors the bubble-like chamber of the management room, you come across relics from Surprise’s personal previous. Standing alone and considerably uncared for is the unique Moog synthesizer he used on Music Of My Thoughts, Speaking Ebook and Innervisions. Across the nook from that magnificent creature, draped in black material, is the Yamaha “Dream Machine” he used on Songs In The Key Of Life.
On the danger of fetishising know-how, there’s a sure awe in beholding these outmoded dinosaurs. So vital was the function Moog and Yamaha performed within the radical brilliance of Surprise’s run of masterpieces from Music (1972) to Songs (1976) that one seems like prostrating oneself earlier than such superannuated gadgets.
“I’m all the time intrigued by his orchestral use of synthesizers,” stated jazz big Herbie Hancock, who performed on Songs In The Key Of Life‘s impassioned “As”. “He lets them be what they’re – one thing that’s not acoustic.” Listening to the just about classical preparations of songs similar to ‘Pastime Paradise‘ and ‘Village Ghetto Land‘, one appreciates what Hancock meant: it’s as if Surprise is celebrating the very artifice of artificial sound.
“I believe all the things has its personal character,” Stevie says. “Even in sampling strings, a keyboard participant can not actually play like a string participant. You may have numerous samples at numerous locations on the keyboard to intensify a really feel and offer you a way of that, however the entire function of me utilizing synthesizers was to make a press release and to precise myself musically – to return as shut as attainable to what these devices may do, but additionally to expressing how I’d permit these issues to sound.”
Surprise’s discovery of electronics was simply a part of the extraordinary burst of creativity that flowered when he got here of age in 1971, ten years after signing as a pint-sized prodigy to Berry Gordy‘s rising Motown label. In a frenetic four-year run he left “Little Stevie” and the ’60s behind and have become one of many towering artists of the brand new decade.
Think about black American music with out “Superwoman“, “Superstition“, “Too Excessive“, “Residing For The Metropolis“, “Greater Floor“, “You Haven’t Achieved Nothin’“, “I Want“, “Sir Duke” or “Pastime Paradise“. Or with out “Blame it On the Solar“, “He’s Misstra Know-it-All“, “They Gained’t Go Once I Go“, “Knocks Me Off My Toes“, “Pleasure Inside My Tears“. This can be a concentrated physique of labor that stands alongside the very best of the Beatles or Brian Wilson and sometimes eclipses even them.
It’s additionally a physique of labor in whose shadow Stevie Surprise has lived ever since. The query in 2005 is, will he ever emerge from it?
FIND THE FULL INTERVIEW FROM UNCUT JUNE 2005/TAKE 97 IN THE ARCHIVE