Tags
Tamla T 54096 (A), May 1964
b/w This Little Girl
(Written by Marty Cooper and Lou Josie)
Stateside SS 323 (A), August 1964
b/w This Little Girl
(Released in the UK under license through Stateside Records)
“Little Stevie” is gone – long live Stevie Wonder.
Stevland Morris Judkins was 14 now, and the last single Motown had released under the name “Little Stevie Wonder” – the rather pretty Castles In The Sand – had been an attempt to move him away from the kiddie novelty trappings of his raw earlier work, and towards a more mature, contemplative sound. Strange, then, that once Motown pushed ahead with that process by getting rid of the “Little” prefix, the first thing they did was to release another throwaway track from the Stevie At The Beach LP, one which – the word “Man” in the title notwithstanding – is as juvenile a novelty as anything he’d put out in the last two years.In later years, Stevie has poured scorn on his pre-’65 Motown output; whenever he’s asked about these records, he seems to lump them all together as a collection of juvenilia. Perhaps surprisingly, it’s Hey Harmonica Man for which he reserves particular criticism, describing it on more than one occasion as “embarrassing”.
That’s not really fair, but I can see his point: at a crucial, sensitive time in his life, coming off the back of an unexpected Number One hit record in Fingertips and searching for both credibility and direction, having finally thrown off half of the marketing department’s condescending nickname, he’s suddenly saddled with something which paints him right back into that same corner he’d been trying to climb out of. It’s not that Motown were treating him as some sort of freak show, but it’s not too far off either; it’s somewhat galling to observe that, two years down the line from Stevie’s Motown début 45 I Call It Pretty Music But The Old People Call It The Blues, the label’s basic strategy hadn’t changed: look at this blind kid! He can sing *and* play the harmonica! Often quite well! Have we mentioned he’s only fourteen? Gather round, everyone, and have a good gawp.
The more of these early Stevie sides I listen to, the more Fingertips feels like an anomaly, a burst of freeform creativity amidst the rigidly-controlled confines of most of his other efforts to date. Hey Harmonica Man sounds like Fingertips as rewritten by someone whose favourite Stevie Wonder record was actually his long-forgotten duet with Clarence Paul, Little Water Boy. Accordingly, it features long call-and-response vocal sections (most of the vocals are done by the backing singers, cast here in the role of an adoring crowd, rather than by Stevie himself), of which more later, interspersed with lengthy and frequent bursts of harmonica – but the latter are stuck in some weird halfway house, the spontaneity and uncontrollable joy of Fingertips replaced by a more carefully-managed, self-conscious sound, presaging Stevie’s later mature work, but a sound that doesn’t jibe with the rest of the shambolic, self-consciously rambunctious track.
A West Coast production like the rest of the Stevie At The Beach LP, this is a record that wants to have its cake and eat it, tugging the heartstrings of the punters drawn in by the novelty value (played up by the sleeve, above left) while also getting the Fingertips crowd’s vote by providing good dance material.
It worked relatively well, if not artistically then at least commercially (the single hit the R&B Top Five and the pop Top 30, by far Stevie’s biggest hit since Fingertips, helping him continue to earn his keep while his labelmates started to hit the charts with increasing regularity), but it’s not a record to linger in the mind. The lyric is a bit of self-mythologising, ostensibly building Stevie up by having him wow a rubbernecking surf party crowd (played here by some nasal-sounding Los Angeles backing vocalists), but actually playing to the exact same stereotypes he’d pandered to on his début:
Hey harmonica man!
What you calling my name?
Tell us if you can!
It’s my one big thing
Is it really true…
What you wanna know?
What they say you can do?
Ain’t you ever heard me blow?
Can you play that thing?
I can play that thing.
Make you dance and sing?
Make you dance and sing!
Do it if you can, can, can, Harmonica Man!
Aw, I’m gonna blow now!
The overall impression isn’t helped by Stevie giving a strained, wavering vocal performance that suggests his voice was in the process of breaking (check out the piercing squeak and subsequent growl at 2:04) that – ironically – actually makes him sound even younger than on his previous records.
It’s not awful – the harmonica parts, the best thing here by an absolute mile, are excellent, even if they sound like they belong to a totally different record (and that in itself is pretty bad, given the rest of the record is really just a series of extended, skit-like setups for Stevie to do yet another harmonica solo, but anyway) – but it is a difficult listen. In spite of some great work on the mouth-organ, there’s an argument to say it’s as embarrassing as Stevie makes out; it’s just that it’s not Stevie who should feel bad about this, but rather the label that was forcing him to jump through this particular set of hoops.
MOTOWN JUNKIES VERDICT
(I’ve had MY say, now it’s your turn. Agree? Disagree? Leave a comment, or click the thumbs at the bottom there. Dissent is encouraged!)
You’re reading Motown Junkies, an attempt to review every Motown A- and B-side ever released. Click on the “previous” and “next” buttons below to go back and forth through the catalogue, or visit the Master Index for a full list of reviews so far.
(Or maybe you’re only interested in Stevie Wonder? Click for more.)
The Temptations “The Girl’s Alright With Me” |
Stevie Wonder “This Little Girl” |
DISCOVERING MOTOWN |
---|
Like the blog? Listen to our radio show! |
Motown Junkies presents the finest Motown cuts, big hits and hard to find classics. Listen to all past episodes here. |
Michael P. Davis said:
Right On! Your last paragraph nailed it as far as I am concerned. It is an embarrassing record but I love the harmonica solos and currently have one of them running through my head. He can play that thing!
LikeLike
dvlaries said:
Nelson George mentions in Where Did Our Love Go, that as an adolescent, “Stevie could be a real pain in the ass.” There must be some truth in that -at least at this moment in Stevie’s career, because with William Stevenson, Norman Whitfield, Smokey and HDH right there in the building, and all of them getting increasingly prolific, a better record than this could have happened if someone was really trying to help Stevie.
I let myself enjoy the record anyway for its energy, forced or not. At least I have an easier time remembering how this one ‘goes,’ compared to “Happy Street” and “Kiss Me Baby.”
LikeLike
Landini said:
Sorry sports fans… I CAN’T STAND THIS SONG!!!!! But I like Happy Street… SO go figure!!!!
LikeLike
W.B. said:
One of the writers of this piece, Lou Josie, later wrote “Midnight Confessions” which would become a big hit for The Grass Roots in 1968 and transform them from a folk-rock act to a brassy pop-rock outfit that rode a wave of hits through 1971. Hard to think that and this number came from the same guy . . .
LikeLike
Landini said:
Wow, WB, didn’t know about that. By the way, welcome! I have also loved Motown/Soul music & also liked of lot of 60’s pop-rock (Grassroots; Buckinghams; Spiral Staircase; Tommy James/Shondells). Some critics write these acts off as bubblegum but many of their records had a soul/pop feel to them that was definitely Motown influenced.
LikeLike
Slade Barker said:
I agree with your review. Just want to note that the refrain that begins “Now we’ve been searching for a long, long time” is a pretty terrible rewrite of the Leiber-Stoller classic “Poison Ivy.” The L.A. session singers even ape the Coasters’ harmonies & vocals. But it doesn’t work here — at all!
LikeLike
Pingback: Hey Harmonica Man | Songs with Earlier Histories Than the Hit Version
nafalmat said:
Well you learn something everyday! After all these years I had no idea that ‘Hey Harmonica Man’ had previously been recorded by another act. I assumed that as Jobete was listed as the publisher on Stevie’s single it was a Motown original, although I must admit the writer credits were unknown to me at the time the UK Stateside record was released. How did Jobete get a publishing credit on this song, when the original single by Jo Jo Wail and The Somethings does not credit Jobete at all? Is this a case of Motown purloining the rights to tis song?
LikeLike
144man said:
The earlier version is so obscure that its existence isn’t even mentioned in the Complete Motown Singles booklet.
LikeLike