Black and 
White Musicians Dialogue: the Jeff Beck/Stevie Wonder 
Collaboration
 
(a continuing look at 
the career of Jeff Beck)
 Stevie Wonder had long written songs addressing social issues of race and 
class for his Motown label recordings. In 1971, he began to perform benefits and 
make public appearances supporting his beliefs. That was the year he turned 21 
and was free to make his own contractual arrangements without his mother’s 
signature. On December 10, 1971, he joined John Lennon in Ann Arbor, Michigan, 
at a benefit rally for John Sinclair, the jailed leader of the White Panthers. 
In 
May 7, 1972, Jeff Beck and Stevie Wonder along with Free, the supporting third 
act, played a concert at Cobo Arena in Detroit, Michigan, one that would lead to 
their historic meeting and musical collaboration. Max Middleton, Jeff’s keyboard 
player at the time (Beck, Bogert and Appice) recalled, "The record company told 
Stevie how much Jeff admired him … a deal was struck for Jeff to play on a 
couple of tracks of Stevie's LP in exchange for some material for us to record 
in New York.” The record labels arranged a summit meeting at Electric Ladyland 
Studios in New York.
Eric 
Clapton had already sat in on a session for Stevie’s album Talking 
Book but couldn't break out of the blues idiom. Jeff Beck, on the 
other hand, showed up at the June 1972 session 
ready and eager to put a guitar part on a couple of Wonder's tracks 
(horns and guitars were the only instruments on his records Wonder didn't play 
himself). 
Max said “When we got to the studio, Stevie was already there with 
engineer Malcolm Cecil. They literally had over 250 of Stevie's compositions on 
tape and started playing them for us. Jeff just said to Stevie, ‘Play me 
something funky.’” 
The story goes that Beck 
was sitting at a drum kit just goofing around, pounding out a simple, mundane 
groove, when out of nowhere Wonder came up with the iconic, monster riff on the 
clavinet now famously recognized as the song “Superstition.” Wonder scratched 
out some quick lyrics and Beck left the studio with a dub copy of the track 
called, at the time, “Very Superstitious.”
The song that made it to the final 
released master of Stevie Wonder’s Talking Book was “Lookin for another 
Pure Love.” It features a beautiful jazz-nuanced solo from Beck. 
Although Jeff tried to record 
“Superstition” with his group when they returned to England, he ended up firing 
his entire band because of personnel problems (the bass player took a swing at 
Beck during the Wonder sessions). He didn't get around to recording the tune for 
several months.
Meanwhile the album Talking Book came out 
in October 1972, and Stevie Wonder's version of “Superstition” quickly went to 
number one on the charts. It’s hard to blame Wonder for using the track; the 
album gave him his biggest crossover success. But Beck couldn’t resist making 
some snide comments to the music press.
"But 
I did promise him the song," Wonder admitted to Rolling Stone later that year, 
"I'm sorry it happened and that he came out with some of the arrogant statements 
he came out with. I will get another tune to him that I think is as exciting, 
and if he wants to do it, cool."
Beck finally recorded Superstition in December 1972, while Stevie’s 
rendition of the song was topping the Billboard Charts that same month. Beck’s 
version was released in April 1973 on the Beck, Bogert and Appice album. 
Stevie’s promise of “another tune as 
exciting” was ultimately hollow, although it has to be acknowledged that hits 
are usually hard to predict. During his career, Beck would record four Stevie 
Wonder songs altogether. One of them did become a worldwide “hit,” in 1975. His 
instrumental cover of “'Cause We've Ended Now As Lovers” (cowritten by Syreeta) 
is featured on the album Blow by Blow, his most 
commercially successful album. It reached #4 on the charts. Beck still includes 
the tune in his concert appearances to this day. 
 Jeff Beck wasn't the only key Wonder used in his attempt to unlock the 
white rock audience. He hired a New York publicity firm to help him court the 
rock crowd (they also, oddly enough, booked Wonder for appearances on TV game 
shows like I've Got A Secret). But 
the big breakthrough came when he landed the spot as opening act for The Rolling 
Stones US tour in 1972. The groundswell the Stones tour stirred up for Wonder on 
the rock scene paid off with airplay success on FM rock stations across the 
country."That Stones tour crossed him over to a white audience," said his 
recording engineer Bob Margouleff.
When 
Stevie spoke about it at the time, it sounded more like a corporate marketing 
initiative than a civil rights, breaking down the racial barriers, kind of 
issue. "I hope it will do just that - make more people aware where I'm coming 
from," Wonder told writer Joel Selvin at the time, between Stones shows in San 
Francisco. "I think the brothers know me - I just want more people. … 
Fortunately I did do a lot of my own writing. The character of my tunes did 
express where I was coming from. Now I've just got to get to more 
people."
Collaborations between black artists and white rock musicians have 
continued to be successful for the most part, famous performance partnerships 
such as Phil Collins and Philip Bailey (Earth, Wind & Fire) on “Easy Lover,” 
Aerosmith and RUN DMC’s “Walk This Way.” Just like Beck’s and Wonder’s, not all 
have ended well. The Paul McCartney/Michael Jackson venture, “Ebony and Ivory, 
living in perfect harmony,” was followed by the demise of their relationship 
when Michael outbid Paul at the sale of the Beatle’s song catalogue. Music 
became big business. Arguments over money displaced friendships and left little 
room for the idealism of the 70s about social issues.
(Dave Holt)
Sources:
Jeff Beck Bulletin #8 for Max Middleton 
interview,
http://www.micasamm.com/articles/mojo_0403.html Mi Casa Multimedia, Robert Margouleff’s present 
company. The article “Power in the Darkness” by Joel Selvin is also on http://prince.org/msg/8/335735




 
Dave, You are flying at my altitude. As long as you write rock journalism I will be reading.
ReplyDeleteAnother wonderful piece that has me digging through my records to rediscover the connections from the past. Thanks a bunch
ReplyDelete