Colloquium by Jack Hamilton

Future Paradise: Synthesis and Stevie Wonder’s Classic Period
April 5, 2024 - 3:30pm
107 Old Cabell Hall
Free

Future Paradise: Synthesis and Stevie Wonder’s Classic Period

The five albums made by Stevie Wonder from 1972 to 1976 won him an unprecedented three Album of the Year Grammys and placed him at the critical and commercial vanguard of Seventies pop. But Wonder’s “classic period” also marked a revolution at the nexus of music, technology, and cultural politics, one that found him creating other-worldly techno-utopias, sonic visions of “another dimension,” as Wonder put it to an interviewer in 1973. This talk explores Wonder’s use of synthesizer technologies during the 1970s to create cutting-edge soundscapes that offered vital windows into black American life at the dawn of the “post-civil rights” era, and argues that Wonder’s political commitments were often intermingled with his musical commitments to destabilizing place, race and genre through technological experimentation and innovation.

Jack Hamilton is an associate professor of American Studies and Media Studies at the University of Virginia, and the author of the book Just around Midnight: Rock and Roll and the Racial Imagination. He is also the pop critic for Slate magazine and his writing has appeared in The AtlanticThe New York Times MagazineThe New Yorker, and many other publications.

Old Cabell Hall is located on the south end of UVA’s historic lawn, directly opposite the Rotunda. (map) Parking is available in the central grounds parking garage on Emmet Street, in the C1 parking lot off McCormick Rd, and in the parking lots at the UVA Corner. 

To see all events in our colloquium series visit https://music.virginia.edu/colloquia.

All events are subject to change.

Please contact the UVA Music Department at 434.924.3052 or music@virginia.edu for more information.

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Address

UVA Department of Music
112 Old Cabell Hall
P.O. Box 400176 Charlottesville, VA 22904-4176

Email: music@virginia.edu