Tune Tag #78 with Kal Hodgson of Kalowski's Substack, Pt. 2: Stevie Wonder, Contours, Aretha Franklin, Leon Russell, Chris Rainbow, Prince, Donny Hathaway
Soul much music....soul little time! Kal and I get up only to get down again! Kal waxes urban in his second Tune Tag foray, and FRONT ROW & BACKSTAGE is down with it!đ”
âSnow gettinâ away, Kal! Tag! Youâre IT!
Tune Tag welcomes of Kalowskiâs Substack for his T.T. encore!

âI have found much of my writing is steeped in nostalgia, memory and anecdote, but I donât aim for that - I write organically, just see what emerges. So for the last couple of years, I have written about a range of artists, and I aim to continue to do that, weekly, at Friday 5pm (GMT) for as long as I can!â
Kalâs Tune Tag, Part 1 is here, from 11 months ago:
Last week, we were honoured to share FRONT ROW & BACKSTAGE space with of Chrisâs Shaped by Sound:
Next week, join us when we Tag Tunes with of Infrequency-FM!
Kalâs song #1 sent to Brad: The Contours, âJust A Little Misunderstanding,â 1966
Kalâs rationale: I thought Iâd start with something personal: I was raised on soul music, and this was a favourite of my late motherâs. It always makes me think of her, but it also has a real Northern Soul beat that my dad would love.
And, that drum beat is played by a 15-year-old Stevie Wonder, who also wrote the song with Clarence Paul and Morris Broadnax. Itâs a thrilling soul track with that incredible backing from The Funk Brothers - especially James Jamersonâs remarkable bassline - and fabulous vocals from Joseph Stubbs, brother of Levi Stubbs. The single appeared on Motown subsidiary, Gordy Records, produced by William Stevenson and Clarence Paul.
This same Motown-based songwriting trio of Wonder/Paul/Broadnax wrote âUntil You Come Back to Me (Thatâs What Iâm Gonna Do),â first recorded by Wonder (produced by Clarence Paul) on April 4, 1967 (he was a month away from his 17th birthday), but unreleased at the time, and was picked up by Aretha Franklin for its first release in November 1973. It reached #3 in the U.S.
Motown was set to release Stevieâs around then, as well, but at the artistâs request, it got delayed four years, and appeared on a 1977 Wonder compilation, Looking Back. Hereâs Stevieâs initial recording:
Bradâs song #1 sent to Kal: Aretha Franklin, âUntil You Come Back to Me (Thatâs What Iâm Gonna Do),â 1973

Kalâs response: Undoubtedly the Queen of Soul! This was written by the same trio of Wonder, Paul and Broadnax, and produced by Jerry Wexler and Arif Mardin (who also arranged the strings and horns). A huge U.S. Top Ten hit for Aretha, itâs a slinky soul track. I think that once you know Stevie played a part in writing it, you can tell - it has his inflections all over it - but, of course Aretha makes it her own with those soaring vocals. The band is absolutely on fire here and like so many Aretha tracks, the backing vocals are just sublime.
Bradâs rationale: Weâre matching Motown songs, and two songs written by the same trio (including Stevie Wonder). Hereâs the Queen with Stevie accompanying, at The 10th Annual Soul Train Lady of Soul Awards, July 9, 2005 (I believe Iâm recognizing George Duke on the keys directly behind Lady âReâ!):
Kalâs song #2: Donny Hathaway, âA Song for You,â 1971
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