[ applause ] larry: someone will record that and he ll dump me and it will be marsha. more music. more stevie after the break. [ male announcer ] every day thousands of people are switching from tylenol® to advil. to learn more and get your special offer, go to takeadvil.com. take action. take advil®. [ smack! ] [ smack! smack! smack! ] [ male announcer ] your favorite foods fighting you? fight back fast with tums. calcium rich tums goes to work in seconds. nothing works faster. tum ta tum tum tums nothing works faster. three. two. one. don t cha wish your work phone was hot like me?.
the first hit we had was a song called fingertips. and originally larry: third album, right? that was in the, yeah, third album, yes. it was a jazz sort of the first time it was recorded the jazz little stevie. it was a project that motown did with me playing the harmonica and piano and drums and stuff. kind of jazz project. and than we did a tribute to uncle ray, which was a tribute to ray charles that we did. and then we were on the motown revue, and in chicago the fingertips was done again. we d come up with a live version of it. clarence paul, who was my musical director at the time, came up with an idea for, you know, the whole everybody say yeah, and all that stuff. and that was put on the album that was called little stevie wonder live at the apollo.
Really feel before we see. we really hear before we see. because the information, you know, goes into our minds and we have to we have to really i mean, if we re honest with ourselves, if we re being ourselves, we have to say, okay, this is how i view this. but when you have preconceptions, if your vision gives you preconceptions, then you ve got a problem with yourself. larry: do you read braille? what s that? larry: you don t read braille? i m kidding you. of course i read braille, yes. larry: want to play a little under me? we re going to break. play a little under me. anything you wrote. my guest is stevie wonder. more music when stevie is our guest. we re honoring him tonight for the full hour. don t go away.
larry we re going to miss you so don t ever go too long if you re a woman i may have kissed you but that will never happen ever larry i remember listening to you when you interviewed james brown on the radio i was younger then and you were too a few years ago [ applause ] larry: someone will record that and he ll dump me and it will be marsha. more music. more stevie after the break.
elephandella, that s the name i keep hearing elephandella larry: that could be a hit. i don t think so. it wasn t then. it s not now. larry: what was the first hit? the first hit we had was a song called fingertips. and originally larry: third album, right? that was in the, yeah, third album, yes. it was a jazz sort of the first time it was recorded the jazz little stevie. it was a project that motown did with me playing the harmonica and piano and drums and stuff. kind of jazz project. and than we did a tribute to uncle ray, which was a tribute to ray charles that we did. and then we were on the motown