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Stevie Wonder TOLD Prince “You Can’t Play Jazz Piano” — What Prince Played Left Him in TEARS

Stevie Wonder TOLD Prince “You Can’t Play Jazz Piano” — What Prince Played Left Him in TEARS

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Stevie Wonder grinned and said, “Prince, you’re a great guitarist, but jazz piano, that’s my world, man. You can’t just walk in here.” And Prince didn’t argue. He just sat at the piano. What he played in the next four minutes made Stevie cry for the first time in 30 years. The Blue Note, Legendary Jazz Club, Greenwich Village, New York City.

Late night, October 2009. 11:47 p.m. Private Legends Night. An annual gathering where music icons jammed together after the club closed to the public. Invitation only. 40 people maximum. No cameras, no press, just musicians playing for each other. Tonight’s attendees, Stevie Wonder, 59, just inducted into the rock hall for the second time.

Herby Hancock, 69, jazz piano legend. Winton Marcales, 48, trumpet virtuoso. Quest, 38, the roots drummer and Prince, 51, invited by Quest Love. 11:52 p.m. The jam began. Herby on piano, Winton on trumpet, Quest Love on drums, Stevie at a table in the front listening, occasionally joining on harmonica. They played standards. Take five. So what? Autumn leaves.

Prince was in the back corner. Black turtleneck, dark jeans, purple scarf, sipping water. He didn’t drink. Watching, listening. He hadn’t played yet. 12:17 a.m. Stevie noticed Prince in the corner. Stevie, blind but with an uncanny awareness of rooms, turned his head toward Prince’s direction. That you back there, Prince.

Yeah, Stevie, it’s me. You’ve been awfully quiet. When you going to play something soon? Stevie grinned. That signature Stevie Wonder grin. You know, I heard you play guitar, you play bass, you play drums. Hell, I heard you play 27 instruments. Something like that. But can you play jazz piano? The room went quiet. Everyone knew this was playful.

But it was also a challenge. Prince calm. I can play piano. I didn’t ask if you could play piano. I asked if you could play jazz piano. That’s different, man. That’s my world. Herby’s world. That’s chords we invented. rhythms we created. You can’t just walk into jazz piano and Stevie. Yeah. You want me to try? Stevie laughed.

Oh, I want you to try. I’m just saying don’t be embarrassed when you can’t hang. The room laughed. It was affectionate. Stevie and Prince were friends. This was banter. But Prince stood up, walked to the piano. Herby Hancock, surprised, stood, and stepped aside. You serious? Yeah. Herby gestured. Be my guest. Prince sat at the piano.

The Steinway Model D. The same piano Herby Hancock had just played. The same one Bill Evans had played in the 70s. The same one countless legends had touched. Prince adjusted the bench, placed his hands on the keys, looked at Stevie. Any requests? Stevie, still grinning. Play me something I’ve never heard before. That’s not a song. Exactly.

If you’re really a jazz piano player, you don’t need a song. You just play. Prince nodded. Okay. He started with a single note. Middle C. Held it. Then a second note, E flat. Created a minor third interval, let it hang in the air. Then his left hand entered. A walking baseline, slow, deliberate, soulful. then his right hand, a melody that sounded like it had been living in the Blueote’s walls for 70 years.

It was jazz, unmistakably jazz, but it was also something else. It was Prince jazz. It had the harmonic complexity of Bill Evans, the rhythmic swagger of Oscar Peterson, the emotional depth of Keith Jarrett, but underneath it all, funk, soul, the Minneapolis sound that only Prince owned. By the 92nd mark, Quest Love had stopped drumming.

He was just watching Prince’s left hand, his mouth open. [snorts] He’d played with thousands of musicians, seen virtuoso, been in rooms with legends. But this was different. Prince’s left hand was creating a rhythm section by itself. Bass, drums, percussion, all in the movement of five fingers. Winton Marcales had lowered his trumpet.

He was leaning forward, elbows on his knees, studying Prince’s technique like a man trying to solve an equation that didn’t exist 5 minutes ago. Herby Hancock was standing behind Prince, watching his fingers like a man witnessing a magic trick he couldn’t figure out. At one point, Herby leaned over to Winton and whispered, “He’s using voicings I’ve never seen.

” By the 2-minute mark, Prince shifted. The melody changed. It was no longer abstract jazz. It was a song, not a famous song, not a standard, something original, something Prince was composing in real time. But here’s the thing, the melody sounded like Stevie Wonders style. It had that Stevie DNA, the harmonic movements, the syncupation, the way the chords resolved.

Prince was playing jazz, but he was playing it in Steviey’s voice. Stevie, sitting in the front row, tilted his head. He recognized what was happening. Prince wasn’t just playing jazz piano. He was paying tribute to Stevie, to Herby, to every black musician who built this language. Steviey’s hands gripped the armrests of his chair, his mouth opened slightly.

Behind his dark glasses, something was happening. not visible to most people in the room, but Quest Love, watching from the drums, saw Steviey’s jaw tighten, saw him swallow hard, saw the first sign that this wasn’t just a performance. It was something else entirely. By the 3minute mark, Prince introduced a new element, gospel chords.

The kind of chords you hear in black churches, the kind his father played, the kind Stevie grew up hearing in Detroit. The melody became a conversation between two worlds, jazz and gospel, secular and sacred. By the 4-minute mark, Prince’s hands were moving faster now. Not showy, not flashy, just necessary.

Like every note was the only note that could possibly come next. He built to a climax, then stopped. One final chord, a major 7th with an added ninth, let it fade into silence. 12:22 a.m. The room was silent, not even the sound of breathing. Then Stevie Wonder was crying, not sobbing, not loud, just tears running down his face from behind his dark glasses.

Herby Hancock had his hand over his mouth. Winton Marcales was nodding slowly, eyes closed like he’d just witnessed something holy. Stevie stood, walked toward the piano, his cane tapping. Someone guided him. He reached Prince, extended his hand. Prince took it. Stevie pulled him into a hug, whispered something in his ear.

Nobody heard it except Prince. Later, someone asked Stevie what he whispered. Stevie wouldn’t say, just shook his head. That’s between me and Prince. 12:47 a.m. The jam session continued, but something had changed. Prince and Stevie played together now. Piano and harmonica. Four hands on one keyboard. They played for 40 minutes straight.

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