The Brooklyn Academy of Music will perform all 5 of Stevie Wonder’s classic albums live over three nights to mark his birthday and the 50th anniversary of Songs in the Key of Life.
BAM honors Stevie Wonder with a 3 night tribute performing his 5 classic albums live, featuring top musicians, on May 14–16 in Brooklyn. The Brooklyn Academy of Music is pulling out all the stops this weekend for one of music’s most enduring icons. A three night tribute event titled Stevie: A Life in the Key of Songs will run May 14, 15 and 16 at BAM’s Howard Gilman Opera House, honoring a career that has shaped R&B and popular music for more than five decades.
The timing couldn’t be more fitting. Wonder celebrated his 76th birthday on May 13, and this year also marks the 50th anniversary of his beloved double album Songs in the Key of Life a record that remains one of the most celebrated in music history. The tribute will spotlight the remarkable five year creative stretch from 1972 to 1976, during which Wonder released five albums that redefined what popular music could be.
What each night will bring
The Black Rock Coalition (BRC) Orchestra will perform all five of those milestone albums in their entirety, one or two per night, giving audiences a rare full immersion experience into Wonder’s catalog.
Night 1, on May 14, opens with Music of My Mind and Talking Book, both released in 1972. Those albums contain some of Wonder’s most recognizable work, including the tracks “Superstition” and “You Are the Sunshine of My Life.”
Night 2, on May 15, moves into Innervisions (1973) and Fulfillingness First Finale (1974), a stretch widely considered among the most socially engaged work of his career, featuring Higher Ground and Living for the City.
Night 3, on May 16, closes with the diamond certified Songs in the Key of Life, which includes beloved classics like Sir Duke and I Wish. Given its scope and cultural weight, this final night is expected to be the emotional centerpiece of the entire event.
The talent behind the tribute
Helming the production are Darrell M. McNeill, Director of Operations for the BRC, and LaFrae Sci, director of the Willie Mae Rock Camp. Their approach focuses on reimagined arrangements that honor the originals while giving the material fresh energy in a live orchestral setting.
The performer lineup for the three nights reads like a who’s who of genre spanning musical talent. Living Colour founders Corey Glover and Vernon Reid will appear on nights 2 and 3. Roots keyboardist Ray Angry, jazz guitarist Mark Whitfield, and Grammy winning harmonica player Grégoire Maret round out the ensemble across the full run of shows.
About the Black Rock Coalition
The organization at the heart of this tribute has its own storied history. Founded in 1985 and co founded by Vernon Reid alongside the late musician and journalist Greg Tate, DK Dyson and Konda Mason, the Black Rock Coalition was built to champion alternative Black musicians at a time when the music industry frequently overlooked them.
Now a well established nonprofit, the BRC continues to provide performance opportunities, recording access and creative funding to progressive Black artists, making events like this tribute part of a much larger, ongoing mission.
How to get tickets
Tickets for Stevie: A Life in the Key of Songs are available through BAM’s official website or at the box office inside BAM’s Peter Jay Sharp building at 30 Lafayette Ave. in Brooklyn. Individual night tickets are available, so attendees can choose one evening or make a full weekend of it.
For Wonder‘s longtime fans and anyone curious about the depth of his influence, this is a rare opportunity to experience that legacy performed live and in full.

