Malcolm Cecil & Robert Margouleff

Fulfillingness’ First Finale cover

Fulfillingness’ First Finale

Stevie Wonder
Body Heat cover

Body Heat

Quincy Jones
1980 cover

1980

Brian Jackson, Gil Scott-Heron
Music of My Mind cover

Music of My Mind

Stevie Wonder
Stevie Wonder Presents Syreeta cover

Stevie Wonder Presents Syreeta

Syreeta
2nd Resurrection cover

2nd Resurrection

The Stairsteps
Perfect Angel cover

Perfect Angel

Minnie Riperton
It's My Pleasure cover

It's My Pleasure

Billy Preston
Beast From The East cover

Beast From The East

Mandrill
Innervisions cover

Innervisions

Stevie Wonder
The Heat Is On cover

The Heat Is On

The Isley Brothers
3 + 3 cover

3 + 3

The Isley Brothers
Live It Up cover

Live It Up

The Isley Brothers
Talking Book cover

Talking Book

Stevie Wonder
Secrets cover

Secrets

Brian Jackson, Gil Scott-Heron

Malcolm Cecil & Robert Margouleff were a pair of producers/engineers/musicians, best known for their synth work, engineering and production on Stevie Wonder’s peerless 1970s run of albums. They also contributed synth programming and performances, composition, production and engineering to a wide range of other musical projects.

Former RAF radar operator and jazz bassist Cecil, who passed away in 2021, met record producer Margouleff in the late sixties. Margouleff had been an early synthesiser adopter, getting his first Moog in 1966 and together the pair set about assembling the largest synth in the world which they christened T.O.N.T.O.: The Original New Timbral Orchestra. T.O.N.T.O was a huge, circular bank of synthesiser modules, based around a Moog modular synth with added modules from other manufacturers including ARP and Oberheim, along with some custom sections created by Cecil. It needed an entire room to house it and both men to operate it.

This was at a time when synthesiser technology was still in its infancy and the pair had to pioneer a number of techniques to realise their musical vision. There was no MIDI standard to easily allow different modules to be synced together and analogue synths often had problems with tuning stability. T.O.N.T.O. was one of the first polyphonic synthesisers (meaning it could play more than one note at a time) and was also one of the very first multitimbral synthesisers, able to produce five different timbres at a time. 

In 1971 Cecil and Margouleff released an album using T.O.N.T.O., Zero Time, under the name Tonto’s Expanding Head Band. A few synthesiser albums had already been released in the late 60s, notably Wendy Carlos’ Switched-On Bach and a host of other ‘Switched-On’ albums including Switched-On Bacharach by Christoper Scott and Switched-On Rock by The Moog Machine, but they generally attempted to recreate the sound of traditional instruments using the new Moog and Arp synthesisers. Zero Time was different in that Cecil and Margouleff made little attempt to mimic brass, woodwind or strings but instead created a new sonic vocabulary of synthetic textures. Just listen to the opening track ‘Cybernaut’ and you can hear the fat synth bass tones, smooth pads, synth squelches and clear flute-like timbres that would help to define Stevie Wonder’s seventies output. 

Meanwhile, over at Motown, Stevie Wonder turned 21 in May 1971 and negotiated a new contract that gave him complete creative control over his music as well as more money than any Motown act had ever received before. He was fascinated by the sounds of Zero Time and was introduced to Cecil and Margouleff by singer/songwriter Richie Havens. The three immediately hit it off and Stevie had the entire T.O.N.T.O. setup moved to Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Lady Studios. There they set to work, beginning a musical relationship that resulted in Stevie’s next four albums: Music of My Mind and Talking Book, both from ’72, Innervisions in 73 and Fullfillingness’ First Finale in ’74, a run of albums that remains unsurpassed in popular music history. Author Craig Werner in his book Higher Ground: Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Curtis Mayfield, and the Rise and Fall of American Soul said of Stevie’s seventies work that “No musician has ever had a better decade… Wonder offered a sound that rendered the distinction between (soon-to-be “white”) rock and (black) soul meaningless.”

Author Nelson George, in his Motown history Where Did Our Love Go, picks up the tale: “The trio was supposed to work on one album together but, in the words of an ex-Wonder employee, they ‘went nuts. Nuts, nuts, nuts.’ Working evenings, often starting after midnight, working into the daylight and even the next afternoon…in that first year alone they completed thirty-five tracks with Stevie supplying the ideas and Margouleff and Cecil the technology to realise them.” Cecil later estimated that aside from all the material that made it onto Stevie’s albums, they had also recorded around forty other songs and had another 240 that were uncompleted.

Stevie and Cecil and Margouleff parted company following Fullfillingness’ First Finale due to various disagreements about their working relationship, although plenty of their work with Stevie was included in his Songs In The Key of Life album. Both Cecil and Margouleff were already working with other artists and throughout the seventies provided synth programming and performance, engineering and production for artists including The Isley Brothers, Billy Preston, Mandrill, Minnie Riperton, Gil Scott-Heron, The 5 Stairsteps, Richie Havens, Inner Circle and Quincy Jones.

Together with Stevie Wonder, Cecil and Margouleff completely overhauled the Motown sound and revolutionised the aesthetic of soul music, introducing a new sonic vocabulary of synthesised sound. They pioneered new musical practices that would be embraced by the pop and rock world as the decade progressed and which changed the very sound of popular music - and in the process, they also created a body of vibrant, influential and at times truly wonderful music.

Harold Heath

Fulfillingness’ First Finale

Stevie Wonder
Fulfillingness’ First Finale cover

The final album that Stevie made with Cecil and Margouleff features highlights like the righteous anger and ludicrously funky clavinet of US number one ‘You Haven’t Done Nothin,’ the tender ballad ‘Heaven Is 10 Zillion Light Years Away’ and direct, simple, simply beautiful songs like ‘Creepin’ and ‘Please Don’t Go.’ With confident songwriting, soaring vocal performances and some wonderfully produced, seriously tight Moog bass/Stevie drums rhythm sections, Fullfillingness’… is perhaps the most introspective and reflective album of Stevie’s classic seventies run, equally full of dark and light. 

Body Heat

Quincy Jones
Body Heat cover

The artists Quincy Jones assembled for his sublime 1974 set Body Heat reads like a ‘who’s who’ of jazz and soul and included Herbie Hancock, Bob James, Dennis Coffey, Bernard Purdie, Wah Wah Watson, Billy Preston, Leon Ware and Minnie Riperton! Cecil and Margouleff were on board to programme the Arp synthesiser which is all over the album, providing a futurist, space-age edge to the deep funk and soul. Body Heat is a haunting, brooding, heavy-duty, atmospheric sci-fi funk record that didn’t really sound like anything else at the time and which easily stands up today. 

1980

Brian Jackson, Gil Scott-Heron
1980 cover

1980 was the second album that Scott-Heron and Jackson made with Malcolm Cecil providing synth and engineering services and although not as well known as much of Scott-Heron’s work, it stands up against many of his other albums. ‘Shut ‘Um Down’ and ‘Push Comes To Shove’ both do that thing that GSH did just so well, matching searing lyrics with irresistible grooves, wrapping up a harsh message in the deepest of grooves. In fact, with no ballads, that’s pretty much what the entire album does, brilliantly.

Music of My Mind

Stevie Wonder
Music of My Mind cover

Stevie’s first album with Cecil and Margouleff was a complete break from his own back catalogue and the Motown sound. Music of My Mind is full of brand new synthesised textures and effects, perfectly integrated with Stevie’s drums and keys playing. Including the deceptively tragic ‘Superwoman’ (about the collapse of his marriage to Syreeta), the ebullient ‘I Love Every Little Thing About You’ and the elongated prog-funk of ‘Love Having You Around,’ it lacked a big hit single and wasn’t popular with Motown at the time, but it remains a superb work and an exciting precursor of what was to come. 

Stevie Wonder Presents Syreeta

Syreeta
Stevie Wonder Presents Syreeta cover

Mostly written by Stevie Wonder, this is like a peak-era Stevie album but graced by the beautiful, distinct voice of Syreeta. Cecil and Margouleff get production and engineering credits as well as taking care of synth programming and the album is a unique-sounding blend of their synth work and a more traditional soul/R’n’B backing. The album is mostly lush, mid-tempo soul with epic ballads like ‘Heavy Day’ neatly predicting 80s ‘quiet storm’ soul. Ending on the euphoric, no-holds-barred pop-jazz hybrid ‘Universal Soul Of The World,’ it’s a quality partner piece for classic-period Stevie albums. 

2nd Resurrection

The Stairsteps
2nd Resurrection cover

2nd Resurrection is a high-quality, overlooked soul album from the band that gave us soul classic ‘Ooh Child’ when they were the Five Stairsteps. Featuring synths and engineering from Malcolm Cecil, whose unmistakable Arp programming and playing can be heard on the instrumental ‘Theme Of Angels’ and throughout, the quality on show here — in the playing, singing, production, arrangement and songwriting — is consistent through the entire album. Add it to the list of weirdly ignored great soul albums of the seventies. 

Perfect Angel

Minnie Riperton
Perfect Angel cover

Stevie Wonder played on, arranged, produced and co-wrote Riperton’s second album and his synth collaborators Cecil and Margouleff were on engineering and production duties. It’s a gorgeous listen that showcases her infamous five-octave vocal range in a series of sophisticated soul tracks. Her biggest hit ‘Loving You’ is included here, but despite it being her most well-known song, it’s not even the best track on this album. ‘Reasons’ and ‘Every time He Comes Around’ are both stone-cold, searing, guitar-laden minor-soul classics, while elsewhere Riperton effortlessly delivers jazz-tinged and folk-flavoured soul with class. 

It's My Pleasure

Billy Preston
It's My Pleasure cover

Billy Preston’s tenth album from 1975 saw him utilising the synth programming chops of Cecil and Margouleff, whose T.O.N.T.O. synthesiser is all over the album. Mostly written or co-written by Preston, it’s a soul/R’n’B album that despite the space-age synths still has a very down-home feel to it, mostly due to Preston’s warm and welcoming voice and the rich instrumentation courtesy of guest players like uber-guitarists Shuggie Otis and George Harrison and Stevie Wonder on harmonica. An overlooked album full of Preston’s impressive keyboard — piano, Rhodes, synth, organ and clavinet — wizardry.

Beast From The East

Mandrill
Beast From The East cover

Mixed, mastered and produced by Malcolm Cecil, this horn-laden, organ-rinsed album from Caribbean funksters Mandrill is a nice fusion of funk, Latin and rock. It’s from that moment in the mid-seventies when the 4/4 rhythms and synthetic strings of disco were beginning to seep into the production of bands like Mandrill but it’s still essentially a funk record, albeit one with expansive influences. So you get occasional touches of jazz, Latin-flavoured tracks like ‘Panama,’ rich soundtrack-esque jams like ‘Aqua-Magic,’ Stax-style horns on ‘Ratchet’ and peaceful synth instrumentals like ‘Synthia Song.’ 

Innervisions

Stevie Wonder
Innervisions cover

An album that was again almost entirely played by Stevie, who also wrote and produced it, with guest appearances from top players like guitarist David ‘T’ Walker and conga player Larry ‘Nastyee’ Latimer, Innervisions stands as one of the musical high points of the 1970s. The songwriting, production and performances are such high quality that Innervisions transcends genre — it might be soul and funk, but it’s so much more as well. From the tender, jazz-inflected ‘Visions,’ the futurist vocal processing on ‘Too High’ to the exquisite Hammond organ flourishes on ‘Golden Lady,’ it’s full of sublime musical moments. Timeless. 

The Heat Is On

The Isley Brothers
The Heat Is On cover

Another collection of classic Isley Brothers soul and funk, flavoured with heavy-duty rock guitar from Ernie Isley and synthesiser work from Cecil & Margouleff. The album is pretty much divided into two parts, the first featuring the awesome synth-laden funk-fest ‘Fight The Power,’ the electronically-pulsing squelches of the title track and another of the rock guitar funk jams that the Isleys excelled at, ‘Hope You Feel Better Love.’ The second half is all about intimate, steamy love songs, including the biggest hit off the album ‘For The Love Of You.’ Another killer mid-seventies set from the Isleys. 

3 + 3

The Isley Brothers
3 + 3 cover

The first of a series of classic Isley Brothers albums aided by Cecil and Margouleff on production, engineering and synth duties, ‘3 + 3’ featured the new Isley’s expanded lineup with brother-in-law Chris Jasper on keys, and brothers Ernie on Guitar and Marvin on bass. The album showcased a new, expansive sound that deftly melded searing rock guitar solos and the purest, sweetest soul. Their take on their old hit ‘That Lady’ and the epic ‘Summer Breeze’ are both acknowledged acid-soul classics, and the blend of synths, rock guitars and the Isley’s impeccable soul credentials proved to be hugely successful.

Live It Up

The Isley Brothers
Live It Up cover

This is the second album from the Isleys in tandem with Cecil and Margouleff, who drop their space-age synth stylings on several tracks here. Live It Up is a well-balanced mix of deep ballads and hard funking, rock-flavoured soul, ranging from the sweet acoustic stylings of ‘Brown Eyed Girl’ and heartfelt love songs like ‘Lover’s Eye’ and ‘Hello It’s Me’, to funkier numbers like ‘Midnight Sky’ and the title track. Confident, assured classic soul from one of most consistent R’n’B acts of the seventies. 

Talking Book

Stevie Wonder
Talking Book cover

The second album released by Stevie Wonder in 1972, Talking Book was more successful than Music of My Mind, the big hits ‘You Are The Sunshine of My Life’ and epic funkster ‘Superstition’ making Motown very happy indeed. Multi-instrumentalist Stevie played most of the instruments himself, with guest appearances from vocals Denice Williams and guitarist Jeff Beck, who was extremely displeased when Motown opted to release Stevie’s version of ‘Superstition’ — originally intended for Beck — as a single. The entire album is just a gorgeous piece of work, swooping effortlessly from the gentlest, sweetest soul to the nastiest low-down funk. 

Secrets

Brian Jackson, Gil Scott-Heron
Secrets cover

Gil Scott-Heron and multi-instrumentalist, song-writer and composer Brian Jackson’s 1978 Secrets sees the pair adopting a contemporary sound palette of synths and a paired down aesthetic to produce this beguiling, late-night set of conscious soul grooves. Featuring some of Scott-Heron’s most affecting songs, “Three Miles Down” and “Angola, Louisiana” for example, pair tragic lyrics with languid late 70s synth-soul, lightened by Jackson’s jazz flute and a solid rhythm section. It’s a slicker sound than some of GSH’s jazzier albums, but it’s a memorable set that is intimate and full of warmth.