Who has ever heard, Stevie Wonder is something of a living legend, has to know that this situation is mainly due to the "Songs in the Key of Life". If we neglect this time confidently his work since the mid-80s, for what he accomplished since "Where I'm coming from," no later than "Music of My Mind", through to the 1981 "Hotter than July", was individual, most innovative Motown sound and sufficient all to cement the legend status. His artistic descent culminated in miserable "In Square Circle" just a movie soundtrack (to Spike Lee's "Jungle Fever") among the upper levels in the phase approximate artistic insignificance after 1981st But back to "Songs in the Key of Life". As long as I did not have that 24-bit remastered version, I did not know that it is the CD, which I most eagerly awaited. Sure, the LP 1976 sounded good, the recording was to listen to the care in each groove. The first edition on CD was not bad, but was superior to the analog brother not very. But what I bekames heard with this high-bit version, is only one thing: simply amazing! The shiny-working engineer should have taken out the last completely from the master tapes. The "Songs in the Key of Life" were one of the most listened to albums during my awkward age. They still are, only that I now much prefer to hear! The blessings of digital technology thank (comes every now and then before), is the muff and dust, which lay on the heights, now as blown away. Cymbals hiss and clank as spick and span cleaned, the sound is airy and dynamic. The space is breathtakingly: The stereo spectrum is heard a lot wider than the distance between the boxes, it suggests. Happy is he who has a good hi-fi system! To hear this masterpiece in a superb dubbing is really a great pleasure and makes us forget many of the digital crime that had been perpetrated in the early CD era. Ran to the order forms, people! You will not regret it knows God.