For the casual fan? No. Buy Songs in the Key of Life and stop.
Produced by Stevie’s then-manager, Keith Harris, the set was released during the tumultuous transition from physical to digital media. It contained deep cuts, alternate mixes, and live tracks that Motown’s legal team later realized overlapped with complex licensing agreements for Stevie’s Original Musiquarium and the At The Close... companion DVD. Rather than renegotiate, Motown (under Universal) simply let it go out of print in 2001. They never looked back. STEVIE WONDER AT THE CLOSE OF A CENTURY RAR
(The .5 deduction is because a sealed Japanese first pressing exists, and no one has ever actually seen one in the wild.) For the casual fan
In the pantheon of box sets, few are as ironically invisible as Stevie Wonder’s "At The Close Of A Century." Released on November 23, 1999, this 4-CD behemoth was supposed to be the definitive statement on the genius of a 20th-century titan. Instead, it became a phantom—a whispered legend among collectors, a digital ghost, and arguably the most RAR (Rare and sought-after) official release in Motown’s history. Produced by Stevie’s then-manager, Keith Harris, the set
Why?