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(born May 13, 1950, Saginaw, Mich., U.S.) U.S. soul-music singer, songwriter, and musician. Blind virtually from birth, he was a skillful performer on the piano and other instruments by age eight. The family moved to Detroit, and at 10 he signed with the fledgling Motown label. His first hit, Fingertips, Part 2 (1963), was followed by many top-selling singles, including Up-Tight and I Was Made to Love Her. After studying composition at USC, he continued to enjoy enormous success in the 1970s and '80s with such albums as (1972) and (1976) and such hits as Superstition, Ebony and Ivory, and I Just Called to Say I Love You. He has spoken out against nuclear war, worked to end apartheid in South Africa, and raised funds for his eye-disease facility, Wonderland.
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