Jordan Rhodes struck two second half goals for Norwich to inflict a first defeat upon new Aston Villa manager Dean Smith.
Both were close range efforts that will have been painful for Smith's assistant John Terry to watch.
Villa's goal, which opened the scoring, was also firmly in the 'preventable' category. James Chester was credited with heading home form a corner, although it may well have been an own goal.
Norwich kicked off on the back of a 2-1 win at Nottingham Forest on Saturday, 25 years plus a day since the Canaries enjoyed their most famous victory, a 2-1 win at Bayern Munich in the UEFA Cup.
Villa fans of a certain age have their own fond memories of beating Bayern of course, in the 1982 European Cup final thanks to Peter Withe's goal.
That might as well be Ancient History as far as the current crop of Villa players are concerned, although Terry has his own Munich memories. Specifically joining his team-mates in full Chelsea kit to celebrate beating Bayern in the 2012 final having had to watch because of suspension.
Norwich made a hasty change before kick-off as Alex Tettey's partner went into labour so Timm Klose took over the armband.
Christoph Zimmermann was booked in the fourth minute for clattering Jack Grealish, with Conor Hourihane testing Norwich goalkeeper Tim Krul with an angled drive from the free-kick move.
Norwich replied with too-high efforts from Moritz Leitner and Todd Cantwell before Axel Tuanzebe cleared Klose's header before it could reach the target.
Villa took the lead in the 19th minute from Hourihane's corner. Chester's head met it, although it looked like Norwich's Tom Trybull actually got the finishing touch with his.
Smith's side almost doubled the lead in the 34th minute when Alan Hutton burst into the box and laid the ball back for Tammy Abraham, whose flicked shot took enough of a deflection off a defender to hit the far post rather than the net and Albert Adomah's follow-up was blocked.
The first half ended with Villa's Neil Taylor booked for one foul too many, on Marco Stiepermann.
Abraham needed treatment early in the second half when Klose's boot caught him in the head but it was Adomah who went off with a knee problem before play resumed.
Hourihane fired just wide soon after but the dazed Abraham was soon down again and this time he was off too, replaced by Scott Hogan.
Instantly Norwich equalised through Rhodes, who outjumped Hutton to meet Emi Buendia's corner, although Villa goalkeeper Orjan Nyland was at fault for coming to meet it but not making contact.
Rhodes struck again in the 73rd minute with another poacher's strike. This time he got across Chester at the near post to meet Stiepermann's low cross from the left with a boot to deflect it past the static Nyland.
Rhodes had been a Villa transfer target in January 2017 when Steve Bruce was in charge. The Midlanders bought Hogan instead, as a cheaper option.
wetsar
1
Just like old times from Villa, SB could be on touchline for all the difference served up. Wide players can¿t get a cross over except from a corner. Defence making mistakes and no midfield leader. Biggest mistake putting Hogan on vice Kodji. Still another game on Friday against QPR, no big deal except they just won 3-0. UTV!
Shuntamallett
0
in the words of Pete Townshend .." new boss same as the old boss" and Villa just as bad.
ourselvef
0
Smith out. He's had more than enough time to turn it around
Louleiew
0
This won't be his last
Tyranny
0
come back Bruce all is forgiven now wheres those cabbages
Spencerer
0
Had his first defeat? hes only had two games lol, and he reckons he should have won tonight, get a life Smith. Norwich out classed you with a great young inexpensive team, exception the very fantastic very experienced Rhodes
limited
0
OTBC fabulous just fabulous,keep up the good work Mr Farke.
development
0
Norwich played some lovely, flowing football last night. The early part of the season was problematic. The manager was within a couple of losses away from a change. Since then, onwards and upwards. OTBC.