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An evening with

Gregory Porter
PROGRAM
Gregory Porter Vocals
Sat, Jan 17 Chip Crawford Piano
Royce Hall Emmanuel Harrold Drums
Aaron James Bass
8pm Yohsuke Satoh Sax

ABOUT THE ARTIST


Ever-dapper in his Kangol Summer Spitfire hat, suit jacket and wooden-wristband Nixon
watch, Gregory Porter talked about one of the tracks from his latest album, the 2013 award
-inning release titled Liquid Spirit. A rolling piano, organ and brass-powered soul-jazz number,
RUNNING TIME: the first single from the album is called Musical Genocide. It’s a provocative title – was that
Approximately 90 minutes intentional?
No intermission
“Well…” begins this Grammy-winning singer/songwriter/entertainer with a chuckle. “It’s a
provocative title in the sense that unfortunately the word carries significance in our history
– and still does. So I meant it to be provocative in that way. But as the first lines say: ‘I do not
agree, this is not for me…’”

So while, yes, “on a larger level I’m talking about that,” Porter’s song has typically multiple
layers. Musical Genocide isn’t the only song on his acclaimed third album Liquid Spirit that
talks about the record industry. “If you manufacture everything; if you shy away from the
organic artist who’s gone through something in his life to try figure out music; if you’re only
going for the sexiest, newest thing… Well, that’ll be the death of blues, of soul… So that’s what I
MEDIA SPONSOR: mean.”

Luckily, this charismatic Californian is here to breathe life, and vitality, and fun, and
excitement, and passion, and honesty into the musical genres he has loved from boyhood, ever
since Nat “King” Cole entered his heart. It’s the central message of the album’s title: Porter is
here with Liquid Spirit, offering up a replenishing, satisfying brew. As the 200,000 fans who’ve
bought his albums in Germany will attest, or as the British listeners who have heard him light
up the airwaves at 6 Music and BBC Radio 2 will agree, or as the lucky crowds who’ve seen him
at Cheltenham Jazz Festival or playing with Gilles Peterson or his set just before Stevie Wonder
at Calling Festival can vouchsafe: you can drink deep of Gregory Porter. And the best kind of
intoxication will follow.
As the lyrics to his foot-stomping, high-clapping title track have it:
MESSAGE FROM THE CENTER: “Un-reroute the rivers, let the dammed water be, there’s some people
down the way that’s thirsty, so let the liquid spirit free…’”
text
It’s a sentiment that’s of a piece with the slow burning success of
Liquid Spirit, released in 2013 as the first fruits of Porter’s new
worldwide deal with Blue Note Records.

“The word-of-mouth quality of this record, and even my first two,


is a positive thing in a way,” affirms this big-voiced, big-hearted
man who’s as adept at covers of The “In” Crowd and jazz standard
I Fall In Love Too Easily as he is at singing his own compositions.
“When you say the people are thirsty – they want something. And
not speaking narcissistically, everything they want is contained in
me! But I do know that people are thirsting for something musical.
And they come to me after a concert and say: where you been?’ And
sometimes,” he acknowledges with a grin, “I think they don’t even
mean me – it’s a feeling they get inside once they hear something I’ve
done.”

Where he’s been is slowly, measuredly building his craft. It’s a work
ethic – dogged, patient, respectful – that Porter learned at his
mother’s knee in Bakersfield, California. A single parent to eight
children, and a “storefront minister”, she’s paid tribute to on the
simple, elegant, brushed-snares album track When Love Is King:
“He lifted up the underneath, all of his wealth he did bequeath…
of hungry children first He’d think to pull their lives up from the
brink…”

“These are all concerns she’s had, the philosophies she instilled in
me. If there was somebody on the edge who needed just a little help
to get back, whether spiritually, food, housing, clothing… That was
her thing. She as a storefront minister who wanted to go where
people are dazed and confused and lost. Kids walking around who
didn’t know where their daddy was. She wanted to go where there
was trouble.”

Often times that trouble rolled right up to the Porter kids’ front door.
The Klu Klux Klan was active in Bakersfield, and young Gregory and
his brothers regularly ran the gauntlet of racial hate.

“It was intense,” he says simply. “But my mother protected us and


shielded us from that – psychologically as well. But at the same time
we still had cool friends, basketball games and summer league. So
there were two kinds of worlds going on.”

There were also many musical words. Bakersfield was an epicenter


of country music. But it’s mostly migrated population – from Texas,
Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi – had also brought with it gospel,
blues, rhythm and blues, jazz, soul.

“I was singing that music of a bygone era with these old church
members that my mother would associate with. And that still
informs my music. Liquid Spirit is directly from that.”

This rich mixture goes some way to explaining the power and impact
of Porter’s music. But he’s the first to admit that it also means it can
be confusing to purists.

“I’m fully aware that everything I do doesn’t adequately please jazz


traditionalists,” he says with a shrug. But he likes it that way – likes
being able to appeal to the Cheltenham Jazz crowds and the younger
fans of Peterson, the respected, genre-hopping DJ doyen.

“I laugh at the mix of people who show up at shows. I realize I have


to give them all something – and something for all of them exists
in me. There are songs that a 68-year-old grandma likes. And there
are hard-hitting, more bass- and funk-infused things. That’s part of
my vocabulary as well. And I don’t do them as a separate part of the
show – they co-mingle and co-exist. Which is something I’ve done COMING UP AT CAP UCLA
with everything – racially, politically. I’m trying to find that happy
medium.”

All of which has conspired to take Gregory Porter a long way from
Bakersfield. These days he lives in Brooklyn with his wife and
18-month-old son. But, actually, mostly he lives on the road.

“It’s intense,” he nods of the familial absence that’s been amplified by


the international success of Liquid Spirit. “It’s intense,” he repeats.
“I go home and he tries not to let me go the day that I’m there. He
knows that if I have a 5am wake-up for a flight, he knows I’m up and
liable to be gone for two, three weeks. And that’s a long time in his
memory. That’s half his life!

“But one thing I’ve realised is that with all three of these records, I Frank Warren: PostSecret Live
don’t shy away from uncomfortable or painful situations in my life. Wed, Jan 28 at 8 pm
So that’s the emotions that that brings. Today, before I came here, I
was working on a song called Cornbread And Caviar Dreams, which Royce Hall
is about my son. My wife is Russian, and of course my mother made
great cornbread,” he laughs. “So that’s painful. But I’m figuring it
out. I want him to hear the message in When Love Was King. I hope
he has thought and empathy for other people, and mutual respect.
He has some say in this record.

And true to his positive mindset, Porter uses the separation, and the
travelling, and alchemizes it into something magical on stage.

“In a way, jetlag and the punishing schedule can actually take me
there more,” he says of his onstage mindset. “The band will be like,
‘Greg, you ain’t got to sing that hard!’ But that feeling of exhaustion
makes me think of my family or my mother or a situation or a
struggle. When I sing Work Song it makes me think of my mother
and how hard she worked. And it makes me work harder.”

And when he’s not working, this stylish man is relaxing by


entertaining in another way. Kyle Abraham/Abraham.In.Motion
The Ambassador
“I love cooking, and I love having friends over. I think of music in
the same way I think about food, in the serving aspect – you put a Thu, Feb 12 at 8pm
plate of food in front of a friend and it feels good, they’re nourished.
I think about music like that. And the things that I’m good at are
When The Wolves Came
these nourishing things – music, food…. I used to be into massage. Fri, Feb 13 at 8pm
Giving, not receiving! And then some other things that you don’t Royce Hall
need to know about!” he adds with a hearty laugh.

But in the end it always comes back to the music. For Gregory Porter
the songs, and their messages, and their power, literally are the be-
all and end-all.

“I’m trying to come honestly, really trying to be unpretentious. I’m


trying to be appealing, even as a jazz artist, to the non-jazz head.
Trying to speak to them as well. I want to speak to the human heart.

“And I’m gonna keep on trying to do my thing,” he smiles. “Really,


I’m married to music. And whether people keep on buying my
records or not, or keep on coming to the shows or not, I’m still gonna
sing. I’m amazed and thankful and blown away that I’ve had these
opportunities. But if they take it away, I’m cool. I’ve still got my
songs,” Porter concludes, beaming expansively. “I swear to God I am
cool!”

That he is. They don’t come much cooler than Gregory Porter.
Gabriel Kahane: The Ambassador
Fri-Sat, Feb 27-28 at 8 pm
(Bio from GregoryPorter.com) Freud Playhouse
The boards of CAP UCLA and Design for Sharing would like to thank all the members who have made a choice to join
them in supporting arts education and the art of performance at UCLA.

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