John Legend
The
“La La Land” Interview
with
Kam Williams
Legend
in La La Land!
Ohio-born John Legend is
an award-winning, platinum-selling singer/songwriter. His work has
garnered him ten Grammy Awards, an Oscar and a Golden Globe, among
others. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania where he studied
English and African-American literature, John participated in a wide
range of musical activities while in college.
During that period, he
was introduced to Lauryn Hill, who hired him to play piano
on her track "Everything
Is Everything." Shortly thereafter, he began to play shows
around the Philadelphia area, eventually expanding his audience base
to New York, Boston, Atlanta and Washington, D.C.
After college, he was
introduced to an up-and-coming hip-hop artist named Kanye West. Kanye
quickly signed John to his G.O.O.D. Music imprint and had him sing
vocal hooks on some of his tunes.
John's career started
gaining momentum through a series of similar collaborations with
established artists. He added vocals to an impressive list of
chart-topping hits including Kanye's "All of the Lights,"
Jay-Z's "Encore" and backup vocals on Alicia Keys' 2003
song, "You Don't Know My Name."
John’s debut album, Get
Lifted, was released to critical acclaim in December of 2004 by
Columbia Records. The album landed multiple Grammys, including Best
R&B Album, Best New Artist and Best Male R&B Vocal
Performance. And earlier this year, John won his first Academy Award
for “Glory,” a song he wrote and performed with Common for the
film Selma.
.
Throughout his career,
John has worked to make a difference in the lives of
others. In 2007, he
launched the Show Me Campaign (ShowMeCampaign.org), an initiative
that focuses on education as a key to breaking the cycle of poverty.
He's received the 2010
BET Humanitarian of the Year Award, the 2009 CARE
Humanitarian Award for
Global Change, the 2009 Bishop John T. Walker Distinguished
Humanitarian Service Award from Africare, and the 2011 Harvard
Foundation Artist of the Year Award. Furthermore, John sits on the
boards of The Education Equality Project, Teach for America, Stand
for Children and the Harlem Village Academies.
Here, he shares his
thoughts about playing his first, major movie role opposite Ryan
Gosling and Emma Stone in La La Land, a picture which he also
executive produced. And he talks about his philanthropic work and his
new album, Darkness and Light, too.
Kam
Williams: Hi
John. Thanks so much for the time.
John
Legend:
My
pleasure, Kam.
KW:
I've tried to land an interview with you for years, so I'm honored
to finally have this opportunity to speak with you.
JL:
I'm
excited, too.
KW:
Let me
start by asking what made you decide to do this film with Damien
[writer/director Damien Chazelle]?
JL:
Well,
it really started with meeting him as a filmmaker in my capacity as a
producer, because my company, Get Lifted Film Company, has done a few
movies and a couple of television shows now. We love meeting with
up-and-coming directors who are doing great things. And, obviously,
upon the success of Whiplash, Damien was someone we'd love to
collaborate with. My producing partner [Mike Jackson] suggested we
connect with him very early on, after we saw a screener of Whiplash.
We finally got a chance to sit down and discuss something creative
when he was in the process of preparing to shoot La La Land. The
script was finished, and they were already in talks with Ryan and
Emma to star in it. Damien wanted to see if we were interested in
getting involved. He was originally thinking in terms of executive
producing and in terms of the music for the character, Keith, and his
band, The Messengers. But eventually, he asked me if I wanted to play
Keith. I said, "Yeah, let's do it!" I hadn't done anything
like it before. I hadn't had a major speaking role in a film before.
But I guess he felt that I could pull it off, because the character
had some similarities to my own background as a musician. Damien
thought I could relate to the character, and I felt the same way. So,
it made sense for me to do it, since I was already a fan of his work.
And then, when I found out that Ryan and Emma had come aboard, it
seemed like a no-brainer for us to get involved.
KW:
After
watching the film, I was surprised to see that you have so few acting
credits, because you did a phenomenal job.
JL:
Thank
you! I'd spent my whole career focused on music. Acting wasn't
something I was really pursuing, even though we were doing film and
TV behind the camera as producers, because music takes up so much of
my creative energy. But I couldn't pass up the opportunity to work
with such great people.
KW:
After
Damien released his first movie, Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench, I
wrote: "Appreciate Damien Chazelle now and avoid the rush!"
JL:
Yeah,
he's brilliant! You can tell, just by virtue of the fact that he made
Whiplash and La La Land before turning 32. That's not even fair.
[Chuckles]
KW:
What
did you think of Justin Hurwitz's score for La La Land? Did he
compose the songs you played in the movie?
JL:
We
wrote those together. He, Marius [de Vries], Angelique [Cinelu] and
I. The four of us just sat in a room and played, and figured it out.
Justin, obviously, was the composer for the rest of the film, and
he's wonderful. But since I always feel comfortable singing, that
particular song ["Start a Fire"] worked, and made sense for
the character I was playing. Yet, it posed an interesting challenge,
because you wanted the song to be good and represent a viable
creative path, but you also wanted it to be a song Ryan's character,
Sebastian, wouldn't want to play, given the storyline. So, it called
for an interesting balance of making it a good, jazz-influenced tune
you could hear on the radio while also making it something that
represented too much of a departure for Sebastian.
KW:
Early in your career, were you a musical purist like Sebastian, who
had a reverence for the classics?
JL:
No, I
never looked at myself as a purist in the sense of simply wanting to
recreate old music that I'd grown up listening to. I never struggled
with that conundrum. But I think every artist is influenced by
certain traditions and the artists they grew up listening to. For
Taylor Swift, it was Country music. For me, it was Gospel and Soul.
Other artists grew up listening to Folk, Classic Rock or whatever
else it was for them. But no matter what your early influences are,
you have to decide how much you're just recreating the feelings those
artists gave you, recreating their styles, or doing something fresh
and new that's influenced by them. I think we all deal with that.
There's always the push and pull in our careers of how much we go
traditional and how much we try to change it up and do something new.
KW:
Editor/Legist
Patricia Turnier says: like many people, I think that you are a great
artist and I consider you like the young Stevie Wonder. I saw you in
Montreal when you opened for Alicia Keys on one of her tours. Given
that your new film is about jazz, please name a few of your favorite
jazz musicians.
JL:
Honestly,
I don't consider myself much of a jazz aficionado. When I was growing
up, my dad used to play a lot of vocalists like Billie Holiday, Ella
[Fitzgerald], Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson and Nat King Cole. So, I
grew up loving some of the great standards singers and jazz
vocalists. Also Nina Simone who cut across a few different genres.
Those are a few of my bigger influences, but i wouldn't say I was
much of a jazz expert.
KW:
Patricia
also notes that you consider yourself a feminist. She would like to
know why men should feel as concerned as women about female issues
and how men can advance women's causes?
JL: First
of all, because its the right thing to do. It's fair, you have women
in your family, women you work with, and women who are your friends.
Why shouldn't they have the same possibilities and opportunities as
you? Why shouldn't they live in a world where they are valued for
what they contribute, and valued as much as men are for the same
thing? Who wouldn't want to live in that world? It doesn't hurt men
for women to do well, because it just makes the planet a better
place. There's more innovation, more creativity and more productivity
in the world. All of our lives are improved when women have power,
influence and opportunity.
KW:
I'd
like to congratulate you on your new album, Darkness and Light, which
I've been listening to. It's terrific!
JL:
Thank
you. I'm really proud of it. It's funny being in La La Land mode
today, since I've been in Darkness and Light mode for the past month,
and I'll be back into it for the next year or so. It's exciting to
support this really beautiful film and to have a new album out at the
same time.
KW:
I've
always been impressed by your incredible commitment to charity work.
What has inspired you to do that?
JL:
I've
always thought that if I were successful in this career, I would have
a lot of resources and a lot of influence, and that I would would
want to use them to make the world a better place. Part of my making
the world better involves creating great art, and part involves my
being an activist and contributing directly to causes that improve
people's lives with my time, my money and my influence. I think
that's part of who I am and of who I always will be.
KW:
Finally,
what’s in your wallet?
JL:
What’s
in my wallet? [Laughs] Credit cards... insurance cards... membership
cards... I got my Academy membership renewed this year.
KW:
Congratulations
on the Best Song Oscar for "Glory" last year. And it looks
like you'll be back in contention, since it looks like La La Land's
going to be nominated for a lot of Academy Awards.
JL:
Well, I
don't know whether I'll personally be nominated, but I'm going to be
rooting for the whole team. We have some wonderful contenders in a
wide range of categories.
KW:
Well,
thanks again, John, and best of luck with both La La Land and
Darkness and Light.
JL:
Thank
you very much, Kam.
To
order a copy of John's new CD, Darkness and Light, visit:
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B01MTUIYY8/ref%3dnosim/thslfofire-20
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B01MTUIYY8/ref%3dnosim/thslfofire-20
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