An Interview with John Legend

There's quite a '60s feel to some of the tracks on your new album. How would you describe the general sound of 'Once Again'?
I think it borrows from a lot of genres. There's a '60s feel on some tracks, also '70s soul, and I have also added a modern edge on others, so there are sounds like nothing else that has come before. The album is a blend of eras and that reflects my musical tastes. You'll hear me listening to The Beatles, I'll play a bit of Jay Z or Stevie Wonder next to The Killers.

There are a few risqué tracks on there talking about threesomes, and 'P.D.A' (We Just Don't Care)' is about having sex in public places. Even the video for 'Save Room' has you hanging out with lots of beautiful women, so we're wondering if this is perhaps a glimpse into your new A-list lifestyle?
There are no threesomes on the album [laughs]. Believe me, someone had thought 'Stereo' was about threesomes but it's not. My life is much simpler than that! I don't have several women waiting around for me. Not at all. The video aside, 'P.D.A' is a song about when you really love somebody, and you just can't resist wanting to show that in public sometimes.

What was your musical upbringing in Ohio like ?
I was around a lot of gospel as a kid.

That was through church?
Yes, through my mother and father and through my church. Just being in a family where that was a big thing.

A lot of black Americans have similar upbringings but it never seems like a lot of them go back to church. Are you one to go back?
I don't go to church a lot. I go occasionally, usually when I go to see my parents. I'm not devoutly practising religion at this point but it is still a part of my heritage and I think a part of my musical background too.

'Coming Home' explores a soldier fighting for his country overseas and his uncertainty. What's your view of artists using their fame to voice political opinions?
The song has a political backdrop to it, but in a lot of ways it's just about an emotional young man who might die any day and him wanting to be with his family. I was trying to connect to the human side of what war is. I don't think it's an artist's responsibility to be political all the time - I think your first responsibility as an artist is to make music that people will listen to and enjoy. However, I think that when you are able to say something that is moving, and if you put it in a great song then that is even better.

The anthem of a recent break-up for me was your smash hit 'Ordinary People' from your first album. It was like therapy for just the price of a CD.
[Laughs] That was cheap therapy. I have to charge more for these albums.

Based on the fact that you usually choose to write about domestic issues, can I assume most songs are autobiographical?
No you can't. There are autobiographical elements to the albums and when I write I always reference my own life as well as other things, so I'm just like any novelist or any fiction writer. Sometimes you use your own life as an example but a lot of the time you reserve the right to make things up or draw from other people's lives; things you read about, or things you have seen in movies.

Do you consider music awards to be genuine affirmations of your talent or just gratuitous?
There is genuine artistic credibility to some awards that are given, but they also just recognise people who are successful. If you sell a lot of records and you have artistic credibility, you are likely to get a lot of awards. If you sell a lot of records you could still get some awards even if you are not that great an artist. However, if you have artistic credibility but don't sell a lot of records then you probably won't get many of those awards. So I think that it is like a nexus of artistic credibility and commercial success that these awards usually fall. I am grateful for my awards, because I think it helped me get more commercial success but I think that if I was to have only sold 300 or 400 records versus three million, I probably wouldn't have gotten as many Grammy nominations as I did, and I understand that.

It's Black History Month, so which person of colour past or present do you hold in high regard?
There are so many. Obviously Martin Luther King was very important especially in the States, but even around the world as a symbol for non-violent protest and an effective and eloquent leader. I kind of laugh at the notion of doing a Black History Month. I mean, black people have been so important to the history of the world, so it is silly to single out one month - we should be acknowledging history all the time!

I was delighted to see that you have a track entitled 'Maxine' until, that is, I discovered she was a two-timing cheat. How could you tarnish my name like that?
The first line I had was 'she may not be you, but she looks just like you' so I started to develop a whole idea around it. The concept was loosely based on a song by Nancy Wilson called 'Guess Who I Saw Today'. Nancy Wilson is singing to her lover saying that she saw a beautiful couple at this bar and you wouldn't believe who it was... It was you, with someone else, and so that was the basic concept of 'Maxine'. When I was writing with the guys they said we should call her name and kind of plead with her and call her out, so we started throwing out names to see what sounded the best and Maxine just sounded so good.

Sounded like a good cheat name, huh?
We wanted something that sounded quaint and a bit vintage, because not many young girls are named Maxine.

Check out our fabulous John Legend media player below and listen to his new single 'Save Room', watch the video, and buy his new album, 'Once Again'.

 

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