Program Notes for Amos Lee

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PROGRAM JOHN WILLIAMS The Cowboys Overture ALAN SILVESTRI Arr. Calvin Custer Forrest Gump Suite VARIOUS Arr. Calvin Custer The American Frontier AARON COPLAND "Hoe-Down" from Rodeo AMOS LEE

INTERMISSION

Friday, August 25, 2017 | 7:30PM

AMOS LEE WITH THE SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY

vocalist and guitar Amos Lee conductor Sean O'Loughlin |

Amos Lee (Selections to be announced from the stage.)

See page 8 for bio.

Performance at Embarcadero Marina Park South

S AN D I EG O SYM PHONY ORCHES TRA 2017-18 SE ASON AU GUST 2017

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AMOS LEE WITH THE SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY – AUGUST 25 | PROGRAM NOTES

ABOUT THE ARTIST Over the course of more than a dozen years and six studio albums, AMOS LEE has continued to evolve, develop, and challenge himself as a musician. With Spirit, he makes his biggest creative leap yet. Most notably, for the first time, Lee acted as his own producer. While his last two albums bore the stamp of strong producers—Joey Burns of Calexico on 2011’s Mission Bell (which debuted at Number One on the Billboard 200, Amazon, iTunes charts and spun off a hit single with "Windows are Rolled Down") and Jay Joyce (Little Big Town, Eric Church, Cage the Elephant) on 2013’s Mountains of Sorrow, Rivers of Song—Lee finally felt ready to take over the helm. “I’ve been wanting to produce my own record for a long time,” he says, explaining that he met with numerous candidates before concluding that he should make the move. "What I wanted to provide was a place for musicians to come and feel they were able to express themselves, and contribute in their own voice the way I was able to contribute in mine.” Lee’s sense of ambition for Spirit largely derived from his own live performing experiences in recent years. "Working with folks like the LA Philharmonic and the Mobile, Alabama Community Gospel Choir opened my mind to the possibility of pushing the edges of arrangement away from solitary moments into more collaborative, community experiences," he says. "These were transformative creative opportunities that I never dreamed I would have. To stand on stage and be equal parts participant and observer during these career-defining moments was such a thrill, and I credit the singers, arrangers and conductors for being so open and generous to the songs." Along with such monumental events as working with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra (a performance which yielded Lee's most recent release, Live from Red Rocks), being a band leader over the last decade has also helped Lee hone his craft as an arranger. "I have a great, great band – the most gentle, genuine, musically open-minded people," he says. "I push them some, but they always respond with creativity, and they inspire me to open things up musically. The versatility of my live band has been a gradual concept I've been working on since I started playing at the club The Tin Angel in Philly in 2002. Back then, we would play three- or four-hour shows. We had horn sections, violins, extended jams, improvisational songs and whatever else would come from the ether. This current group of players I have on the road with me has re-inspired me to be more open, and less protective. I think Spirit reflects this attitude, and the vibrations are very much reflections of the connections. "I've always loved such a wide range of music." Lee adds, discussing some new influences, which were pulling him toward a new sonic direction. “I’ve been listening to a lot of Schoolboy Q, Drake, the earlier stuff by The Weeknd, and I was wanting to open up that box a little more,” he says. "I've always loved '90s R&B, and now with streaming services, it's so easy to sample so much new music." To begin the new project, he began assembling musicians who he felt could blend a dynamic yet organic marriage of modern rhythm with classic instrumentation. “I chose the players because I had this instinct and hunger to challenge myself and expand," says Lee, "and the

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foundation of this record was built when I chose the rhythm section.” A performance by the Robert Glasper Trio in Philadelphia led Lee to the realization that Mark Colenburg was the drummer he was looking for. "I remember watching Mark play with such incredible facility and musicality," he says. "He's such a diverse and soulful listener. It was one of those eureka moments, and he elevated everything so much." Lee had known bassist Adam Blackstone (who’s played alongside artists from Jay-Z to Al Green to Justin Timberlake) for years, but had never worked with him. "Adam is a genius," he says. "He's playing and hearing everything four bars ahead of everyone else. As a first-time producer, he was such a blessing to have." Finding a three-day window when both of these busy players were available, Lee – along with his live band's musical director, Jaron Olevsky – went to Nashville. They knocked out ten songs, most in one or two takes, and the core of Spirit was formed. “We had never played with this kind of rhythm section before,” says Lee. “And we came away from these sessions with a hybrid sound I wasn’t able to find in my previous records, but which I’ve always gravitated to as a listener – real gospel-soul-R&B stuff.” This new energy is most apparent in a song like “Vaporize,” which served as a jumping-off point for Lee's vision of the record. But it was equally important that the album’s more straightforward, “singer-songwriter”style songs were infused with a different approach. “With something like ‘Highways and Clouds,’ I didn’t want to just do the standard waltz feel that's led by the acoustic guitar,” he says. “I wanted to add dimensions to the arrangements and try to transform them, rhythmically and instrumentally, so that the album was cohesive. The demo versions of these songs are remarkably different from what came out through the recording process, and it was so much fun to explore feels and textures, and bear witness to the transformation. “The song ‘One Lonely Light’ had kind of a small, short verse with a sweeping chorus,” he continues. “I was always under the impression that if you just write a good song and play it, that’s the magic of it – which is not untrue, but now I also want to think about arrangements that can be impactful in a live setting as well. On my first album, I didn’t think about any of that, and Lee Alexander did such a great job making that album all about me and my songs and voice. But I’ve picked up enough information and experience that now I can inject what I’ve learned from working with so many great producers into helping mold arrangements that are more in tune with what I'm doing live." Not that it was easy learning the ropes as a producer. “It’s not always magic-making,” says Lee with a laugh. “There’s a lot of grinding it out, with people you maybe don’t have a lot of history with, but it was such a joyous experience, even in those harder creative times." For Amos Lee, Spirit is the fulfillment of dreams and aspirations – musical, personal and professional – that he’s had for a long time. “All you can ask for as an artist is the chance to create what you hear and feel inside of yourself,” he says. “The performances by everyone gave me such a strong place to draw from, and being more connected to the arrangements made it easier and more fun to sing. For my first time producing, I could not have been luckier – I was able to get into the heart of every single moment of this record.” n

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