Gregory Porter coming to Morristown

| 13 May 2016 | 03:37

Called "the next great male jazz singer" by NPR Music, artist Gregory Porter comes to Mayo Performing Arts Center on Thursday, June 9, at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $29-$59.
Winner of the 2014 Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Album, Gregory Porter has quickly made a name for himself due to his rich voice that fuses jazz, soul and R&B into a unique sound that has critics calling him a cross between Nat King Cole and Bill Withers.
An artist whose music is at once timeless yet utterly of its time, Gregory Porter solidifies his standing as his generation's most soulful jazz singer-songwriter with the May 6 release of Take Me to the Alley, the much-anticipated follow-up to his million-selling Grammy-winning 2013 Blue Note debut Liquid Spirit.
"Holding On" was premiered in 2016 on Apple Music's Beats 1 and finds Porter presenting his decidedly different version of the Disclosure single that he was the featured vocalist on and co-wrote for their album Caracal. "I decided to do the song the way that I would have recorded it on my record," Porter said. "It's a way of saying that a song is a song is a song. The lyrics and the intention of the song come through no matter what kind of bells and whistles are going on."
The rousing, bluesy stomp "Don't Lose Your Steam" is dedicated to Porter's three-year-old son with encouraging lyrics about staying committed one's goals regardless of hardship.
Liquid Spirit — which followed Porter's critically-acclaimed and Grammy-nominated albums Water (2010) and Be Good (2012) — was released in the Fall of 2013 and quickly grew into a global phenomenon, selling a million albums worldwide and becoming the most streamed jazz album of all-time with over 20 million streams. The album sold Platinum in the U.K. and Germany, and in the U.S. Porter made his first-ever national TV appearances on The Tonight Show and Jimmy Kimmel Live.
Liquid Spirit also won Porter his first Grammy Award in 2014 for Best Jazz Vocal Album while also earning him a Best Traditional R&B Performance nomination for his affecting ballad "Hey Laura."
In the Fall of 2015 Porter finally found the time to return to the studio in New York City to record Take Me To The Alley. As he's done on his previous three albums, Porter teamed with producer Kamau Kenyatta to craft a collection of stirring originals that juxtapose the personal and political.