Human Element
,
.
A simple foreign phrase that rolls o the tongue. It’s not hard to imagine using it in a catchy
chorus, if you were a musician. But Jason Mraz is not your average composer.
¶
e
Grammy-winning singer-songwriter is the kind of artist who can take inspiration from
a multitude of sources. It takes a special kind of bravery—the kind born from a playful
imagination and a wide-open heart—to write the way he does on “Have It All,” the rst
single from his brand-new album,
Know
.
¶
e creative process for the song began with
the Tibetan Buddhist greeting. He heard it in Myanmar, where he performed a few con-
certs in late
to support a human-rights group. But instead of eventually incorporating
those two simple words into a song, he opted for a much more complicated route.
¶
e
greeting sounds simple enough in its native tongue. Not so in English, where it balloons to
eight words with a total of staccato syllables, yet it began to quickly seep into his brain. “I
got to walk around and meet some really beautiful monks,” Mraz recalls. “ eir common
greeting—
tashi delek
,
tashi delek
—was translated to me as ‘May you have auspiciousness
and causes of success.’ Wow, that’s quite a salutation to lay on a total stranger. I loved that.”
|
Jason Mraz catalyzes care
without confines in concert
AUGUST 20 – SE3TEM%ER 2, 2018 | RAVINIA MAGAZINE
25