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Mraz happily

acknowledges that

he’s well known for

“wedding songs and friendship

songs,

and remind

you to live in the moment

and

.”

Asked to trace his musical evolution from childhood,

Mraz points to the kind of perfectly whimsical inspiration

that frames his career:

e Muppet Movie.

“You know, Fozzie,

Kermit, Gonzo singing your favorite songs,” he says. (Come

to think of it, who wouldn’t want to hear

his

covers of “Mo-

vin’ Right Along” and “ e Rainbow Connection”?) Mraz,

, turned two years old in

, the year Jim Henson’s classic

musical comedy was released, so it makes sense that his earliest

memories seem more tied to the songs than to the actual lm.

“My grandmother had

e Muppet Movie

sheet music on

her piano,” Mraz recalls. “I could fake along with it because

I knew those songs well enough, singing them, and then

starting to assign those notes to the piano. So at an early

age— , , years old—I started to put things togeth-

er. en my mom started to show me chords on

the piano.”

Growing up in Mechanicsville, VA, a suburb

of Richmond, Mraz continued to show early

signs of talent. “I started harmonizing with

songs on the radio, everything from Air

Supply to Queen to Michael Jackson,” he says.

His taste naturally expanded as he got older,

which led to him making more musical con-

nections: “In high school, I fell in love with

Dave Matthews Band. Suddenly, all my dad’s

singer-songwriter music started to make

sense. I could kinda hear how Dave Matthews

was a derivative of singer-songwriters before

him.”

He got his rst guitar when he entered

college, which he fell in love with because

of its mobility. But there’s not really any in-

strument Mraz is reluctant to attempt, from

upright bass to drums to ddle to harmoni-

um. “I play everything badly. I don’t mind; I’m

not afraid,” he says. “I’ve built my whole career

around accidents. You bang on an instrument,

discover a sound. en, okay, I’ll build a whole

song around that sound or that chord pro-

gression. A er you do that a thousand times,

you’ll eventually get a couple of them that

are really great.”

at willingness to play and the brav-

ery to keep inventing (along with plenty

of hard work, of course) have gi ed Mraz

with a career as wide-ranging as it is

illustrious. He spoke to

Ravinia

Magazine

by phone in early July from Okemah,

OK, where he performed at the annual

Woody Guthrie Folk Festival. And as the

year began, he was extending his debut

appearance on Broadway, playing the

leading man in Sara Bareilles’s musi-

cal

Waitress

. In prior years, he found

himself playing some of the world’s

most prestigious venues, including an

RAVINIA MAGAZINE | AUGUST 20 – SE3TEM%ER 2, 2018

28