John Mayer
Biography
After making his introduction as a sensitive, acoustic-styled songwriter on 2001's Room for Squares, John Mayer steadily widened his approach over the subsequent years, encompassing everything from blues-rock to adult contemporary in the process. Arriving during the tail end of teen pop's heyday, he crafted pop music for a more discerning audience, spiking his songcraft with jazz chords and literate turns of phrase. The combination proved to be quite popular, as Room for Squares went triple platinum before its follow-up release, Heavier Things, arrived in September 2003. Mayer continued to retool his sound with each album, however, moving beyond the material that had launched his career and adopting elements of rock, blues, and soul. Moreover, he partnered with legends of several genres, making guest appearances on albums by Buddy Guy, Eric Clapton, and B.B. King, while touring alongside jazz icon Herbie Hancock. Mayer also retained enough pop/rock foundation to continue his reign of the charts, making him one of the decade's most popular songwriters.
Born in Bridgeport, CT, and raised in the nearby town of Fairfield, Mayer began playing blues as a teenager. By 1997, his skill on the electric guitar was enough to warrant admission into the Berklee College of Music, although Mayer dropped out after two semesters to pursue a songwriting career in Atlanta. Working alongside former classmate Clay Cook, he frequented the local coffeehouse circuit and began co-writing material that melded palatable pop/rock with unexpected flourishes. Cook and Mayer parted ways shortly thereafter, however, with Cook joining the Marshall Tucker Band's touring lineup for several years. Now a solo artist by default, Mayer recorded several of the duo's songs, packaged them alongside a handful of his own compositions, and self-released the EP in 1999 under the title Inside Wants Out.
Mayer secured a deal with Aware Records in early 2000, and recording sessions for his debut album commenced later that year with producer John Alagia, renowned for his work with Dave Matthews and Ben Folds Five. Although Inside Wants Out had been a decidedly acoustic effort, Room for Squares proved to be a more expansive affair, with several of Mayer's old songs receiving new, radio-ready arrangements. Released in 2001 by both Aware and Columbia Records, the album quickly launched Mayer's career, with "No Such Thing" and "Your Body Is a Wonderland" both becoming Top 20 hits.
As Mayer hit the road in support of the album, his considerable talent as a lead guitarist (a skill that had been downplayed during Room for Squares) flourished, leading him to showcase several blues-influenced solos on his 2003 live album, Any Given Thursday. That same year, Mayer won his first Grammy Award for "Your Body Is a Wonderland." He returned to the Grammy ceremony two years later, this time to accept a pair of awards for "Daughters," a soulful ballad from his lucrative sophomore release, Heavier Things. Commercial and critical success notwithstanding, Mayer's interest in other genres convinced him to take a brief break from pop music, and he tested his instrumental chops by collaborating with blues artists (Buddy Guy, B.B. King, Eric Clapton) and jazz legends (John Scofield, Herbie Hancock). He also assembled the John Mayer Trio, whose bluesy rock & roll was displayed on the band's first and only release, Try!
Mayer returned to his solo career with 2006's Continuum, a warmly received album that saw him focusing on blues, pop, and contemporary soul. "Gravity" found modest success as a single, but "Waiting on the World to Change" proved to be the album's commercial highlight, cracking the Top 20 in February 2007 and winning a Grammy that same month. Later that year, Mayer achieved his highest-charting single to date with "Say," a song from the Rob Reiner film The Bucket List. After "Say" peaked at number 12, the song was included in a reissued version of Continuum, and it took home yet another Grammy Award (along with "Gravity") in early 2009. Following the release of a live album, Where the Light Is, Mayer once again returned to the studio in 2009, this time to record Battle Studies. ~ Andrew Leahey, All Music Guide
Selected Discography
Willow, keep your comments to yourself. no one wants to hear/read them. John Mayer IS talented, and there are alot of people who DO love John and his music. I am one of them. He is original and is a very good singer/ songwriter. His new song is interesting but still very good. It just kames you think more about what the song is saying, which was his whole point of his word choice, in the first place. LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE john mayer.
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I've been a fan for a long time, with him playing Pop, Blues, Rock, and everything in between. What a great talent.
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We love your music John!!! OMG you are soooo talented! Please make us cremes some more!
Sincerely, Homosexuals, Fat married moms and Douchey College Freshmen |
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I love John Mayer, and I have from the first time I heard him, even though I got sick of hearing his first big hit. His music has matured so much. I really like his work with his trio. He just becomes more versatile and more skilled, and his voice is still pure and lovely.
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that is one handsom indivisual. don't ever stop making the music you do john, u sooth the hearts of many and enlighten the ignorance of the world with your lyrical genius.!
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Won me over live...went to a show to see the Counting Crows open for him. Have to admit I wanted to hate John, he seemed so mainstream. The he stepped on stage and stole my breath away. I had crappy seats and couldn't see him but the music was true, hard, and REAL. WOW!! Kudos John, you showed me that one man alone can rock the house down to its foundations. Not to mention, nice looking (as I found out later)...kil l i n many birds with one sexy stone, eh?
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JOHN MAYER HAS GREAT TALENT AND EASY TO LISTEN TO.WHEN HE,S WITH CHRIS BOTTI GOOD GOD THEY TAKE THE HOUSE DOWN. BOTH ARE GREAT ENTERTAINERS . GOOD WORK JOHN . WILL ALWAYS BE ON MY LIST.
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Really wasn't down with this dude until I heard him at Michael Jackson's funeral, (his renditon of Human Nature) all I can say is he did the damn thing! I will be listening to him from now on......
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Loving his music. I never heard all his songs till I heard Daughter. I can't wait to go to one of his concerts!
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This cat cooks!! Either on the Strat, the Tele or that Gibson acoustic that he hits!! The entire band is just awesome. I`ve seen them 4 times, nobody in the crowd was ever ready to leave!!
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he does not look like i would picture him, at all. good singer though.
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i agree with cr917lover. the trio would be an AMAZING combination. unbeatable.
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i think that him jack johnson and jason mraz should do a song together that would make my life
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I love John Mayer, he is one of my favorite artists. I love his soothing voice and his slow songs always put me to ease at night when I need to fall asleep.
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John Mayer is defiantly one of my favorite artist to listen to. i love his semi raspy voice. the one song that won me over was gravity on continuum.
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Aw I love John Mayer, he kinda is is player, but hey, there most definately is sensitive side in there, those lyrics had to come from inside him somewhere!
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I love John Mayer, but I really don't understand the Dave Matthews comparison. They don't sound anything a like. I'm not a big fan of DMB, their music is decent but it's not my thing, which is why i hate hoe the pandora station plays DMB so much.
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I didn't know this guy could jam like he can until I saw him on Leno, I mean no disrespect, but the songs he has on the radio....yuk .
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