John Mayer

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John Mayer
John Mayer live in 2007 01.png
Mayer, June 2007
Born John Clayton Mayer
(1977-10-16) October 16, 1977 (age 46)
Bridgeport, Connecticut, U.S.
Residence Montana, U.S.
Education Center for Global Studies at Brien McMahon High School
Alma mater Berklee College of Music
Occupation Singer-songwriter, record producer
Home town Fairfield, Connecticut, U.S.
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
  • Guitar
  • vocals
  • omnichord
  • piano
  • harmonica
  • percussion
Years active 1998–present
Labels
Associated acts
Website johnmayer.com
Notable instruments
Fender Stratocaster
Martin Guitar

John Clayton Mayer (/ˈm.ər/;[1] born October 16, 1977) is an American singer-songwriter and producer.[2] He was born in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and raised in nearby Fairfield. He attended Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, but disenrolled and moved to Atlanta, Georgia, in 1997 with Clay Cook. Together, they formed a short-lived, two-man band called Lo-Fi Masters. After their split, Mayer continued to play local clubs—refining his skills and gaining a following. After his appearance at the 2001 South by Southwest Festival, he was signed to Aware Records, and then Columbia Records, which released his first EP, Inside Wants Out. His following two full-length albums—Room for Squares (2001) and Heavier Things (2003)—did well commercially, achieving multi-platinum status. In 2003, he won the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for the single "Your Body Is a Wonderland".

Though Mayer started his career mainly performing acoustic rock, he began moving towards the blues genre that had originally influenced him as a musician. By 2005, he was collaborating with blues artists such as B. B. King, Buddy Guy, and Eric Clapton. Forming the John Mayer Trio, he released a live album in 2005 called Try!, and his third studio album Continuum in 2006. Both albums received wide critical acclaim, and Continuum earned Mayer a 2007 Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Album. He also won Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for "Waiting on the World to Change". That album was followed by Battle Studies in 2009, a return to pop, with a number-one grossing tour.

After having several controversial incidents with the media, Mayer withdrew from public life in 2010 and began work on a follow-up album, called Born and Raised, that would draw inspiration from the 1970s pop music of Laurel Canyon. However, the discovery of a granuloma on his vocal cords delayed the release of the album until May 2012, and ultimately forced him to cancel the planned tour. Even so, the album enjoyed a generally favorable reception, though was less commercially successful than his previous work. After extensive treatments for his vocal problems—and a two-year hiatus—Mayer began performing as a singer again in January 2013, and that year released the album, Paradise Valley. The album is named for where he lives in Montana and features country music influences. By 2014, he had sold a total of over 20 million albums worldwide.[3] After developing an interest in the Grateful Dead and connecting with Bob Weir, Mayer was invited to join remaining members on the Dead & Company tour that began in October 2015.[4]

Mayer's secondary career pursuits extend to television hosting, comedy, and writing; he has authored columns for magazines such as Esquire. He supports various causes and has performed at charity benefits. He is a watch aficionado (with a collection valued into the tens of millions of dollars), and has been on the jury at the Grand Prix d’Horlogerie de Genève. He currently lives in Montana.

Early life

John Clayton Mayer was born on October 16, 1977 in Bridgeport, Connecticut to Richard (a high-school principal) and Margaret Mayer (a middle-school English teacher).[5] He grew up in nearby Fairfield, the middle child between older brother Carl and younger brother Ben.[6][7] His father is Jewish, and Mayer has said that he relates to Judaism.[8] As a middle school student, Mayer became close friends with future tennis star James Blake, and they often played Nintendo together after school.[9] He attended the Center for Global Studies at Brien McMahon High School in Norwalk for his junior year (then known as the Center for Japanese Studies Abroad, a magnet program for learning Japanese).[10]

After watching Michael J. Fox's guitar performance as Marty McFly in Back to the Future, Mayer became fascinated with the instrument. When he turned 13, his father rented one for him.[11][12] A neighbor gave Mayer a Stevie Ray Vaughan cassette, which cultivated Mayer's love of blues music.[13]a[›] According to Mayer, his fascination with Vaughan started a "genealogical hunt" that led him to other blues guitarists, including Buddy Guy, B.B. King, Freddie King, Albert King, Otis Rush and Lightnin' Hopkins.[14] Mayer started taking lessons from a local guitar-shop owner, Al Ferrante, and soon became consumed.[15][16] His singular focus concerned his parents, and they twice took him to see a psychiatrist, who determined him to be healthy.[15][16] Mayer says that his parents' contentious marriage led him to "disappear and create my own world I could believe in".[15] After two years of practice, he started playing at bars and other venues, while still in high school.[10][12] In addition to performing solo, he was a member of a band called Villanova Junction (named for a Jimi Hendrix song) with Tim Procaccini, Joe Beleznay and Rich Wolf.[15][17]

When Mayer was seventeen, he was stricken with cardiac dysrhythmia and was hospitalized for a weekend. Reflecting on the incident, Mayer said, "That was the moment the songwriter in me was born", and he penned his first lyrics the night he left the hospital.[18] Shortly thereafter, he began suffering from panic attacks, and says he feared having to enter a mental institution.[15] He continues to manage such episodes with anti-anxiety medication.[18][19]

Career

Early career (1996–1999)

Mayer considered skipping college to pursue his music, but his parents dissuaded him.[15] He enrolled in the Boston, Massachusetts Berklee College of Music in 1997 at age 19.[20] At the urging of his college friend Clay Cook, they left Berklee after two semesters and moved to Atlanta.[21] There, they formed a two-man band called LoFi Masters, and began performing in local coffee houses and club venues such as Eddie's Attic.[12] According to Cook, they experienced musical differences due to Mayer's desire to move more towards pop music.[22] The two parted ways and Mayer embarked on a solo career.[21]

With the help of local producer and engineer Glenn Matullo, Mayer recorded the independent EP Inside Wants Out. The EP includes eight songs with Mayer on lead vocals and guitars. For the opening track, "Back To You", a full band was enlisted, including the EP's co-producer David "DeLa" LaBruyere on bass guitars.[23] Cook had co-written many of the album's songs, including its first commercial single release, "No Such Thing",[22] However, his only performance contribution was backing vocals on the song "Comfortable".

Major label and commercial success (2000–2004)

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Mayer and LaBruyere performed throughout Georgia and nearby states.[citation needed] Also, as his career coincided with the then-nascent internet music market, Mayer benefited from an online following.[24] A March 2000 appearance at the South by Southwest music festival brought him to the attention of "launch" label, Aware Records.[16][25] After including him in Aware Festival concerts and his songs on Aware compilations, in early 2001, Aware released Mayer's internet-only album titled, Room for Squares. During this time, Aware concluded a deal with Columbia Records that gave Columbia first pick in signing Aware artists.[26] In September, Columbia remixed and re-released Room for Squares.[27] As part of the major label "debut", the album's artwork was updated, and the track "3x5" was added. The re-release included reworked studio versions of the first four songs from Inside Wants Out.[28]

By the end of 2002, Room for Squares had spawned several radio hits, including "No Such Thing", "Your Body Is a Wonderland", and ultimately, "Why Georgia". It also received general praise critically, and Mayer drew comparisons to Dave Matthews.[21][27] In 2003, Mayer won a Grammy for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for "Your Body Is a Wonderland".[29] In his acceptance speech he remarked, "This is very, very fast, and I promise to catch up".[16] He also figuratively referred to himself as being sixteen, a remark that many mistook to mean that he was sixteen years old at the time.[30]

In February 2003, Mayer released a live CD and DVD of a concert in Birmingham, Alabama titled Any Given Thursday, which included songs previously not recorded, such as "Man on the Side", "Something's Missing", and Covered in Rain". Commercially, the album peaked at number 17 on the Billboard 200 chart.[citation needed] Its accompanying DVD release received conservative—although consistent—praise, with critics torn between his pop-idol image, and (at the time) emerging guitar prowess.[31][32] Erik Crawford of AllMusic asked, "Is [Mayer] the consummate guitar hero exemplified when he plays a cover of Stevie Ray Vaughan's 'Lenny', or is he the teen idol that the pubescent girls shriek for after he plays 'Your Body Is a Wonderland?'"[33][34] That summer, Mayer went on the road with Counting Crows in a tour that spanned 42 dates between July 7 and September 2.[35]

Heavier Things, Mayer's second album, was released in 2003 to generally favorable reviews. Rolling Stone, Allmusic and Blender all gave positive, although reserved, feedback.[36] The album was commercially successful, and while it did not sell as well as Room for Squares, it peaked at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart. Mayer earned his first number one single with the song "Daughters" as well as a 2005 Grammy for Song of the Year.[29] He dedicated the award to his grandmother, Annie Hoffman, who had died in May 2004.[37] He also won Best Male Pop Vocal Performance. On February 9, 2009, Mayer told Ellen DeGeneres that he thought he should not have won the Grammy for Song of the year because he thought that Alicia Keys' "If I Ain't Got You" was the better song. Because of this, he removed the top half of the Grammy and gave it to Keys, and kept the bottom part for himself. At the 37th Annual Songwriters Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in 2006, Mayer received the Hal David Starlight Award.[38]

Mayer again recorded live concerts across seven nights of his U.S. tour in 2004. These recordings were released to the iTunes Store under the title As/Is, indicating that the errors were included along with the good moments. A few months later, a "best of" CD was compiled from the As/Is nights. The album included a previously unreleased cover of Marvin Gaye's song "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)", featuring a solo from Mayer's supporting act—jazz and blues turntablist DJ Logic. The album covers of the As/Is releases feature drawings of anthropomorphic bunnies.[39]

Change in musical direction (2005–2008)

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As early as 2002, Chris Willman with Entertainment Weekly said that Mayer was "more historically savvy, and more ambitious than you'd guess from the unforced earnestness of [Room for] Squares".[40] However, Mayer was largely associated with the Adult Contemporary and singer/songwriter genres.[40] Fame allowed him access to his early influences, and he began collaborating with blues and jazz artists. He accompanied Buddy Guy in a concert at the Irving Plaza in December 2003.[41] He toured with jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, including a show at the Bonnaroo Music Festival.[citation needed] He also performed on commercial releases, namely, with Eric Clapton (Back Home, Crossroads Guitar Festival), Buddy Guy (Bring 'Em In), John Scofield (That's What I Say), and B.B. King (80). Although Mayer maintained his reputation as a singer-songwriter, he gained distinction as a guitarist,[31]

Following the conclusion of his Heavier Things tour, Mayer began working with artists, including those from other genres of music. He voice was sampled on the song "Go by rapper Common, and he appeared on Kanye West's a hidden track from the album Graduation, "Bittersweet Poetry".b[›] The collaborations drew praise from rap heavyweights Jay-Z and Nelly.[42] When asked about his presence in the hip hop community, Mayer said, "It's not music out there right now. That's why, to me, hip-hop is where rock used to be."[43]

Around this time Mayer began announced that he was "closing up shop on acoustic sensitivity".[43] In the spring of 2005, Mayer formed the John Mayer Trio with bassist Pino Palladino and drummer Steve Jordan, both of whom he had met through studio sessions. The trio combined blues and rock music. In October 2005 they opened for the Rolling Stones[44] and that November released a live album called Try! The band took a break in mid-2006.

John Mayer performing on the The Early Show in 2006

Mayer's third studio album, titled Continuum, was released on September 12, 2006, produced by Mayer and Steve Jordan. Mayer suggested the album was intended to combine blues and pop. In that vein, two of the tracks from his Trio release Try!—"Vultures" and "Gravity"—were included on Continuum.[20] Despite his excitement, in a Rolling Stone interview, Mayer recalled that after former Columbia Records head, Don Ienner, panned Continuum; as result, Mayer briefly considered quitting music and studying design full-time.[18]

The first single from Continuum was "Waiting on the World to Change", which debuted on The Ron and Fez Show. The song was the third most downloaded song of the week on the iTunes Store following its release on July 11, 2006,[citation needed] and debuted at number 25 on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart.[citation needed] On August 23, 2006, Mayer debuted the entire album on the Los Angeles radio station Star 98.7, offering commentary on each track.[45] A subsequent version was released the next day on the Clear Channel Music website as a streaming sneak preview. On September 21, 2006, Mayer appeared on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, playing "Waiting on the World to Change" and "Slow Dancing in a Burning Room". The song "Gravity" was featured on the television series House, in the episode "Cane & Able" and Numb3rs. He recorded a session for the British program Live from Abbey Road at Abbey Road Studios on October 22, 2006.[citation needed]

On December 7, 2006, Mayer was nominated for five Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year.[citation needed] The Trio received a nomination for Try!. He won two: Best Pop Song with Vocal for "Waiting on the World to Change" and Best Pop Album for Continuum.[29] Mayer remixed an acoustic version of his single "Waiting on the World to Change" with vocal additions from fellow musician Ben Harper. In preparation for Continuum, Mayer had booked the Village Recorder in Los Angeles to record five acoustic versions of his songs with veteran musician Robbie McIntosh. These recordings became The Village Sessions, an EP released on December 12, 2006. As usual, Mayer oversaw the artwork.[46]

Mayer was featured on the cover of Rolling Stone (#1020) in February 2007, along with John Frusciante and Derek Trucks. He was named as one of the "New Guitar Gods", and the cover nicknamed him "Slowhand, Jr.", a reference to Eric Clapton.[14] The initial North American Continuum tour ended on February 28, 2007, with a show at Madison Square Garden that the New York Post described as "career-defining".[47]

On November 20, 2007, the re-issue of Continuum became available online and in stores. The release contained a bonus disc of six live songs from his 2007 tour: five from Continuum and a cover of the Ray Charles song "I Don't Need No Doctor".[48] His new single, "Say", became available through iTunes.[citation needed] On December 6, 2007, "Belief" was nominated for Best Male Pop Vocal for the 50th Annual Grammy Awards. He accompanied Alicia Keys on guitar on her song "No One" at the ceremony.[citation needed] Additionally, he was selected by the editors of Time magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential People of 2007, listed among artists and entertainers.[49]

In February 2008, Mayer hosted a three-day Caribbean cruise event that included performances with various musicians including David Ryan Harris, Brett Dennen, Colbie Caillat, and Dave Barnes, among others. The event was called "The Mayercraft Carrier" and was held aboard the cruise ship known as the Carnival Victory.[50] A follow up cruise titled "Mayercraft Carrier 2" sailed from Los Angeles March 27–31, 2009 on the Carnival Splendor.[citation needed]

On July 1, 2008, Mayer released Where the Light Is, a live concert film of Mayer's performance at the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on December 8, 2007.[51] The film was directed by Danny Clinch.[52] It features an acoustic set and a set with the Trio, followed by a set with the band from the Continuum album.[53]

Battle Studies (2009)

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Australian artist Guy Sebastian invited Mayer to collaborate on three songs from his 2009 album Like It Like That.[54] Mayer also played guitar on the title track of Crosby Loggins' debut LP, Time to Move.[55]

On July 7, 2009, Mayer performed an instrumental guitar version of Michael Jackson's "Human Nature" at Jackson's televised memorial service.[56] He co-wrote "Worlds of Chance" with Demi Lovato for her second album Here We Go Again, released later that month.[57]

After the overwhelming success of Continuum, Mayer confessed to be intimidated with beginning on a follow-up. However, he stated, "I think it got a lot easier when I realized that no matter what I do, it's not going to be Continuum, good or bad."[58] On November 17, 2009, Mayer's fourth studio album, Battle Studies, debuted at number one on the U.S. Billboard 200 album chart.[59] The first single, "Who Says", was released on September 24, 2009 in advance of the album, followed on October 19 by "Heartbreak Warfare" and "Half of My Heart" on June 21, 2010. The accompanying arena tour grossed 45 million.[60] Despite the album's commercial success, critics reactions were mixed. Some reviews glowed, calling it his "most adventurous",[61][62] others called the album "safe" and noted that "Mayer the singer-songwriter and Mayer the man about town sometimes seem disconnected, like they don't even belong in the same body".[15][63][64][65] Mayer admitted to Rolling Stone that he thought Battle Studies was not his best album.[66][67]

Personal troubles and hiatus (2010–2013)

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I did a lot of therapy, like anti-acid reflux, and it didn’t work, then I went on vocal rest. No alcohol. No spicy food. No talking. Most of September I wasn’t talking at all. I'd have a Bluetooth keyboard, and someone would have an iPad to read what I type. I had to point to menus at restaurants.

John Mayer[68]

Following two revealing and highly controversial magazine interviews in February 2010 with Rolling Stone and Playboy magazines,[69] Mayer withdrew from public life and ceased giving interviews. While still on tour for Battle Studies, he began work in earnest on his fifth studio album—which drew on the popular music of Laurel Canyon in the early 1970s.[70] Around this time, he began to experience vocal problems, and sought medical assistance.[60] On September 16, 2011, he posted on his blog that his next record, Born and Raised, would be delayed due to treatment he was receiving for a granuloma discovered on his vocal cords.[71] Mayer described the event as a "temporary setback" and added that the album was entirely finished except for a few vocal tracks.[72] A month later, on October 20, 2011, Mayer posted, "I had surgery this afternoon to remove it and am now on complete vocal rest for a month or more," during which he planned to "travel the country, look, and listen".[73] However, the surgery did not work as expected, and he had to undergo another one that August.[68][74] During his travels, he visited and fell in love with Bozeman, Montana, where he bought a house and re-settled in the spring of 2012.[75][76]

With his treatments complete, Mayer finished the vocals on Born and Raised,[60] and the album's first single, "Shadow Days", was released on February 27, 2012. The following day, he released the track listing for the album, announcing that it would be released on May 22 of that year.[77] He described it as his "most honest" album,[75] and begin booking dates at more "intimate" venues than for Battle Studies.[60] He also accepted an invitation to appear at the South by Southwest festival.[60] However, the granuloma returned, and on March 9, 2012, Mayer announced that he had been forced to cancel his tour and refrain from all singing indefinitely.[78] Even so, Born and Raised was released as scheduled, and entered the Billboard 200 chart at number one, selling 219,000 copies in its first week.[60] It also received generally positive critical feedback; Rolling Stone rated it number 17 on its list of the 50 Best Albums of 2012,[79] and People magazine called it "a shimmering album".[80] Meanwhile, Mayer brought a new focus to his guitar playing and, fearing that his vocal cords had been permanently damaged, tried to come to terms with a possible future as a session musician.[60] Determined to be cured, he sought help from the UCLA Voice Center.[60] That September, otolaryngologist Dr. Gerald Berke paralyzed Mayer's vocal cords with a series of high-dose Botox injections, hoping that they would allow the granuloma to heal.[60] Mayer's vocal rest extended to several months and,[81] unable to even talk, his performances were limited to accompanying other artists on guitar. He appeared in September 2012 on Saturday Night Live, where he joined musical guest Frank Ocean.[82] He played with the Rolling Stones in New Jersey in December 2012.[60]

By January 2013, Mayer had recovered sufficiently enough to perform at a benefit concert in Bozeman, after almost two years without singing publicly.[83] In April 2013, he made an appearance at the Crossroads Guitar Festival,[84] and at the 28th Annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, where he inducted the late Albert King.[85] A show at the Tuscaloosa Amphitheater in Alabama on April 25, 2013, followed by a set at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival the next day, marked his first full-length concerts since his health troubles.[60][86][87]

Paradise Valley (2013–present)

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Mayer performing at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, on December 17, 2013

In June 2013, Mayer announced that he was finishing work on his sixth album, Paradise Valley.[88] Produced by Don Was, the album features "low-key folk-rock tunes".[70][89] He collaborated with Frank Ocean on the song "Wildfire Pt. 2",[90] and with Katy Perry on "Who You Love".[91] The latter song would go on to become the album's third single, and an accompanying music video was released on December 17.[92] On June 18, 2013, he released a lyric video for the album's first single, "Paper Doll", on his official YouTube page.[93] The album was released August 20, 2013,[94] and—meeting with positive reviews[95]— debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 145,560 copies in the United States.[96] Mayer embarked on a tour, his first in three years, in support of Born and Raised and Paradise Valley. The American leg of the tour ran from July to December 2013 with Interscope recording artist Phillip Phillips serving as support act.[97][98] The tour visited Australia in April 2014.[99]

During a concert in Adelaide, Mayer covered the Beyoncé song "XO" .[100] One month later, on May 22, he released a studio version of the song on his SoundCloud account.[101] It was made available for digital download by Columbia Records on May 27, 2014 through the iTunes Store.[102] For the week ending June 1, 2014, Mayer's version debuted at number 90 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 13 on the US Hot Rock Songs chart.[103][104] On the Canadian Hot 100, "XO" peaked at a position of 76.[105] The single also peaked at number 81 on the Australian Singles Chart (its debut week),[106] and at number 95 on the Dutch Singles Chart.[107] In the UK, it peaked at 115 on the UK Singles Chart.[108] Mayer recorded the song "Come Rain or Come Shine" as a duet with Barbra Streisand for her album Partners, released in September 2014.[109][110]

In February 2015, Mayer performed alongside Ed Sheeran at the Grammy Awards.[111] As of March, he was working on a "deeply personal new album".[112]

In 2011, Mayer says was listening to Pandora and happened upon by a song by the Grateful Dead; he claims it was soon all he would listen too.[4] In February 2015, while Mayer was guest hosting the The Late Late Show, he invited Grateful Dead guitar player Bob Weir to join him in a studio performance. A bond developed between the two, and while Weir and the rest of the surviving members of the Grateful Dead were preparing for their 50th anniversary shows, dubbed Fare Thee Well, Mayer began practicing the band's large catalog of songs. That August, Mayer, Weir, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann formed the group Dead & Company, along with Jeff Chimenti and Oteil Burbridge. The group began a fall tour in the United States.[113]

Touring

Mayer began touring as a solo artist in 2001.[114] While his early records were largely acoustic, early reviewers noted his unexpected electric "guitar heroics" during live performances.[115]

Mayer has toured North America, Europe and Australia[116] with many musical groups, including Maroon 5,[117] Counting Crows,[118] Ben Folds, the Wallflowers, Sheryl Crow, Colbie Caillat and Train.[119] In 2010, Mayer and Keith Urban performed at a CMT Crossroads concert a medley of their songs and a rendition of George Michael's single, "Faith". This performance led to Urban and Mayer teaming up again for future performances, including at the 2010 CMT Music Awards.[citation needed]

Mayer allows audio taping and non-commercial trading of those recordings at most of his live performances[120] Mayer often shows up at small venues unannounced (or with little advance notice) for surprise concerts—occasionally for free or without accepting the performance fee.[121][122][123][124] He has made appearances throughout the Los Angeles, Atlanta and New York areas, including shows at the Laugh Factory,[125] Eddie's Attic,[126] and the Village Underground.[124] After a public campaign by their senior class president, Mayer performed a surprise three-song set at the 2004 Pennsbury High School senior prom.[127] In June 2015, Mayer appeared as a guest for two nights with Phil Lesh and Friends at Terrapin Crossroads, recreating the Grateful Dead's notable May 8 and June 9, 1977 concerts.[128][129]

Other ventures

Author

With the June 2004 issue of Esquire, Mayer began a column called "Music Lessons with John Mayer".[130] Each article featured a lesson and his views on various topics, both of personal and popular interest. In the August 2005 issue, he invited readers to create music for orphaned lyrics he had written.[131] The winner was Tim Fagan of L.A., as announced in the following January's issue.[132]

As social media gained momentum in the 2000s, Mayer became increasingly active online, and maintained four blogs: a Myspace page, a blog at his official site, another at Honeyee.com, one at tumblr, and a photoblog at StunningNikon.com. He was particularly prolific on Twitter, where he was noted for authoring his own posts,[19][49] and he amassed 3.7 million followers.[60][133] Although his posts often dealt with career-related matters, they also included jokes, videos, photos, and eventually what he called the "maintenance of vapor"—or misguided, personal responses to the media.[60] On January 23, 2008, he posted the quote "There is danger in theoretical speculation of battle, in prejudice, in false reasoning, in pride, in braggadocio. There is one safe resource, the return to nature.";c[›] all the previous blog entries were deleted.[134] On September 14, 2010, he deleted his personal Twitter account.[60]

In the mid-2000s he did comedy sporadically,[133] making random appearances at the famed Comedy Cellar in New York and at other venues.[citation needed] He stated that it helped him write better, but that increased media attention made him too careful in his technique.[18] He has since said he has no plans to return to it.[74]

Mayer is an avid collector of watches, a pastime that he says keeps him "sane".[31] His collection—which he values in the "tens of millions" of dollars[135]—includes a Patek Philippe with a Sky Moon Tourbillion, a Rolex GMT Master 116710 BLNR, and an IWC Big Pilot Ref 5002, his signature watch.[135][136] He has also served as a juror at the Grand Prix d’Horlogerie de Genève, a competition rewarding timepieces that champion the values of Swiss-made watches.[135] He writes a column for the horology website Hodinkee.[137] In his column for January 16, 2015, he wrote an open letter to the watch brand IWC, encouraging it to "embrace [its] heritage, scale the product line down in terms of model variants, and simplify the design language".[138] IWC replied, defending the changes they've made over the years, saying, "We have a wonderful past, it is true—but in admiring what we achieved thus far, we hope you will feel encouraged to look forward to what we achieve in the future".[139]

Appearances in the media

In 2004, Mayer hosted a one-shot, half-hour comedy special on VH1 titled John Mayer Has a TV Show, with antics including wearing a bear suit while anonymously teasing concertgoers in the parking lot outside one of his concerts.

January 2005, left to right: David Ryan Harris, John Mayer and Steve Jobs at Macworld 11, SF Moscone Center.

Steve Jobs invited Mayer to perform during Apple's annual keynote address at the Macworld Conference & Expo in January 2004 as Jobs introduced the music production software GarageBand.[140] Mayer became a fixture of the event, including at the 2007 iPhone announcement.[141] Volkswagen concluded a deal with instrument manufacturer First Act to include a GarageMaster electric guitar that was playable through the stereo system of six of their 2007 models; Mayer (along with Slash and Christopher Guest) were selected to endorse the campaign and was featured playing the guitar in ads.[142] Mayer used and endorse the BlackBerry Curve.

Mayer made many appearances on talk shows and other television programs, most notably, on a Chappelle's Show comedy skit, the Late Show with David Letterman and on the final episode of Late Night with Conan O'Brien. Mayer made an appearance with Rob Dyrdek in the MTV show Rob Dyrdek's Fantasy Factory. Mayer wrote the theme song to the OWN network show Rollin' with Zach, which features Zach Anner.[143] CBS invited him to guest host The Late Late Show in early 2015 on three dates, February 4–6, after the retirement of Craig Ferguson.[144]

Mayer makes a cameo as a truck driver in the 2014 comedy horror film Zombeavers.[145] In the 2015 film Get Hard, he played a version of himself who is disgusted with the “monetization of the creative process.”[146]

Instruments and equipment

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. John Mayer is a guitar collector and has collaborated with elite guitar companies to design his own instruments. He owns over 200 guitars.

In 2003, Martin Guitars gave Mayer his own signature model acoustic guitar called the OM-28 John Mayer.[147] The guitar was limited to a run of only 404, an Atlanta area code.[148] This model was followed by the release of two Fender signature Stratocaster electric guitars, beginning in 2005. A third Stratocaster, finished in charcoal frost metallic paint with a racing stripe, was also a limited-release, with only 100 guitars made. In January 2006, Martin Guitars released the Martin OMJM John Mayer acoustic guitar. The guitar was intended to have many of the attributes of the Martin OM-28 John Mayer but with a more affordable price tag.[149] In August 2006, Fender started manufacturing SERIES II John Mayer Stratocasters.[citation needed]

In January 2007, Two Rock collaborated with Mayer on custom-designed amps. Only 25 (all signed by Mayer himself) were made available to the public[150] along with a 500-run John Mayer signature Fender Stratocaster in Cypress-Mica, including the limited Cypress-Mica model was the INCSvsJM gig bag on which Mayer collaborated with Incase designs. In 2006, Mayer was estimated to have more than 200 guitars in his personal collection.[18] In 2010, Fender announced a production model of Mayer's "The Black One" guitar.[58] Conceived after he finished his Heavier Things tour, Mayer went to Fender and asked for them to hand make a modified replica of his signature guitar; it was the principal guitar on the Continuum album. The Black One also includes gold hardware modeled from SRV Tribute Strat.[58]

Personal life

Relationships

Mayer's famous girlfriends have included Jennifer Love Hewitt,[125] Jessica Simpson, Minka Kelly,[151] Jennifer Aniston, and Katy Perry.[74]

Philanthropy

In 2002, Mayer created the "Back to You" Fund, a nonprofit organization that focuses on fundraising in the areas of health care, education, the arts and talent development. The foundation auctions exclusive John Mayer items, such as guitar picks, T-shirts and signed CDs. The auctions have been successful, with some tickets selling for more than seventeen times their face value.[152][153]

Mayer participated at the East Rutherford, New Jersey location of the Live Earth project, a musical rally to support awareness for climate change held July 7, 2007.[154]

Mayer performed at a number of benefits and telethons for charity throughout his career. He has participated in benefits for the Elton John AIDS Foundation.[155][156] In response to the Virginia Tech massacre, Mayer (along with Dave Matthews Band, Phil Vassar, and Nas) performed a free concert at Virginia Tech's Lane Stadium on September 6, 2007.[157] followed by and appearance with Rob Thomas at the Annual Holiday Concert at Blythedale Children's Hospital in Valhalla that winter.[158] On December 8, 2007, Mayer hosted the first annual Charity Revue, a tradition he has continued each year. Charities who have benefited from the concerts include Toys for Tots, Inner City Arts and the Los Angeles Mission.[159] CDs and DVDs of the first concert were released under the title Where the Light Is in July 2008.[51][53] Mayer appeared on Songs for Tibet: The Art of Peace, a celebrity initiative to support Tibet and the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso.[160] Mayer (along with Keith Urban) headline Tiger Jam 2011 in Las Vegas to help raise around $750,000 for the Tiger Woods Foundation.[161] In January 2013, Mayer participated with Zac Brown in a benefit concert in Bozeman, Montana where they raised more than $100,000 for firefighters who battled a wildfire in the summer of 2012 in Paradise Valley that destroyed 12,000 acres.[83][162]

Controversy

Mayer's relationship with Jessica Simpson coincided with behavior changes that significantly increased his tabloid exposure.[8][16][163] Early in his career, he had expressed his resolve to completely avoid drugs, alcohol, clubbing, "red-carpet" events, dating celebrities, and anything that he felt would detract the focus from his music.[164] In interviews, however, Mayer alluded to experiencing an extreme "anxiety bender" episode in his twenties that motivated him to be less reclusive.[15][16] In 2006, he first mentioned that he had begun using marijuana,[18] he began making appearances at clubs in Los Angeles and New York City, and Simpson became the first in a string of famous girlfriends, including Jennifer Aniston and Minka Kelly.[151] By 2007, his personal life had become regular fodder for the gossip media and, as a result, Mayer made efforts to control his public image.[31] His online presence increased (including daily posts on Twitter),[31] he began to stage pranks for the paparazzi,[165] and he hosted a segment for the gossip show TMZ.[166]

<templatestyles src="Template:Quote_box/styles.css" />

I abused that ability to express myself, to the point where I was expressing things that weren't true to my thoughts.[74]

John Mayer, Rolling Stone interview, January 2013

In early 2010, Mayer gave a controversial interview to Playboy magazine,[69] in which he revealed sexually explicit details about his former girlfriends Jessica Simpson and Jennifer Aniston—calling his relationship with the former "sexual napalm".[8] In response to a question about his interest in dating black women, he said, "My dick is sort of like a white supremacist. I've got a Benetton heart and a fuckin' David Duke cock. I'm going to start dating separately from my dick."[8] He also used the word "nigger" in the interview. This set off accusations in the media of him being a misogynist, kiss-and-tell ex-boyfriend, and racist.[167] He apologized via Twitter for his use of the word "nigger", saying, "It was arrogant of me to think I could intellectualize...a word that is so emotionally charged".[168] He also tearfully apologized to his band and fans at his concert in Nashville later that night.[169] In the following two years, he left New York and retreated from the media.[70] Reflecting on that time in a May 2012 episode of The Ellen DeGeneres Show, he said, "I lost my head for a little while and I did a couple of dumb interviews and it kind of woke me up...It was a violent crash into being an adult. For a couple of years, it was just figuring it all out, and I'm glad I actually stayed out of the spotlight."[75][170][171]

Pop singer Taylor Swift performed vocals for the song "Half of My Heart" on Mayer's November 2009 album Battle Studies.[172] Rumors began to circulate in the media that they two were a couple, an assertion that neither addressed. However, Swift released a song called "Dear John" in 2010, which was widely believed to be about her relationship with him. In June 2012, Mayer criticized the song, saying she never contacted him and that "it's abusing your talent to rub your hands together and go, 'Wait till he gets a load of this!'"[173] The song "Paper Doll",—the first single from Mayer's album Paradise Valley—was reportedly a response,[174] an assertion which Mayer has neither confirmed nor denied.[175]

In March 2014, Mayer sued watch dealer Robert Maron for $656,000 when he discovered that seven of the $5 million in watches he purchased from the dealer contained counterfeit parts.[176][177] He dropped the charges in May 2015, releasing a statement that asserted that research restored his "belief that Bob Maron is an expert on Rolex watches, and confirmed that Bob Maron never sold him a counterfeit watch".[178]

Discography

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Awards

Grammy Awards

Mayer has won seven awards from nineteen nominations.[29]

Year Awardee Category Result
2003 John Mayer Best New Artist Nominated
"Your Body Is a Wonderland" Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Won
2005 "Daughters" Song of the Year Won
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Won
2007 Continuum Album of the Year Nominated
Best Pop Vocal Album Won
Try! Best Rock Album Nominated
"Waiting on the World to Change" Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Won
"Route 66" Best Male Rock Vocal Performance Nominated
2008 "Belief" Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Nominated
2009 "Say" Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Won
Best Song Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media Nominated
"Gravity" Best Male Rock Vocal Performance Won
"Lesson Learned" Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals Nominated
Where the Light Is: John Mayer Live in Los Angeles Best Long Form Music Video Nominated
2011 Battle Studies Best Pop Vocal Album Nominated
"Half of My Heart" Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Nominated
"Crossroads" Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance Nominated
2013 Channel Orange (featured artist) Album of the Year Nominated

Others awards and nominations

Year Award Category
2002 MTV Video Music Awards
  • Best New Artist in a Video for "No Such Thing" – nominated
Orville H. Gibson Guitar Awards
  • Les Paul Horizon Award (Most Promising Up and Coming Guitarist)
VH1 Big in 2002 Awards
  • Can't Get You Out of My Head Award for "No Such Thing"
Pollstar Concert Industry Awards
  • Best New Artist Tour
2003 20th Annual ASCAP Awards
  • Most Performed Songs – "No Such Thing" (shared with Clay Cook)[179]
    Awarded to songwriters and publishers of the most performed songs in the ASCAP repertory for the award period.
31st Annual American Music Awards
  • Favorite Male Artist – Pop or Rock 'n Roll Music
15th Annual Boston Music Awards
  • Act of the Year[180]
  • Male Vocalist of the Year
  • Song of the Year for "Your Body Is a Wonderland"
MTV Video Music Awards
  • Best Male Video
Radio Music Awards
  • Modern Adult Contemporary Radio Artist of the Year
  • Best Hook-Up Song for "Your Body Is a Wonderland"
Teen People Awards
  • Choice Music – Male Artist
  • Choice Music – Album for Any Given Thursday
Danish Music Awards
  • Best New Artist
2004 BDS Certified Spin Awards
March 2004 recipients
  • Reached 100,000 spins for "Why Georgia"
2005 33rd annual American Music Awards
  • Adult Contemporary: Favorite Artist
World Music Awards
  • World's Best Selling Rock Act
People's Choice Awards
  • Favorite Male Artist
2006 ASCAP Awards
  • Most Performed Songs – "Daughters"[181]
2007 35th Annual American Music Awards
  • Adult Contemporary Music – nominated
23rd Annual TEC Awards
  • Tour Sound Production (for the Continuum Tour)
  • Record Production/Single or Track (for production on "Waiting on the World to Change")
  • Record Production/Album (from production on Continuum)
2009 ASCAP Awards
  • Most Performed Songs – "Say"[182]

See also

Notes

^ a: Generally, it was believed that Mayer's father, a Bridgeport High School principal, had given him a tape player (confiscated from a student) that happened to contain Stevie Ray Vaughan album. However, in a 2006 interview on the New Zealand show Close Up (and other interviews), Mayer said that this was not true.[13]
^ b: "Bittersweet Poetry" was released in the summer of 2007 (three years after its creation) as an iTunes pre-order bonus track to the album Graduation.
^ c: The quote is taken from the posthumously-published book Battle Studies by Colonel Ardant Du Picq (d. 1870)

References

Footnotes

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Bibliography

External links