Catching Up with Grace Potter
Photo by Bobby K. RussellThis month, Grace Potter & the Nocturnals began their headlining tour across North America, already performing to several sold out venues and generating buzz from Potter’s rockstar stage presence.
The band’s most recent album, The Lion The Beast The Beat, was released earlier this year and features several standout tracks and a few collaborations. Paste got a chance to catch up with Potter about songwriting, life on the road and the science of picking the perfect performance outfit.
Paste: This summer you were on Kenny Chesney’s massive Brothers of the Sun tour, but you played some dates in between as well. What was an average week like for you?
Grace Potter: When we’re out on the road, we just try to sort of maximize our passion for everything possible. I mean we got into this business to play music, so the most uncomfortable times on the road are those awkward days off. Once we’re on the bus we just want to go for the glory. So I would say we ended up doing at least three shows in between each of the Brothers of the Sun shows on average. Sometimes, we would go full-throttle and just play straight through every night until the next weekend. We were also promoting the record so we were really flying around, doing TV in the middle of it, and lots of other stuff. But it was a wild summer. We definitely kept busy.
Paste: How was this touring experience different from touring in the past?
Potter: I’m not used to stadiums. I played a few of them last summer, just sitting in with Kenny for the one song, but never had I experienced my band on a stage doing what we do in front of a crowd like that before. It’s really exceptional. It’s an experience that I wasn’t prepared for, but now that I’ve done it I’m so glad. It makes me want to get back out there and do it again.
Paste: One song that really stands out in your live performances is “Stars.” You can tell there’s a lot of emotion behind that one. What’s the story there?
Potter: Basically, I started writing it as if it was a break-up song, not recognizing the fact that I was actually grieving for the loss of a friend. She had passed away about a half year before I started writing the song, and every time I came home to Vermont the feelings would come rushing back. I was writing for the new record and I was kind of tinkering around with some new lyrics and I had this lyric, “I lit a fire with the love you left behind,” in initially what I thought was a break-up song. I moved into the writing of the song thinking I was telling that story, and then unbeknownst to me about halfway through that first verse I realized there was something deeper going on and that there was a lot of grief that I hadn’t really addressed yet. It just kind of grew from there.
Paste: Kenny Chesney asked to collaborate with you on “Stars” after it was written, but you’ve collaborated with several different artists spanning all sorts of genres: Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys, Wayne Coyne, withthe Flaming Lips. How does collaboration affect the creative process for you?
Potter: Well, you’re bringing a new energy into something that you’re comfortable in. Any time you write a song, you kind of know what you want from it. You know what you’re getting from it. I know I like to write thinking about my band and my band’s situation. So it’s a surprise, and usually a pleasant surprise, to see what other artists do with your work once they get their hands on it. It gets turned on its head in a really cool way. I’ve always really enjoyed that piece of the puzzle. I’ll continue to collaborate with other people and mess around with that, probably forever.