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Grace Potter

Grace Potter

FromBehind the Setlist


Grace Potter

FromBehind the Setlist

ratings:
Length:
45 minutes
Released:
Aug 11, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Grace Potter's '70s influences come through on her new album, Mother Road (out August 18 through Fantasy Records). The Vermont native built her name as the leader of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, sang on a hit song ("You and Tequilla" in 2010) with country star Kenny Chesney and had a song ("Something That I Want") on the 2010 Disney movie Tangled. Now with countless tour dates and five solo albums under her belt, Grace joins Behind the Setlist to talk about the meaning behind Mother Road, the new material, how she chooses songs to play in her sets, her '70s and '90s musical influences, her music festival and advice a record executive gave to a young Grace Potter.
In this episode:
4:50 The meaning behind Mother Road
5:30 What Grace did during the lockdown
9:00 Playing Red Rocks Amphitheatre
10:30 How the setlist changes night to night
13:00 Considering photographers when choosing the first three songs
15:00 Her parents record collection and making mix tapes
19:00 Covering Lee Hazlewood’s “Some Velvet Morning” with Lukas Nelson
22:50 Playing “Something That I Want” at Red Rocks
25:30 Playing the (at the time) unreleased “Rose Colored Rearview”
29:40 Singing “You and Tequilla” with Kenny Chesney
31:00 The status of the Grand Point North Festival?
34:00 A young Grace Potter getting advice from a record executive
40:00 Picking the songs to close a set
Links:
Grace Potter home page
Grace Potter tour dates
Jay Gilbert @ Label Logic
Glenn Peoples @ Billboard
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Released:
Aug 11, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (39)

At Behind the Setlist, we talk to artists to get the stories about the songs they play live. Most artists are known best for their recordings, but they love to be on stage. That's where the music feels at home. That's where they connect with the audience. How do they pick the songs to take the audience on a journey? Why do they cover other artists' songs? How many new songs can an artist fit into a 16-song set when people want to hear the classics? We find out. Hosted by Glenn Peoples (Billboard) and Jay Gilbert (Label Logic).