New York Post

Righton key

Star pianist Robert Glasper melds classic jazz with R&B and hip-hop

- By CHUCK ARNOLD carnold@nypost.com

DURING his October residency at the Blue Note, Grammy-winning jazz pianist Robert Glasper will be hard-pressed to top one of his previous shows at the West Village institutio­n.

That’s because Kanye West — the perpetuall­y controvers­ial rapper who just changed his name to Ye — once sat in with Glasper at the club.

“I did a week here with different guests, and one day I had [rapper] Lupe Fiasco be my special guest,” Glasper tells The Post while sitting in his dressing room before a sound check for opening night earlier this week. “Between the first and second set, Mos [Def] calls me. He’s like, ‘Yo, I’m coming through, and I’m bringing Ye with me.’ ”

After a little prodding from Fiasco, West and Mos Def ended up hitting the stage. “I doubt Blue Note’s ever been that lit. Everybody was on their chairs,” says Glasper of that surprise-rapper trifecta. “They rhymed, freestyled back and forth, like, 30 minutes. Dude, I tell you, that s - - t was wild.”

That 2011 moment will be the one to beat as Glasper plays his remaining 44 shows over 22 nights, through Oct. 28. Along the way, the genrebendi­ng artist — who has worked with everyone from Erykah Badu and Norah Jones to Kendrick Lamar and Stevie Wonder — will be switching it up with different musical themes (such as a Miles Davis tribute) and band configurat­ions (including a trio featuring Yasiin Bey, the artist formerly known as Mos Def), plus surprise guests.

Not that Glasper has gotten along with everyone he’s collaborat­ed with: In August, he went viral for slamming Lauryn Hill on a Houston radio show. Glasper said she mistreated her musicians and cut their pay for a 2008 show during which he backed the diva.

“That was the worst thing I’ve ever experience­d in my life musically, as far as how she treated people,” he says. “I’m just speaking up for the little guy, because it’s been happening for 20 years, bro.”

The Houston native, who is now based in Fort Greene, has come a long way since he first went to the Blue Note in 1997. “It was a jam session,” says Glasper, 40, who continuall­y taps his left foot to the inner rhythms of his mind during the interview. “Soon as I walked out of the Blue Note, I found a hundred-dollar bill sitting right there on the ground. Good sign, right?”

But Glasper didn’t really need the good luck of finding a C-note outside of the Blue Note, because he had talent — and a vision that went outside of the box. That creativity was nurtured when jazz trumpeter Roy Hargrove visited his high school in Houston.

“He had on overalls and Timberland­s and played jazz,” Glasper says. “I’m like, ‘You can look like that and play jazz? Oh snap!’ I thought you had to look like my f - - king principal.”

Changing his perception of jazz as “old music,” Glasper went on to bring some fresh young energy to the genre by infusing it with R&B and hip-hop.

“I’ve definitely gotten pushback from jazz purists,” says Glasper, who won a Grammy for his 2012 album “Black Radio” and was nominated for 2013’s “Black Radio 2.” “But if I’m being honest with my story, it has to involve hip-hop, neo-soul, gospel and all these things.

“I was playing gospel when I was 10. I didn’t start playing jazz until I was like, 16. But those things are all AfricanAme­rican music. Black music is one bigass house, and I just go room to room.”

 ??  ?? Jazz pianist Robert Glasper is in residency at the Blue Note club in the West Village.
Jazz pianist Robert Glasper is in residency at the Blue Note club in the West Village.

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