New York Post

ALL THAT MRAZ J

After record label rejected his new songs, the singer-songwriter tells how he got his mojo back — and made his Broadway debut, too

- By CHUCK ARNOLD

ASON Mraz is known for relentless­ly upbeat songs like “The Remedy (I Won’t Worry),” “I’m Yours” and “I Won’t Give Up.” But the twotime Grammy winner was so bummed out by the result of the 2016 presidenti­al election that his writing went dark.

“I write about whatever’s going on in my life, and certainly after that election I was very despondent,” Mraz, 41, tells The Post. “I honestly didn’t know how to come out and sing these happy love songs. So I wrote songs about trying to figure out my own identity in the new administra­tion.”

But Mraz’s label, Atlantic Records, wasn’t feeling the funk in his new tunes, “politely rejecting” that material, he says. “Through their eyes, I’m an artist who’s written people’s wedding songs, engagement songs. I think it’s important to keep watering that bouquet of flowers and not just start pissing all over that.”

The result of that creative nourishmen­t is “Know.,” the singer-songwriter’s sixth studio album, which drops Aug. 10. During the LP’s release week, Mraz will play two NYC shows on his Good Vibes summer tour: Prospect Park Bandshell on Tuesday and Central Park SummerStag­e on Thursday. There will also be a documentar­y with the album’s music, “Jason Mraz: Have It All — The Movie,” in theaters for a one-day run on Tuesday.

“Know.” is the follow-up to 2014’s “YES!” Mraz wanted “to celebrate positivity instead of negativity” in the new album’s title, with a play on the word “no.” “K-N-O-Wis powerful, whereas N-O is a wall between us,” he says. “K-N-O-W-propels us.”

The Virginia-born artist got a positve boost from his three-month stint as the male romantic lead, Dr. Pomatter, in Sara Bareilles’ Broadway musical “Waitress.”

“I loved that I didn’t have to write a set list every day. I didn’t have to pick out my clothes. I knew exactly what I was going to do every day, every night,” Mraz says of his theater routine. “And it was a thrill. Where I was a little uptight in wondering who as an artist

Jason Mraz is playing Tuesday at the Prospect Park Bandshell and Thursday at Central Park SummerStag­e. A new album will drop on Aug. 10.

I am [before ‘Waitress’], I left there realizing that a lot of people choose entertainm­ent because it’s like a little mini-vacation.”

Mraz credits “Waitress” with inspiring his direction for both “Know.” and his Good Vibes tour. “We’re all wearing costumes, and we’re bringing dance moves into the show because it’s good old-fashioned entertainm­ent,” he says. “That’s something that I was never really comfortabl­e with, but Broadway really opened my eyes to [not] forget to have fun.”

You can see Mraz having plenty of fun in the video for his new single “Might as Well Dance,” which features footage from his 2015 wedding to Christina Carano. One highlight of their big day was the chow: “The food was pretty darn good because my wife is a chef, so she made sure that the menu was off the charts — and it was a vegan meal.”

Mraz, who got his start playing coffeehous­es in San Diego, ended up marrying a former coffee-shop owner in Carano. And he recently picked up some barista skills himself at Frisson Espresso.

“I was going in [to the East Village location] every day to get coffee, and I kept asking them questions” about how they make their drinks, he says. They wound up teaching him the ropes. “By the end of ‘Waitress,’ I was working shifts at Frisson” — the one on 47th Street, near the theater —“firing off a bunch of drinks.”

There was a more personal developmen­t in Mraz’s life in June when he wrote a poem to the LGBTQ community for Billboard. Was writing the line “I am bi your side” his way of coming out as bisexual?

“Well, yeah,” he says. “And I didn’t anticipate it. It kind of caught me by surprise, but I strive to continue to learn and grow and evolve and know myself.”

Still, coming out wasn’t easy for him. “It was tough, ’cause not even my momknew it, you know?” says Mraz. “And I realized that’s the struggle that people in the LGBT community have. It can be a very stressful secret that we carry.”

But Mraz — whose wife helped him understand his bisexualit­y by likening it to the Native American term “two spirit” — says there hasn’t been any backlash, or much reaction, period. “Absolutely zero. And I think that’s the cosmic joke,” he says. “We carry around these secrets, and then once you say something, nobody cares.”

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 ??  ?? Mraz starred with Sara Bareilles on Broadway in “Waitress.”
Mraz starred with Sara Bareilles on Broadway in “Waitress.”
 ??  ?? All Jason Mraz needs is love and his guitar. He says he is spreading positivity on his album, “Know.,” out Aug. 10.
All Jason Mraz needs is love and his guitar. He says he is spreading positivity on his album, “Know.,” out Aug. 10.

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