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The Third Story Podcast with Leo Sidran
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 15 เม.ย. 2015
There are stories we tell ourselves. There are stories we tell our friends. There are the stories we tell strangers. There are stories we never tell.
Somewhere, in the middle of all of this, is the Third Story. The intersection between the art and the craft, the living and the living, the personal and the professional…The place where all of these meet is the Third Story.
The Third story features long-form interviews with creative people of all types, hosted by me, Leo Sidran. Their stories of discovery, loss, ambition, identity, risk, and reward are deeply moving and compelling for all of us as we embark on our own creative journeys.
Read more at third-story.com.
Somewhere, in the middle of all of this, is the Third Story. The intersection between the art and the craft, the living and the living, the personal and the professional…The place where all of these meet is the Third Story.
The Third story features long-form interviews with creative people of all types, hosted by me, Leo Sidran. Their stories of discovery, loss, ambition, identity, risk, and reward are deeply moving and compelling for all of us as we embark on our own creative journeys.
Read more at third-story.com.
285: Jacob Collier's First Interview
Better audio: thirdstorypodcast.libsyn.com/285-jacob-colliers-first-interview
00:00 Intro
7:45 Interview Begins
9:13 Early Musical Memories
24:30 Learning how to record himself
28:00 Discovering TH-cam
30:00 Making videos
37:30 Magic Mind
39:50 Engaging with public opinion
51:00 His generation of producers and creators
59:00 The creative process
1:08:00 Writing lyrics
1:13:00 Not being in a rush
1:19:00 Dilla, D'Angelo and lilting funk
1:27:00 Honesty and ego
1:33:50 Arranging, cadence and harmonic theory
In 2013, after having posted a series of videos recorded in his family home in North London of himself singing a cappella arrangements of classic - yet sometimes obscure - songs on TH-cam, a critical mass began to form around Jacob Collier.
His videos of Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely” and “Don’t You Worry Bout A Thing” were passed around by musicians and music enthusiasts and by 2014 he was being managed by Quincy Jones and traveling around the world.
He was one of the first career artists to emerge on TH-cam. Jacob’s journey since then has been nothing short of extraordinary. Today, at 30 years old, with six Grammys, millions of fans, and collaborations ranging from Herbie Hancock to Chris Martin, his influence spans generations. His Djesse project-four albums in six years, exploring 50 songs and countless collaborations -represents not just his creativity but his ability to bring others into his world. From arenas to intimate collaborations, Jacob Collier is now a fact of musical life.
Yet, he remains tied to his roots: the small room in his mother’s house where it all began. His first album, In My Room, was both a tribute to that space and a manifesto for his artistic philosophy.
Before his star had really begun to rise, I met with Collier in late 2014. He invited me to his family home in North London, where his mother greeted me with tea and cookies while he returned from university. When we finally sat down in his music room to talk, his brilliance was immediately apparent. He spoke about sound with sensitivity and clarity, blending perfect pitch, synesthesia, and a boundless curiosity. He was still a kid, but one with an expansive vision.
That conversation remains a revelation. It captured a young artist at the cusp of greatness. It is also the first interview of its kind that exists with the extraordinary artist .
Ten years after that first interview, I’m reminded why I started this podcast: to capture history as it’s being made. Jacob Collier’s story is one of boundless curiosity and connection-a message in a bottle that changed the tide.
Get 45% off the Magic Mind bundle with with my link: www.magicmind.com/LEOJAN
www.third-story.com
www.leosidran.substack.com
00:00 Intro
7:45 Interview Begins
9:13 Early Musical Memories
24:30 Learning how to record himself
28:00 Discovering TH-cam
30:00 Making videos
37:30 Magic Mind
39:50 Engaging with public opinion
51:00 His generation of producers and creators
59:00 The creative process
1:08:00 Writing lyrics
1:13:00 Not being in a rush
1:19:00 Dilla, D'Angelo and lilting funk
1:27:00 Honesty and ego
1:33:50 Arranging, cadence and harmonic theory
In 2013, after having posted a series of videos recorded in his family home in North London of himself singing a cappella arrangements of classic - yet sometimes obscure - songs on TH-cam, a critical mass began to form around Jacob Collier.
His videos of Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely” and “Don’t You Worry Bout A Thing” were passed around by musicians and music enthusiasts and by 2014 he was being managed by Quincy Jones and traveling around the world.
He was one of the first career artists to emerge on TH-cam. Jacob’s journey since then has been nothing short of extraordinary. Today, at 30 years old, with six Grammys, millions of fans, and collaborations ranging from Herbie Hancock to Chris Martin, his influence spans generations. His Djesse project-four albums in six years, exploring 50 songs and countless collaborations -represents not just his creativity but his ability to bring others into his world. From arenas to intimate collaborations, Jacob Collier is now a fact of musical life.
Yet, he remains tied to his roots: the small room in his mother’s house where it all began. His first album, In My Room, was both a tribute to that space and a manifesto for his artistic philosophy.
Before his star had really begun to rise, I met with Collier in late 2014. He invited me to his family home in North London, where his mother greeted me with tea and cookies while he returned from university. When we finally sat down in his music room to talk, his brilliance was immediately apparent. He spoke about sound with sensitivity and clarity, blending perfect pitch, synesthesia, and a boundless curiosity. He was still a kid, but one with an expansive vision.
That conversation remains a revelation. It captured a young artist at the cusp of greatness. It is also the first interview of its kind that exists with the extraordinary artist .
Ten years after that first interview, I’m reminded why I started this podcast: to capture history as it’s being made. Jacob Collier’s story is one of boundless curiosity and connection-a message in a bottle that changed the tide.
Get 45% off the Magic Mind bundle with with my link: www.magicmind.com/LEOJAN
www.third-story.com
www.leosidran.substack.com
มุมมอง: 945
วีดีโอ
283: Samora Pinderhughes and Jack DeBoe
มุมมอง 1614 วันที่ผ่านมา
Composer, pianist, vocalist, and multidisciplinary artist Samora Pinderhughes and drummer/producer Jack DeBoe on their long standing collaborative relationship, what happens when art confronts life’s heaviest themes, but the creators meet it with laughter, lightness, and trust. Captured at Winter Jazzfest in early 2024, Samora and Jack talk about the album Venus Smiles Not in the House of Tears...
280: Ben Sidran | The Election
มุมมอง 86หลายเดือนก่อน
Just like we did after the 2016 and 2020 elections, I spoke with my dad Ben Sidran this week about the latest presidential election. True to form, it is a conversation that appears to be about one thing but is in fact about many things. What begins as a somber acknowledgement of the election results turns quickly to a sprawling discussion of everything from Will and Ariel Durant’s massive 11-vo...
278: Aaron Goldberg
มุมมอง 432 หลายเดือนก่อน
Pianist Aaron Goldberg on 20 years of organizing jazz fundraisers for presidential campaigns (this year's was Jazz for Kamala), how he thinks about the potential of music to provoke personal transformation and political action, his own relationship with activism and progressive politics, concert curation, Israel and Gaza. www.leosidran.substack.com www.third-story.com thirdstorypodcast.libsyn.com/
274: Ella Feingold
มุมมอง 4487 หลายเดือนก่อน
Ella Rae Feingold is a guitar player, composer, orchestrator, educator and content creator. She has spent three decades devoted to the soulful side of the electric guitar, and has worked with an impressive list of artists, including Bruno Mars, Erykah Badu and Common, The Roots, Jay-Z, Janet Jackson, Alicia Keys, Jill Scott, Queen Latifah and many more. On her Instagram and TikTok she is a rhyt...
272: Ben Sidran on Rainmaker
มุมมอง 808 หลายเดือนก่อน
In a career spanning over fifty years and thirty five records, Ben Sidran has established himself as a philosopher poet. Equally celebrated for his precise, probing writing style as he is for his improvised spoken word jazz raps, he has carved out a truly unique space for himself. The Times of London aptly described Ben as “the world’s first existential jazz rapper,” and The Chicago Sun Times o...
268: Ten Years of The Third Story - with Will Lee and Amanda Sidran
มุมมอง 8711 หลายเดือนก่อน
268: Ten Years of The Third Story - with Will Lee and Amanda Sidran