The first song I remember hearing
The Commodores â âEasyâ
âWe would listen to this in the car going to church. Something about it connected to me. My family was very musical â most of them could sing or play an instrument. And in church, my dad was the pastor and he sang great too. Things come from the top down and since he was so musical he made sure that we had the best music in church. It was always top notch.â
The first song I fell in love with
The Winans â âTomorrowâ
âMy dad played it all the time⊠I like it because it’s all natural. It was one of the first songs that I wanted to hear over and over.â
The first album I bought
Stevie Wonder â âMusic Of My Mindâ
âThere was a store called Circuit City near my house [in New Orleans] and every week Iâd go there and buy a Stevie Wonder CD. This was the first one I could find â and it instantly changed me. I can still go through the tracks song by song. We were discovering the â60s and â70s all over again when I was a teenager in the â90s â and obviously that comes through in my music.â
The first gig I went to
Commissioned, Dadâs church, late-â80s
âI was lucky because my dad’s church was the hip church. It was the place where musicians would come and I remember this band Commissioned who became a big inspiration for me. They were on my [2020] gospel album [âGospel According to PJ: From the Songbook of PJ Mortonâ]. They set up their amps and the church had never been this loud! I was like: âMan, this is a concert!â
The song that reminds me of home
PJ Morton â âNew Orleansâ
âI wrote this before I moved back to New Orleans. I had started to feel a little lost in New York and LA and this took me back to when I was a kid and having all these crazy dreams, before anybody got to me to tell me âoh no, that dreamâs too bigâ or âyou shouldn’t think like thatâ. When I think of this song, I think of home.â
The song I wish Iâd written
The Beach Boys â âGod Only Knowsâ
âItâs one of my favourites; so simple but complex. To me it’s the perfect song.â
The song I canât get out of my head
PJ Morton â âWatch The Sunâ feat. Chronixx
âThereâs so much music in my head. I’m a maniac that way. When I lock in, that’s where I am and it’s hard to hear anything else. Iâve been working on this album [âWatch The Sunâ] now for two years and it’s finally out. âWatch the sunâ is kind of like a mantra too â just wait until the morning. I know it’s been dark for you but just watch the sun come shining through.â
The song that makes me want to dance
Michael Jackson â âRock With Youâ
âIt must have come at a time in my childhood when âOff The Wallâ came out. There are videotapes of me dancing to that stuff in â82, â83. I was heavily influenced in my childhood, a lot of that stuff stayed with me. I think that’s why a lot of my music speaks to nostalgia. That period hit me the hardest so that’s the one that maybe is deep down in there. I do alright [dancing]. Iâll give you a cool little two-step, we won’t get too far out of the way. Iâm usually behind the keyboard so I can fake it.â
The song I want played at my funeral
Frank Sinatra â âMy Wayâ
âThat’s what I want to be known for: that I took my own path, whether it took a little longer or whether it was non-traditional or not. I want people to be like: âPJ, he always kind of just did it his wayâ. So that song seems fitting and I’m a huge Frank Sinatra fan. Is it overplayed? Not at the funerals I go to. All the Black funerals that I go to, that are in churches, never play it. Iâve never heard it at a funeral. We would probably church it up too. They would PJ it up for me: the âMy Way Remixâ.â
PJ Mortonâs new album âWatch The Sunâ is out now
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