WEATHER ALERT

Who cares? Jason Mraz does

Fans adore U.S. singer-songwriter's musical loving-kindness, and the feeling is mutual

Advertisement

Advertise with us

If you’ve been to a wedding or a beach in the last decade, chances are you’re familiar with the loved-up, ultra-chill work of American singer-songwriter Jason Mraz.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 12/07/2019 (2556 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

If you’ve been to a wedding or a beach in the last decade, chances are you’re familiar with the loved-up, ultra-chill work of American singer-songwriter Jason Mraz.

Mraz, the two-time Grammy Award-winner behind such first-dance staples as I’m Yours (which has more than 729 million streams on Spotify) and I Won’t Give Up (403 million streams), will be making his first-ever stop in Manitoba Friday at the Winnipeg Folk Festival, and after 20 years in the business as a touring musician, says he’s “thrilled” to still have the opportunity to play in new markets. 

“Sometimes it’s embarrassing, like, ‘Wow, how come I haven’t made it there yet?’ But it’s also a thrill. I know the world is a very, very big place and to continually feel like the adventure is still going is something that sparks a lot of gratitude and awe, and then through that, I feel like I still have a great responsibility,” the 42-year-old says from his California home. 

“I like to think of it as transforming new audiences; there could be many new faces in the crowd I have to assume might be skeptical about what the evening is going to be, or they may have lots of expectations, so that continually drives me to put on a great show. And for returning fans that might be visiting Winnipeg for this show, it inspires me to still make it new and make it fresh so they can see us on stage still having fun and creating new things, and that they, too, are participating that.”

Mraz’s musical MO is rooted in ideas of kindness, love and empathy for his fellow humans, and he’s very aware the role his songs play in soundtracking some of the most important moments in his fans’ lives. That connection with those consuming his work is clearly important to him; it drives him and inspires him to continue pushing himself as an artist.

“I grew up knowing that music has that power and has that connection and the artists I love the most touched me in those moments or in those emotional ways, so as a writer I just wanted to emulate my heroes and the music I love,” he says. “And because I play the music and sing the words, they become my mantras, they become my regular language; therefore they become my thoughts and my beliefs and my attitudes…. And then I think because of that, it has the power to reach an audience that way.

“When I work both on my notebook and in my studio and on stage, I have my own personal mission or motto that I follow, which is similar to Old MacDonald, who had a farm, his song was E-I-E-I-O, and I use that acronym to remind me that I’m there to entertain, to inspire, to educate, to be the ‘I am,’ to be authentic and have a true expression to the audience can see themselves in the work as well. And then the O stands for, ‘Oh my gosh, that was one of the best shows I’ve ever seen.’ That’s the criteria I have to meet every time and it keeps me on track.”

Justin Bettman photo
Jason Mraz, a two-time Grammy Award-winner, will play Manitoba for the first time Friday at the Winnipeg Folk Festival.
Justin Bettman photo Jason Mraz, a two-time Grammy Award-winner, will play Manitoba for the first time Friday at the Winnipeg Folk Festival.

These warm-and-fuzzy themes have been especially evident in his last three albums, 2012’s Love is a Four Letter Word, 2014’s Yes and 2018’s Know, which highlight Mraz’s belief positive music can promote a positive attitude which, in turn, promotes positive societal and personal change. But that wasn’t necessarily the same songwriting path he followed earlier in his career; while his work has always had a free and easy quality to it, Mraz’s motivations and inspirations have changed a lot as he has grown as a man and a musician. 

“It’s almost a 180-degree flip, because when I was starting and didn’t have as much experience, I just wanted to make noise and sounds. So sometimes I wouldn’t even edit, I would improvise words and that would be it…. And my motivations were trying to get the girl or to go have fun. I was in my early 20s and hormones were in a much different imbalance, I guess, and through the years and probably largely because audiences show up to listen, it’s made me want to be kinder, it’s made me want to be responsible with my words and have an impact,” says Mraz. 

“But it also has come through the personal development of wanting to make sure I’m developing and serving my community and serving my family and my band members and my friends, and language can be a very powerful thing. To sing and travel is a luxury, it’s a privilege, and I don’t want to ever abuse that or take it for granted, so I felt if I could combine gratitude and the privilege of singing and performing with a thoughtfulness and a kind of song quality that can hopefully heal a broken heart or unite us in a way, then that matters to me.

“I don’t know, it was a slow, gradual transformation, but it was a transformation nonetheless.”

erin.lebar@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @NireRabel

Justin Bettman photo
Jason Mraz
Justin Bettman photo Jason Mraz
Erin Lebar

Erin Lebar
Manager of audience engagement for news

Erin Lebar spends her time thinking of, and implementing, ways to improve the interaction and connection between the Free Press newsroom and its readership.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

‘Difficult day’ as man pleads guilty to impaired driving in bride-to-be’s death near Portage

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Preview

‘Difficult day’ as man pleads guilty to impaired driving in bride-to-be’s death near Portage

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE — Driving a stolen truck with meth in his system, James Lorne Hilton lost control on a highway near Portage la Prairie last winter and caused a crash that killed a beloved bride-to-be, court heard Thursday.

Hilton, 25, appeared in the Court of King’s Bench and pleaded guilty to impaired driving causing death and failing to remain at the scene of the Jan. 15, 2025, collision that killed 28-year-old Kellie Verwey.

“This is a difficult day,” Crown prosecutor Mike Himmelman said as the proceedings began, addressing more than a dozen of Verwey’s family, friends and supporters who gathered in court to hear Hilton admit to his crimes.

Reading from an agreed statement of facts, Himmelman described how Hilton was driving westbound on Highway 26 on the morning of the collision when he veered into the opposing lane and caused another pickup truck to lose control.

Read
Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

David McLaughlin 5 minute read 2:02 AM CDT

Serious times call for serious politics. That means serious leaders offering serious solutions.

If all this sounds like a campaign slogan for the establishment, you’re probably right. But its rising resonance may well prove the unravelling of the conservative populist rage that has been driving politics in Canada, the United States and Europe.

Already we are seeing signs that the “burn it all down” rhetoric of more than a decade of MAGA Trump in the United States, Brexit and Faragism in the United Kingdom, and the angry and anti- establishment brand of Poilievre conservatism in Canada, has crested. Today, voters are yearning for stability and real solutions, the exact opposite of what divisive populist politics promise.

Events, current and past, rightly fuelled the anger. The 2008 financial crisis marked the beginning of our current “end times.” It was followed in short order by the first triumph of Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again movement in 2016, Brexit in Britain in 2016, the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas atrocities in Israel and that country’s two-year invasion and war in Gaza, and the triumphant return of Trump and MAGA in 2024. Now comes the ongoing war with Iran launched by the U.S. and Israel.

Read
2:02 AM CDT

Tanmaxxing trend leaving gen Z cooked

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read Preview

Tanmaxxing trend leaving gen Z cooked

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read 2:02 AM CDT

Picture it: a tanning salon, 2009.

An endless loop of Pitbull’s I Know You Want Me — uno dos tres quatro — is thumping while I, marinating in a lotion with a scent best described as Coconuts N’ Chemicals, am getting a base tan.

I am going to Lollapalooza in Chicago again and do not want to burn the way I did the year before. My fellow millennials will know the true torture that is a gladiator-sandal sunburn at a summer music festival that requires hours of standing. And don’t even get me started on the tan lines after. Like a trussed turkey.

That very same summer, international cancer experts moved tanning beds into the highest risk category for cancer, alongside tobacco smoke, the hepatitis B virus and, memorably, mustard gas. After two or three sessions, I quit going to the tanning salon and never returned.

Read
2:02 AM CDT

‘Sorry’ just won’t atone for tactless ‘tank’ talk

Maureen Scurfield 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

DEAR MISS LONELYHEARTS: I didn’t know my wife was in the house when I was talking to my brother on the phone about her new bathing suit “which makes her look like a tank.”

She walked up behind me while I was on the phone and said loudly, “I guess you won’t want to be having sex with a tank at the lake then!” No amount of apologizing is getting me past this one, it seems.

The temperature is rather frosty in our bedroom, and we leave for the lake in two weeks. Should I invite her to criticize my imperfect body? I don’t want to do that, or I’ll never be able to sleep with her again. Please help!

— Big Mouth, East Kildonan

Convicted arsonist accused in Walmart blaze, caused $10M in damage

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Preview

Convicted arsonist accused in Walmart blaze, caused $10M in damage

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

A convicted arsonist on probation is accused of setting a blaze inside the Walmart at St. Vital Centre on Monday that’s believed to have caused more than $10 million in damage.

“A fire was set in the middle of a busy place,” said Winnipeg Police Service spokesman Const. Claude Chancy.

“It’s a pretty rare incident. We don’t know what the motives were for the suspect committing this act, but (it’s) very lucky that no one was injured or hurt.”

Ronald Marmito Amigo, 47, was arrested by police bail compliance officers on the 300 block of Furby Street on Thursday. He had a small amount of methamphetamine and a lighter on him, police said.

Read
Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

Fort Garry Hotel on Métis federation’s radar

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Preview

Fort Garry Hotel on Métis federation’s radar

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 3:51 PM CDT

One of Winnipeg’s most iconic buildings, the Fort Garry Hotel on Broadway, is next on the Manitoba Métis Federation’s list of acquisitions.

“We are not done with our commitment to investing in Winnipeg’s downtown,” president David Chartrand said Friday, the same day the federation announced it has purchased the former National Research Council property on Ellice Avenue downtown.

“One potential new acquisition we’re considering, if the price is right and the partnership is positive, is the Fort Garry Hotel. It is an iconic part of Winnipeg’s history and its future, just like the Red River Métis,” Chartrand said.

The 113-year-old hotel was co-listed for sale in May by real estate brokerage firms Avison Young and Cushman & Wakefield Winnipeg, but doesn’t have a list price.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 3:51 PM CDT