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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:00:13,250 --> 00:00:17,292 ♪ (THEME MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 4 00:00:28,042 --> 00:00:31,584 Kenny G is the best-selling instrumentalist of all time. 5 00:00:31,667 --> 00:00:35,542 He's probably the most famous living jazz musician. 6 00:00:35,626 --> 00:00:38,042 And I made this film to find out 7 00:00:38,125 --> 00:00:42,459 why that makes certain people really angry. 8 00:00:42,542 --> 00:00:45,792 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 9 00:00:56,709 --> 00:01:03,709 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 10 00:01:11,334 --> 00:01:12,751 PENNY LANE: How are you feeling? 11 00:01:13,584 --> 00:01:14,626 Um... 12 00:01:15,417 --> 00:01:16,959 Underappreciated in general. 13 00:01:17,042 --> 00:01:19,792 -(PENNY LAUGHING) -But other than that I'm fine. 14 00:01:19,876 --> 00:01:21,584 (CHUCKLES SOFTLY) 15 00:01:21,667 --> 00:01:24,209 KENNY G: I never get to go anywhere without playing the sax. 16 00:01:24,292 --> 00:01:27,417 Honestly if I get invited to a party, 17 00:01:27,500 --> 00:01:28,792 it's only because they want me to play. 18 00:01:28,876 --> 00:01:30,334 So I'm never really invited anywhere 19 00:01:30,417 --> 00:01:31,792 -just because of me. -PENNY: I disbelieve that... 20 00:01:31,876 --> 00:01:33,250 It's like, "You're gonna play, aren't you?" 21 00:01:33,334 --> 00:01:35,751 -...I don't believe that at all. -Oh. It's 100 percent true. 22 00:01:35,834 --> 00:01:38,751 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 23 00:01:38,834 --> 00:01:40,000 KENNY G: I think people 24 00:01:40,083 --> 00:01:42,042 don't know me very well, because it's a... 25 00:01:42,125 --> 00:01:44,167 You know, they know my music. They don't really know me. 26 00:01:44,250 --> 00:01:46,792 I'm not a-- I don't think I'm a personality to people. 27 00:01:46,876 --> 00:01:48,542 I think I'm a sound. 28 00:01:48,626 --> 00:01:55,292 ♪ (UPBEAT SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 29 00:02:12,334 --> 00:02:14,209 -♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES STOP) ♪ -I almost had it. Shit. 30 00:02:15,167 --> 00:02:16,209 (BLOWS) 31 00:02:16,292 --> 00:02:18,042 I think you got enough of this backstage right now. 32 00:02:18,125 --> 00:02:19,209 Don't you think? Yeah. 33 00:02:19,292 --> 00:02:20,834 Thanks, guys. 34 00:02:24,167 --> 00:02:26,000 TECH: Stand by for house lights. 35 00:02:26,834 --> 00:02:27,876 Ready? 36 00:02:28,667 --> 00:02:35,584 (CROWD CHEERS, APPLAUDS) 37 00:02:35,667 --> 00:02:41,500 (APPLAUSE CONTINUES) 38 00:02:49,959 --> 00:02:52,042 PENNY: We're gonna start by listening to some Kenny songs. 39 00:02:52,125 --> 00:02:54,500 -(CHUCKLES) -PENNY: Um, you can talk as much as you want, 40 00:02:54,584 --> 00:02:56,918 or just listen, it's totally up to you. 41 00:02:57,667 --> 00:03:00,042 ♪ ("SONGBIRD" PLAYING) ♪ 42 00:03:05,959 --> 00:03:09,500 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES) ♪ 43 00:03:12,417 --> 00:03:14,542 PENNY: Do you remember the first time you heard this song? 44 00:03:15,334 --> 00:03:16,417 No. 45 00:03:17,667 --> 00:03:19,167 Absolutely not. 46 00:03:19,250 --> 00:03:22,167 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES) ♪ 47 00:03:25,709 --> 00:03:28,334 When you first called me and said, 48 00:03:28,417 --> 00:03:30,083 "I'm doing a Kenny G documentary," 49 00:03:30,167 --> 00:03:32,292 I had to think about my own relationship 50 00:03:32,375 --> 00:03:34,125 to Kenny G and to his music, 51 00:03:34,209 --> 00:03:36,000 um, 'cause I don't know anyone out there 52 00:03:36,083 --> 00:03:38,459 who's like a Kenny G scholar per se. 53 00:03:38,542 --> 00:03:41,000 Um, so I had to really think about, like, 54 00:03:41,083 --> 00:03:43,709 what is my intellectual... (CHUCKLES) 55 00:03:43,792 --> 00:03:46,125 ...artistic relationship to Kenny G's music? 56 00:03:46,209 --> 00:03:48,083 He's just sort of part of the musical furniture 57 00:03:48,167 --> 00:03:50,876 of American culture since the late '80s. 58 00:03:50,959 --> 00:03:52,459 ♪ ("SILHOUETTE" PLAYING) ♪ 59 00:03:52,542 --> 00:03:54,542 BEN RATLIFF: I'm sure I heard a lot of Kenny G 60 00:03:54,626 --> 00:03:57,250 while waiting for something. 61 00:03:57,334 --> 00:04:02,375 At a dentist's office, for example, or in a bank. 62 00:04:02,459 --> 00:04:05,250 And so, I think I associated his music 63 00:04:05,334 --> 00:04:10,083 with a corporate attempt to soothe my nerves. 64 00:04:10,167 --> 00:04:13,167 And I didn't like that. You know, I don't like that. 65 00:04:13,250 --> 00:04:14,334 (CHUCKLES) 66 00:04:14,417 --> 00:04:18,042 No, I'm being treated like an ant or something. 67 00:04:19,083 --> 00:04:22,083 ♪ ("FOREVER IN LOVE" PLAYING) ♪ 68 00:04:26,167 --> 00:04:29,167 It feels like he's pouring a sidewalk, 69 00:04:29,250 --> 00:04:32,125 and the music is just, like, layered in there, 70 00:04:32,209 --> 00:04:36,500 and it's just this thin, and it's shiny. 71 00:04:36,584 --> 00:04:40,083 He makes "nice" music for nice people, 72 00:04:40,167 --> 00:04:41,959 and I don't suppose I should begrudge anybody 73 00:04:42,042 --> 00:04:44,542 coming home from their job and relaxing to that. 74 00:04:44,626 --> 00:04:48,209 What it makes me feel is that it's just wallpaper. 75 00:04:48,292 --> 00:04:51,292 I don't know, I just want to believe I'm better than that. 76 00:04:51,375 --> 00:04:56,709 I get a little knotted up and confused when-- 77 00:04:56,792 --> 00:04:59,542 If I have to talk about Kenny G. 78 00:04:59,626 --> 00:05:03,375 With Kenny G's music, what can you say? 79 00:05:04,500 --> 00:05:06,709 I don't know. What can you say? 80 00:05:09,709 --> 00:05:11,792 Want me to sit in this chair and you can check it out with--? 81 00:05:11,876 --> 00:05:13,959 -PENNY: Yeah, check it out. -With the real vibe here? 82 00:05:14,626 --> 00:05:16,209 Um... 83 00:05:16,292 --> 00:05:18,500 Sweater on this, over this, would you like better, 84 00:05:18,584 --> 00:05:19,792 or do you just like this shirt? 85 00:05:19,876 --> 00:05:21,959 -PENNY: I love that shirt. -Great then. 86 00:05:22,042 --> 00:05:24,834 PENNY: Um, so my first question for you is, 87 00:05:24,918 --> 00:05:27,542 what do you love about music? 88 00:05:28,417 --> 00:05:30,250 What do I love about music? 89 00:05:31,500 --> 00:05:33,751 I don't know if I love music that much. 90 00:05:33,834 --> 00:05:34,918 I do... 91 00:05:36,417 --> 00:05:37,959 What do I love about music? 92 00:05:39,375 --> 00:05:41,375 I guess, for me, when I listen to music, 93 00:05:41,459 --> 00:05:43,500 I think about the musicians. 94 00:05:43,584 --> 00:05:46,375 And I just think about what it takes to make that music 95 00:05:46,459 --> 00:05:47,918 and how much they had to practice, 96 00:05:48,000 --> 00:05:49,918 and how good they had to be. 97 00:05:50,000 --> 00:05:55,042 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 98 00:05:55,125 --> 00:05:58,167 KENNY G: I practice every day, three hours every day. 99 00:05:58,250 --> 00:05:59,876 Could I practice two? Probably. 100 00:05:59,959 --> 00:06:01,334 Could I practice five? Probably. 101 00:06:01,417 --> 00:06:03,209 See? I get more excited about that. 102 00:06:03,292 --> 00:06:10,375 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 103 00:06:15,209 --> 00:06:18,083 That's a hard lick. I just played it really well. 104 00:06:18,167 --> 00:06:21,876 I don't think there's anything wrong with hard work, 105 00:06:21,959 --> 00:06:24,209 practice, preparation, 106 00:06:24,292 --> 00:06:26,584 and... not "perfection," 107 00:06:26,667 --> 00:06:29,751 but at least trying, striving for it. 108 00:06:29,834 --> 00:06:31,792 Trying your best to strive for that. 109 00:06:31,876 --> 00:06:33,292 I don't think anybody can say 110 00:06:33,375 --> 00:06:34,667 there's anything wrong with that. 111 00:06:34,751 --> 00:06:36,125 That can't be wrong. 112 00:06:36,209 --> 00:06:38,626 I think that's why my career's lasted this long. 113 00:06:39,667 --> 00:06:40,792 I'm hoping so, 114 00:06:40,876 --> 00:06:43,292 because that way I'll continue to do it. 115 00:06:43,375 --> 00:06:45,918 Put your hands together for Kenny G. 116 00:06:46,000 --> 00:06:50,209 (CROWD CHEERING) 117 00:06:51,292 --> 00:06:57,500 ♪ (MELODIC SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 118 00:07:02,042 --> 00:07:05,959 JASON KING: The 1980s and 1990s represented a peak moment 119 00:07:06,042 --> 00:07:09,375 for a kind of mass monoculture. 120 00:07:10,375 --> 00:07:11,459 There was an attempt 121 00:07:11,542 --> 00:07:14,167 to try to sell artists, superstar artists, 122 00:07:14,250 --> 00:07:16,292 to the widest possible audience, 123 00:07:16,375 --> 00:07:18,834 and Kenny G is one of those artists. 124 00:07:18,918 --> 00:07:22,834 PAT PRESCOTT: He was this white boy with the naturally curly hair, 125 00:07:22,918 --> 00:07:25,292 you know, who looked very ordinary. 126 00:07:25,375 --> 00:07:27,292 Almost a little nerdy, even. 127 00:07:27,375 --> 00:07:31,125 But he had such a beautiful tone on the saxophone, 128 00:07:31,209 --> 00:07:33,709 and captured the imagination of people. 129 00:07:33,792 --> 00:07:36,417 Play that funky music, white boy. 130 00:07:37,459 --> 00:07:40,209 ♪ (JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 131 00:07:40,292 --> 00:07:42,334 WILL SMITH: He's one of the very few jazz artists 132 00:07:42,417 --> 00:07:45,000 to move from the jazz to the pop charts. 133 00:07:45,083 --> 00:07:46,292 Ladies and gentlemen, 134 00:07:46,375 --> 00:07:49,751 the number-one-selling instrumentalist of all time, 135 00:07:50,500 --> 00:07:51,751 Kenny G! 136 00:07:52,626 --> 00:07:55,042 (AUDIENCE APPLAUDS) 137 00:07:55,125 --> 00:07:56,667 Are you sure this is right? 138 00:07:57,918 --> 00:07:59,042 Are you positive? 139 00:08:00,667 --> 00:08:02,292 CHRIS WASHBURNE: The fact of the matter is, 140 00:08:02,375 --> 00:08:04,334 Kenny G, in the 1990s, 141 00:08:04,417 --> 00:08:07,292 was one of the most well-known musicians on this planet. 142 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:10,542 TV HOST: How does it feel knowing that 143 00:08:10,626 --> 00:08:14,584 you are the favorite musician of President Bill Clinton? 144 00:08:14,667 --> 00:08:16,167 -Well, what can I say? -TV HOST: I know. 145 00:08:16,250 --> 00:08:19,042 I mean, I'm flattered that anybody likes my music. 146 00:08:19,834 --> 00:08:21,125 CHRIS: If you'd ask people, 147 00:08:21,209 --> 00:08:23,083 "Name one jazz musician," 148 00:08:23,167 --> 00:08:26,167 it's not gonna be Miles Davis or John Coltrane. 149 00:08:26,250 --> 00:08:27,792 Many times, it's Kenny G. 150 00:08:27,876 --> 00:08:31,209 REPORTER: Billboard Magazine's Jazz Artist of the Decade. 151 00:08:31,292 --> 00:08:32,250 -That's amazing. -Amazing. 152 00:08:32,334 --> 00:08:33,459 What do you think about that? 153 00:08:33,542 --> 00:08:36,292 Because you were an accounting major in college. 154 00:08:36,375 --> 00:08:38,083 TV HOST 2: I would like you to demonstrate 155 00:08:38,167 --> 00:08:41,417 the circle breathing technique that you have patented. 156 00:08:41,500 --> 00:08:43,209 Could you describe it and then do it? 157 00:08:43,292 --> 00:08:45,751 Well, I don't know if it's my patent, but... 158 00:08:45,834 --> 00:08:46,918 it's basically-- 159 00:08:47,000 --> 00:08:48,375 TV HOST 2: You don't breathe, is basically it. 160 00:08:48,459 --> 00:08:51,375 KENNY G: You breathe while you play at the same time. 161 00:08:51,459 --> 00:08:53,375 ♪ (HOLDING SINGLE NOTE) ♪ 162 00:08:53,459 --> 00:08:56,751 And a new honor today for sax superstar Kenny G. 163 00:08:56,834 --> 00:08:58,918 He's made it into the Guinness Book of World Records 164 00:08:59,000 --> 00:09:02,709 for holding the longest sustained note ever. 165 00:09:02,792 --> 00:09:05,584 ♪ (LOW QUIET NOTE PLAYS) ♪ 166 00:09:05,667 --> 00:09:08,292 Forty-five minutes, forty-seven seconds. 167 00:09:08,375 --> 00:09:11,042 Now, that undoubtedly is a new world record. 168 00:09:11,125 --> 00:09:13,626 -Congratulations. -Thank you. Thanks. 169 00:09:13,709 --> 00:09:15,209 PAT: Such an interesting person, 170 00:09:15,292 --> 00:09:17,918 because at the same time that he is one of the most 171 00:09:18,000 --> 00:09:20,209 loved characters in jazz, 172 00:09:20,292 --> 00:09:22,626 he is also one of the most hated people. 173 00:09:22,709 --> 00:09:25,542 And I won't say-- I can't-- I shouldn't say "hated." 174 00:09:25,626 --> 00:09:29,125 Kenny G has a Christmas album out this year. 175 00:09:29,209 --> 00:09:33,209 Hey, happy birthday, Jesus. Hope you like crap. 176 00:09:33,292 --> 00:09:36,792 (AUDIENCE LAUGHS, APPLAUDS) 177 00:09:39,167 --> 00:09:41,167 I remember hearing those songs, 178 00:09:41,250 --> 00:09:44,417 and I also remember that the... 179 00:09:44,500 --> 00:09:47,000 denigration when it came after Kenny G 180 00:09:47,083 --> 00:09:49,667 that was, you know, really, like, over the top. 181 00:09:49,751 --> 00:09:51,167 ♪ (OUT OF TUNE MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 182 00:09:51,250 --> 00:09:52,959 -No! -No! 183 00:09:53,042 --> 00:09:55,334 -Kenny G? -♪ (SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 184 00:09:55,417 --> 00:09:56,792 And I don't remember exactly 185 00:09:56,876 --> 00:09:59,792 what my reaction to it at the time was. 186 00:09:59,876 --> 00:10:02,375 I mean, I myself, might have like, 187 00:10:02,459 --> 00:10:05,209 joined in with... (CHUCKLES) ...with the choir. 188 00:10:05,292 --> 00:10:07,125 ♪ ("SONGBIRD" PLAYS) ♪ 189 00:10:07,209 --> 00:10:10,459 JOHN HALLE: Even today you can go on the Internet 190 00:10:10,542 --> 00:10:12,292 and just google "Kenny G," 191 00:10:12,375 --> 00:10:14,375 and find all sorts of abuse. 192 00:10:14,459 --> 00:10:16,083 ♪ (KENNY G SONG PLAYS) ♪ 193 00:10:16,167 --> 00:10:18,918 -We going all night with this one! -(AUDIENCE LAUGHING) 194 00:10:19,000 --> 00:10:21,083 I don't-- I don't care for Kenny G. I'm not into it. 195 00:10:21,167 --> 00:10:22,709 I don't like all that... 196 00:10:23,334 --> 00:10:25,375 (IMITATES SAXOPHONE) 197 00:10:27,542 --> 00:10:30,083 -NEWS ANCHOR 1: Oh, It's awful, that's awful. -(NEWS ANCHOR 2 LAUGHS) 198 00:10:30,167 --> 00:10:32,542 NEWS ANCHOR 3: Some people might think this is easy listening. 199 00:10:32,626 --> 00:10:35,209 -It's "Songbird." It's my-- It's ringtone. -(NEWS ANCHORS LAUGH) 200 00:10:35,292 --> 00:10:36,709 NEWS ANCHOR 4: There's nothing easy about this. 201 00:10:36,792 --> 00:10:38,167 Oh, I was about to pick up my phone. 202 00:10:38,250 --> 00:10:40,042 I thought suddenly it was KG calling. 203 00:10:40,125 --> 00:10:42,417 -Make it stop, Mel, please! -(NEWS ANCHORS LAUGH) 204 00:10:42,500 --> 00:10:44,209 KENNY G: When you hear that word, "easy listening," 205 00:10:44,292 --> 00:10:46,209 it almost sounds bad like... 206 00:10:46,292 --> 00:10:47,334 Well, I don't see anything wrong 207 00:10:47,417 --> 00:10:48,876 with something that's easy to listen to. 208 00:10:48,959 --> 00:10:51,542 But, that said, I'm not writing music 209 00:10:51,626 --> 00:10:52,834 so it's easy to listen to. 210 00:10:52,918 --> 00:10:55,375 I'm writing music that just appeals to me. 211 00:10:55,459 --> 00:10:58,375 These are songs from my heart. This is the way I just hear it. 212 00:10:58,459 --> 00:11:02,334 The fact that what appeals to me also appeals to other people... 213 00:11:02,417 --> 00:11:04,000 that's the beautiful thing. 214 00:11:04,083 --> 00:11:08,417 Most of the music critics are not kind to me, 215 00:11:08,500 --> 00:11:09,667 because most of the music critics 216 00:11:09,751 --> 00:11:12,459 aren't happy with my style of jazz. 217 00:11:12,542 --> 00:11:15,209 They think I've decided to play these kind of songs 218 00:11:15,292 --> 00:11:17,209 because I knew they would sell well 219 00:11:17,292 --> 00:11:20,000 and I could get rich and famous. 220 00:11:21,542 --> 00:11:23,083 If only I was that smart. 221 00:11:24,834 --> 00:11:29,959 (PLANE ENGINE WHIRRING) 222 00:11:32,709 --> 00:11:34,292 KENNY G: And we are now... 223 00:11:35,417 --> 00:11:36,751 Now we're flying. 224 00:11:36,834 --> 00:11:38,584 -(PENNY CHEERS) -How about that. 225 00:11:39,792 --> 00:11:41,334 That is pretty cool. 226 00:11:41,417 --> 00:11:44,542 I'm gonna make this flight, you know, stellar. 227 00:11:44,626 --> 00:11:46,250 And I feel the same way when I do a concert. 228 00:11:46,334 --> 00:11:49,250 It's like, when I get on stage, I don't want it to be just okay. 229 00:11:49,334 --> 00:11:50,751 "Yeah, he did all right." 230 00:11:50,834 --> 00:11:53,459 No, it's gonna be my fricking best. 231 00:11:53,542 --> 00:11:56,000 And it's gonna be, like, not just my best, 232 00:11:56,083 --> 00:11:58,000 it's gonna be the best. 233 00:11:58,083 --> 00:12:01,209 And now you can see downtown Seattle from here. 234 00:12:01,292 --> 00:12:02,792 Never thought I'd be flying my own plane 235 00:12:02,876 --> 00:12:05,292 over my old high school, that's for sure. 236 00:12:08,083 --> 00:12:10,876 KENNY G: See, I just think, walking in with the sax is-- 237 00:12:10,959 --> 00:12:12,417 It's-- It's more iconic. 238 00:12:12,500 --> 00:12:14,083 PENNY: Okay, fine, do it with the sax. 239 00:12:23,000 --> 00:12:25,167 KENNY G: I don't think I ever came in this way. 240 00:12:25,250 --> 00:12:27,959 The band room is on the other side of the school. 241 00:12:28,042 --> 00:12:30,125 I would come in that way every morning, 242 00:12:30,209 --> 00:12:31,334 'cause we started at 7:00, 243 00:12:31,417 --> 00:12:33,334 and school didn't open till 8:00. 244 00:12:34,834 --> 00:12:35,709 Hey! 245 00:12:35,792 --> 00:12:38,167 -This is the principal. -Yes, right. 246 00:12:38,250 --> 00:12:39,959 You know, here's what's weird. 247 00:12:40,042 --> 00:12:41,334 I'm older than the principal. 248 00:12:41,417 --> 00:12:43,000 -(KENNY G LAUGHING) -PRINCIPAL: Yeah, well, I'd love 249 00:12:43,083 --> 00:12:44,667 to get you to sign the wall here. 250 00:12:44,751 --> 00:12:47,500 -We've got the signature wall. -KENNY G: Hey. It'd be my pleasure. 251 00:12:47,584 --> 00:12:49,459 I've got to think of something inspirational. 252 00:12:49,542 --> 00:12:51,000 PRINCIPAL: An inspirational note, if you can. 253 00:12:51,083 --> 00:12:53,459 -Not to put you on the spot. -No, no, it's just-- 254 00:12:53,542 --> 00:12:54,959 PRINCIPAL: But we'd love to... 255 00:12:55,042 --> 00:12:56,792 KENNY G: I want-- Now this is a lot of pressure 256 00:12:56,876 --> 00:12:58,959 to put the right words down, okay? 257 00:12:59,042 --> 00:13:01,000 'Cause you know how long it takes me to make a record. 258 00:13:01,083 --> 00:13:02,709 Okay, I got to think of something. Gosh. 259 00:13:02,792 --> 00:13:04,626 -This is hard! -(CHUCKLES SOFTLY) 260 00:13:04,709 --> 00:13:05,959 Um... 261 00:13:06,042 --> 00:13:07,250 (CLICKS TONGUE) 262 00:13:08,834 --> 00:13:10,876 Hmm. 263 00:13:10,959 --> 00:13:13,876 Let me see, I got to picture what it's gonna look like. 264 00:13:17,834 --> 00:13:20,042 KENNY G: Okay. Uh... (CLICKS TONGUE) 265 00:13:24,417 --> 00:13:26,542 Okay, here we go. You ready? Okay. 266 00:13:46,167 --> 00:13:48,167 Yeah, I like that. I think that's good. 267 00:13:48,250 --> 00:13:49,626 -That okay? -PRINCIPAL: That's awesome. 268 00:13:49,709 --> 00:13:52,000 -That's really cool. -Whew! Oh, my God. 269 00:13:52,083 --> 00:13:53,834 Okay, Drew, that was a lot of pressure. 270 00:13:53,918 --> 00:13:55,417 Thanks for allowing me to do that. 271 00:13:55,500 --> 00:13:57,250 PRINCIPAL: Of course, it's a beautiful message, thank you. 272 00:13:57,334 --> 00:13:59,751 That's really... I'm honored. 273 00:13:59,834 --> 00:14:02,209 I really am, I'm really honored to be on that wall. 274 00:14:02,292 --> 00:14:04,209 It means a lot. It really does. 275 00:14:12,751 --> 00:14:15,417 KENNY G: Yeah, look at that. There I am on the stairs. 276 00:14:16,959 --> 00:14:19,584 ♪ (SOFT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 277 00:14:23,292 --> 00:14:24,751 Unofficially, Seattle is considered 278 00:14:24,834 --> 00:14:27,209 to be the jazz capital of the northwest. 279 00:14:27,292 --> 00:14:29,667 Officially, the Franklin High School Jazz Lab 280 00:14:29,751 --> 00:14:31,918 is the grand champion of high school bands 281 00:14:32,000 --> 00:14:33,500 for the west coast. 282 00:14:33,584 --> 00:14:35,876 This 18-piece ensemble has pushed itself 283 00:14:36,000 --> 00:14:37,959 to an incredible list of achievements. 284 00:14:38,042 --> 00:14:40,459 This is the Franklin Jazz Lab. 285 00:14:40,542 --> 00:14:43,876 ♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 286 00:14:43,959 --> 00:14:47,125 KENNY G: The Jazz Lab. Loved it, just loved it. 287 00:14:47,209 --> 00:14:50,500 And we had a composer in residence. 288 00:14:50,584 --> 00:14:51,959 This guy, Jim Gardiner. 289 00:14:52,042 --> 00:14:53,167 And all the guys in the band, 290 00:14:53,250 --> 00:14:54,959 we all really loved Jim Gardiner. 291 00:14:55,042 --> 00:14:56,876 When you're teaching somebody, 292 00:14:56,959 --> 00:14:59,459 you really don't know if you're gonna be 293 00:14:59,542 --> 00:15:02,584 affecting them, that makes them do something 294 00:15:02,667 --> 00:15:04,500 for the rest of their life. 295 00:15:04,584 --> 00:15:07,709 Kenny was quiet, shy, 296 00:15:07,792 --> 00:15:11,417 and very, very smart. 297 00:15:11,500 --> 00:15:12,876 He didn't have any girlfriends. 298 00:15:12,959 --> 00:15:15,834 The only girlfriend he had was that new soprano sax. 299 00:15:15,918 --> 00:15:21,459 ♪ (UPBEAT SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 300 00:15:21,542 --> 00:15:24,334 JAMES GARDINER: Kenny was an incredible reader. 301 00:15:24,417 --> 00:15:25,667 I mean, read anything. 302 00:15:25,751 --> 00:15:28,167 So I would write some stuff out for him freehand, 303 00:15:28,250 --> 00:15:29,417 and I'd pass it to him. 304 00:15:29,500 --> 00:15:31,626 Then all of a sudden... (IMITATES SAX NOTES) 305 00:15:31,709 --> 00:15:33,709 And he played, these sight reads and stuff. 306 00:15:33,792 --> 00:15:38,334 I said, "Okay, okay, so let's move this up a notch." 307 00:15:38,417 --> 00:15:43,209 ♪ ("UNTIL IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO GO" PLAYING) ♪ 308 00:15:43,292 --> 00:15:45,876 There was an artist by the name of Grover Washington. 309 00:15:45,959 --> 00:15:47,751 And I had gotten the album, 310 00:15:47,834 --> 00:15:50,584 and I brought the album to school 311 00:15:50,667 --> 00:15:52,959 and I gave it to Kenny and said, you know, 312 00:15:53,042 --> 00:15:55,500 "I think that you should check this out." 313 00:15:57,125 --> 00:15:59,792 KENNY G: And that was what really got me going, 314 00:15:59,876 --> 00:16:01,709 'cause his sound was so beautiful to me. 315 00:16:01,792 --> 00:16:03,792 And I said, "I'm gonna sound just like him." 316 00:16:03,876 --> 00:16:05,125 "That's my sound." 317 00:16:06,083 --> 00:16:10,375 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES) ♪ 318 00:16:10,459 --> 00:16:13,542 KENNY G: Every night, I'd put on Inner City Blues 319 00:16:13,626 --> 00:16:15,584 and I would go to sleep to that record. 320 00:16:15,667 --> 00:16:18,918 Every night, probably for at least two and a half years 321 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:20,709 of my high school life. 322 00:16:20,792 --> 00:16:23,792 So, I tried to become the white Grover Washington, Jr. 323 00:16:23,876 --> 00:16:25,500 And I tried really hard. 324 00:16:25,584 --> 00:16:28,417 ♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 325 00:16:30,500 --> 00:16:32,083 But every time I played my saxophone, 326 00:16:32,167 --> 00:16:34,292 it just sounded like me, it didn't sound like him. 327 00:16:34,375 --> 00:16:36,292 And I was so frustrated. 328 00:16:36,375 --> 00:16:38,000 But, in the long run, 329 00:16:38,083 --> 00:16:39,584 it's good to have your own sound. 330 00:16:42,667 --> 00:16:43,918 The very good kids, 331 00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:45,542 I would invite them to sit in, 332 00:16:45,626 --> 00:16:46,918 you know, with my professional band. 333 00:16:47,000 --> 00:16:49,417 And we had a concert at the Opera House. 334 00:16:49,500 --> 00:16:52,959 So, I said to Kenny, "You get to have a solo at this gig." 335 00:16:56,375 --> 00:16:58,000 Kenny walks out in front of the audience. 336 00:16:58,083 --> 00:17:00,751 He's supposed to do a cadenza, like... (IMITATES SAX NOTES) 337 00:17:00,834 --> 00:17:03,209 You know, with the stuff you hear him doing today, right? 338 00:17:03,292 --> 00:17:07,542 So instead of doing that, Kenny decides to hold a note. 339 00:17:07,626 --> 00:17:09,626 ♪ (SUSTAINED SAX NOTE PLAYING) ♪ 340 00:17:09,709 --> 00:17:11,167 Not just a note. 341 00:17:11,250 --> 00:17:15,042 I mean, he took Mother Earth and was holding a note. 342 00:17:15,125 --> 00:17:18,709 And he's holding a note for ten minutes. 343 00:17:18,792 --> 00:17:24,334 (IMITATES SUSTAINED SAX NOTE) 344 00:17:24,417 --> 00:17:26,876 I looked over my shoulder, imagine Kenny's playing over here. 345 00:17:26,959 --> 00:17:30,334 And all of a sudden, a light is shining on this kid. 346 00:17:30,417 --> 00:17:32,876 I'm going-- And a big old light. Whoo! 347 00:17:32,959 --> 00:17:35,292 I'm going, "What the hell?" and stuff. 348 00:17:35,375 --> 00:17:36,834 You know, and all of sudden he holds that-- 349 00:17:36,918 --> 00:17:38,250 Standing ovation. 350 00:17:38,334 --> 00:17:40,334 -Whoo! My God. -(AUDIENCE CHEERING FAINTLY) 351 00:17:41,918 --> 00:17:44,834 And that was, at that particular moment, 352 00:17:44,918 --> 00:17:46,709 when the gates of heaven opened up 353 00:17:46,792 --> 00:17:49,542 and gave Kenny the other elements 354 00:17:49,626 --> 00:17:50,959 that he was searching for, 355 00:17:51,042 --> 00:17:53,667 which is his soul with his instrument. 356 00:17:54,417 --> 00:17:55,584 That was the moment 357 00:17:55,667 --> 00:17:58,959 little Kenny Gorelick became the G-Man. 358 00:18:00,667 --> 00:18:05,542 (AUDIENCE CHEERING, APPLAUDING) 359 00:18:09,876 --> 00:18:13,167 ♪ (SOFT PIANO MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 360 00:18:18,250 --> 00:18:24,459 ♪ (SENTIMENTAL NOTES PLAY) ♪ 361 00:20:13,042 --> 00:20:17,667 (AUDIENCE CHEERS, APPLAUDS) 362 00:20:17,751 --> 00:20:21,834 (EMERGENCY SIREN BLARING IN DISTANCE) 363 00:20:21,918 --> 00:20:24,959 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 364 00:20:27,584 --> 00:20:29,876 FAN: I have Alexa in my house, 365 00:20:29,959 --> 00:20:33,209 and every morning I wake up at about 7:00. 366 00:20:33,292 --> 00:20:34,834 And before I make my coffee, 367 00:20:34,918 --> 00:20:38,542 I always ask Alexa to play Kenny G. 368 00:20:38,626 --> 00:20:41,584 It just, like, makes me feel, you know, calm. 369 00:20:41,667 --> 00:20:43,792 You know? It calms me out, you know? 370 00:20:43,876 --> 00:20:47,584 I had a big crush on him since I was 12, 371 00:20:47,667 --> 00:20:50,417 and my dad introduced me to him. 372 00:20:50,500 --> 00:20:52,125 -It's from our childhood. -Yeah. 373 00:20:52,209 --> 00:20:53,626 Our parents listened to Kenny G. 374 00:20:53,709 --> 00:20:57,292 And I don't know how we ended up finding the tickets, 375 00:20:57,375 --> 00:20:59,334 but we're like, "Oh, shit, do you want to go?" 376 00:20:59,417 --> 00:21:00,751 -Yes, we do. Yes. -(CHUCKLES) 377 00:21:02,626 --> 00:21:06,751 (IN SPANISH) 378 00:21:19,083 --> 00:21:20,584 He makes playing an instrument really cool, 379 00:21:20,667 --> 00:21:23,542 so growing up, when we were forced to play instruments 380 00:21:23,626 --> 00:21:26,125 and, you know, it wasn't the coolest thing to do. 381 00:21:26,209 --> 00:21:27,459 He made it cool. 382 00:21:27,542 --> 00:21:29,459 -There's no one like him. -We love the show. 383 00:21:29,542 --> 00:21:31,751 I've been listening to him since I was a baby. 384 00:21:31,834 --> 00:21:33,584 Thirty-five years, because of her. 385 00:21:33,667 --> 00:21:34,709 Yes. 386 00:21:34,792 --> 00:21:36,709 It always makes me angry that people, you know, 387 00:21:36,792 --> 00:21:39,542 sometimes mock him, sort of, 388 00:21:39,626 --> 00:21:41,375 because, you know, they call it easy listening. 389 00:21:41,459 --> 00:21:44,167 But he's a really serious, excellent musician. 390 00:21:44,250 --> 00:21:47,751 -I mean, they wish they'd have the success that he has... -Yeah, right. 391 00:21:47,834 --> 00:21:50,500 -Right exactly. -...in terms of instrumental records. 392 00:21:50,584 --> 00:21:52,292 Right, isn't he the world's leading...? 393 00:21:52,375 --> 00:21:55,250 Instrumental artist, I'm pretty sure, so... 394 00:21:55,334 --> 00:21:57,042 Kenny's got a wide range of styles. 395 00:21:57,125 --> 00:21:58,918 He plays everything. 396 00:21:59,000 --> 00:22:01,042 Salsa, jazz, he plays everything. 397 00:22:01,125 --> 00:22:04,334 Pop. He's the number one instrumentalist in the world. 398 00:22:04,417 --> 00:22:07,876 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 399 00:22:07,959 --> 00:22:14,751 ♪ (MELODIC SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYING OVER SPEAKERS) ♪ 400 00:22:17,375 --> 00:22:19,125 ♪ (MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪ 401 00:22:20,834 --> 00:22:22,792 -♪ (MUSIC STOPS) ♪ -KENNY G: So, I'll do the same thing again. 402 00:22:22,876 --> 00:22:24,584 One thing that's interesting is that 403 00:22:24,667 --> 00:22:27,209 when people hear me play live, 404 00:22:27,292 --> 00:22:28,334 they're usually hearing it 405 00:22:28,417 --> 00:22:30,792 through a microphone and speakers. 406 00:22:31,417 --> 00:22:32,500 But here in the studio, 407 00:22:32,584 --> 00:22:35,083 if I were to record my saxophone, 408 00:22:35,167 --> 00:22:37,125 you would hear it sounding like this in the room, 409 00:22:37,209 --> 00:22:39,751 and then I'll turn it on and see what it really sounds like. 410 00:22:39,834 --> 00:22:44,626 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 411 00:22:58,375 --> 00:23:00,792 Sounds pretty nice, but when we actually hear 412 00:23:00,876 --> 00:23:02,500 what it will sound like on the recording, 413 00:23:02,584 --> 00:23:04,751 it adds all the beauty, and I'll show you what we do. 414 00:23:04,834 --> 00:23:08,626 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING OVER SPEAKERS) ♪ 415 00:23:19,334 --> 00:23:21,667 So that sounds all so beautiful. 416 00:23:21,751 --> 00:23:26,209 Usually the same three or four reverbs in combination... 417 00:23:26,292 --> 00:23:27,918 -KENNY G: Yeah. -...to make the whole sound. 418 00:23:28,000 --> 00:23:30,751 Without being egotistical and no conceit here, 419 00:23:30,834 --> 00:23:33,500 when I hear my sax recorded, 420 00:23:33,584 --> 00:23:35,542 like when I give it my stamp of approval, 421 00:23:35,626 --> 00:23:38,417 I sit back and go, "That's fucking beautiful." 422 00:23:38,500 --> 00:23:40,000 I just say it. 423 00:23:40,083 --> 00:23:45,709 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 424 00:23:47,834 --> 00:23:49,042 Cool. 425 00:23:49,125 --> 00:23:51,709 I can just select this note right here... 426 00:23:51,792 --> 00:23:52,876 right there. 427 00:23:52,959 --> 00:23:54,250 If I press record, 428 00:23:54,334 --> 00:23:56,000 I will go in at the beginning of that note, 429 00:23:56,083 --> 00:23:57,250 out to the end of that note. 430 00:23:57,334 --> 00:23:58,667 So let's hear how it sounds now. 431 00:23:58,751 --> 00:24:04,167 ♪ (MELODIC SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYING OVER SPEAKERS) ♪ 432 00:24:04,250 --> 00:24:07,125 I'm going to record myself playing that note again. 433 00:24:07,209 --> 00:24:08,292 So watch this. 434 00:24:09,375 --> 00:24:13,000 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 435 00:24:13,083 --> 00:24:14,709 Now let's see what it sounds like. 436 00:24:14,792 --> 00:24:16,918 You can see how seamless this recording is. 437 00:24:17,000 --> 00:24:20,334 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING OVER SPEAKERS) ♪ 438 00:24:20,417 --> 00:24:22,209 You can't tell that there's even an edit in there. 439 00:24:22,292 --> 00:24:25,375 Perfect. Okay, so, how many edits are there? 440 00:24:25,459 --> 00:24:27,042 Well, let's see. There's an edit. 441 00:24:27,125 --> 00:24:28,375 There's one right there. There's one right there. 442 00:24:28,459 --> 00:24:30,042 There's another right there. There's one right there. 443 00:24:30,125 --> 00:24:31,125 There's one right there. 444 00:24:31,209 --> 00:24:33,250 This section right here was an edit. 445 00:24:33,334 --> 00:24:35,042 This little part of this note was. 446 00:24:35,125 --> 00:24:36,459 This section was an edit. 447 00:24:36,542 --> 00:24:39,375 -PENNY: That's part of a note? -Part of a note, right there. 448 00:24:39,459 --> 00:24:40,876 I mean, it may look like it's sterile, 449 00:24:40,959 --> 00:24:42,500 the way we do it, but it's not. 450 00:24:42,584 --> 00:24:43,834 It's actually-- It's from here. 451 00:24:43,918 --> 00:24:46,500 It's like, "Why doesn't that sound right to me?" 452 00:24:46,584 --> 00:24:48,000 "Hmm, it's just that one note." 453 00:24:48,083 --> 00:24:49,375 So when you fix that one note, 454 00:24:49,459 --> 00:24:52,959 you're not making like a laboratory thing, 455 00:24:53,042 --> 00:24:54,334 and it doesn't take away the feeling. 456 00:24:54,417 --> 00:24:56,375 It adds to it. That's how I do it. 457 00:24:56,459 --> 00:24:58,500 Some people just wanna do a take from start to finish, 458 00:24:58,584 --> 00:25:02,209 and they believe that a live take is the way to go. 459 00:25:02,292 --> 00:25:03,459 For me... 460 00:25:04,834 --> 00:25:06,918 it's-- I'm gonna hear it forever. 461 00:25:07,000 --> 00:25:09,292 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 462 00:25:09,375 --> 00:25:12,292 This album we've been working on about two years now. 463 00:25:12,375 --> 00:25:15,584 The album is called New Standards 464 00:25:15,667 --> 00:25:18,792 because I like old jazz standards. 465 00:25:18,876 --> 00:25:22,125 And these standards have been played so many times. 466 00:25:22,209 --> 00:25:25,042 So, I don't want to do an album of those standards. 467 00:25:25,125 --> 00:25:27,209 I want to do an album that sounds like 468 00:25:27,292 --> 00:25:31,334 I'm doing those standards, but they're my new creations. 469 00:25:31,417 --> 00:25:32,876 So it's called New Standards. 470 00:25:32,959 --> 00:25:34,459 This is the inspiration, right? 471 00:25:34,542 --> 00:25:38,250 Because there's Charlie Parker, that's Dizzy Gillespie. 472 00:25:38,334 --> 00:25:41,292 I'm pretty sure that is Dexter Gordon. 473 00:25:42,417 --> 00:25:44,417 And then, this keyboard player, 474 00:25:44,500 --> 00:25:46,751 gosh, I'm not 100 percent sure who that is. 475 00:25:49,375 --> 00:25:51,792 -PRODUCER: It's Monk with the hat. -It is Monk! 476 00:25:51,876 --> 00:25:54,417 -It is Monk! -Yes. (CHUCKLES) 477 00:25:54,500 --> 00:25:56,542 Perfect. That's great. 478 00:25:58,042 --> 00:26:02,918 This is the paradox of Kenny G's musical world. 479 00:26:03,000 --> 00:26:06,083 It does come from a tradition. 480 00:26:06,167 --> 00:26:08,334 ♪ (TRADITIONAL JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 481 00:26:15,167 --> 00:26:16,751 And yet, Kenny G's music 482 00:26:16,834 --> 00:26:21,584 seems to want to have nothing to do with a past. 483 00:26:21,667 --> 00:26:25,459 ♪ (SMOOTH JAZZ PLAYING) ♪ 484 00:26:25,542 --> 00:26:27,834 Jazz has been a chronological development. 485 00:26:27,918 --> 00:26:31,167 And each stage of its development 486 00:26:31,250 --> 00:26:34,834 has built on what went before. 487 00:26:34,918 --> 00:26:40,209 ♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ PLAYING) ♪ 488 00:26:40,292 --> 00:26:41,500 BEN: What is jazz? 489 00:26:41,584 --> 00:26:43,334 Well, it's a music that has this element 490 00:26:43,417 --> 00:26:45,167 and that element. Sure, fine. 491 00:26:45,250 --> 00:26:47,626 ♪ (TRUMPET SOLO PLAYS) ♪ 492 00:26:47,709 --> 00:26:50,125 BEN: But also, way up on the list of things 493 00:26:50,209 --> 00:26:51,626 that are central to jazz is the fact 494 00:26:51,709 --> 00:26:53,918 that it's a hundred-year continuity. 495 00:26:54,000 --> 00:26:56,459 ♪ (JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 496 00:26:56,542 --> 00:26:58,292 People playing jazz currently 497 00:26:58,375 --> 00:26:59,876 are always in a kind of dialogue 498 00:26:59,959 --> 00:27:02,626 with people who played jazz 50 years ago or whatever. 499 00:27:07,792 --> 00:27:09,375 In the music of Kenny G, 500 00:27:09,459 --> 00:27:12,876 that continuity... is absent. 501 00:27:12,959 --> 00:27:15,042 I'm from Seattle, and I live in a musical vacuum. 502 00:27:15,125 --> 00:27:18,000 I don't really listen to much music, I don't read the paper, 503 00:27:18,083 --> 00:27:20,334 I don't read magazines, I don't watch the news. 504 00:27:20,417 --> 00:27:21,876 So I don't really know what's happening. 505 00:27:21,959 --> 00:27:24,626 INTERVIEWER: Are you influenced by the great saxophonists of the-- 506 00:27:24,709 --> 00:27:25,918 You know, we've had so many. 507 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:27,792 I think I would say I was influenced-- 508 00:27:27,876 --> 00:27:31,000 -Or is that more of a jazz...? -Well, it's real jazz sound, 509 00:27:31,083 --> 00:27:32,834 but it's the technique of it. 510 00:27:32,918 --> 00:27:34,792 The John Coltrane and the Charlie Parker, 511 00:27:34,876 --> 00:27:36,292 I mean, their technique was phenomenal. 512 00:27:36,375 --> 00:27:38,417 But that music was never heartfelt for me, 513 00:27:38,500 --> 00:27:40,000 so when I went out and gigged, 514 00:27:40,083 --> 00:27:42,292 it wasn't anything that I wanted to emulate. 515 00:27:42,375 --> 00:27:44,167 You know, Kenny G is playing music 516 00:27:44,250 --> 00:27:48,375 that is sort of related to jazz but isn't jazz. 517 00:27:48,459 --> 00:27:51,751 Jazz is a very complicated art form, 518 00:27:51,834 --> 00:27:54,042 and to master bebop harmony, 519 00:27:54,125 --> 00:27:56,083 and let's not even go into what that is. 520 00:27:56,167 --> 00:27:58,083 I mean, it's really like getting-- it's like getting 521 00:27:58,167 --> 00:28:00,209 a PhD in mathematics, in a lot of ways. 522 00:28:00,292 --> 00:28:03,083 It is not the same as just picking up your horn 523 00:28:03,167 --> 00:28:04,584 and playing what you feel. 524 00:28:04,667 --> 00:28:06,876 ♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ PLAYING) ♪ 525 00:28:11,626 --> 00:28:13,751 Part of what makes jazz interesting 526 00:28:13,834 --> 00:28:15,459 is this sense of call and response 527 00:28:15,542 --> 00:28:17,083 and dialogue among the musicians. 528 00:28:23,125 --> 00:28:26,167 And what you hear in Kenny G's music 529 00:28:26,250 --> 00:28:28,542 is no conversation at all. 530 00:28:28,626 --> 00:28:31,042 This is a solo project. 531 00:28:31,125 --> 00:28:33,751 This is not sex. This is masturbation. 532 00:28:33,834 --> 00:28:38,167 ♪ (SAXOPHONE PLAYING) ♪ 533 00:28:38,250 --> 00:28:41,167 CHRIS: The model that he's using is not a jazz model 534 00:28:41,250 --> 00:28:43,626 where everybody gets to have a kind of an equal voice 535 00:28:43,709 --> 00:28:45,459 within the jazz unit. 536 00:28:45,542 --> 00:28:48,918 It's much more of a pop act, where he is the star. 537 00:28:53,626 --> 00:28:55,876 KENNY G: Somebody asked me, "What kind of music do you do?" 538 00:28:55,959 --> 00:28:57,584 "Uh, I play sax." "Well, what kind?" 539 00:28:57,667 --> 00:28:59,626 "It's instrumental music." "Well, is it jazz?" 540 00:28:59,709 --> 00:29:02,500 I don't know. You might think it might be jazz. 541 00:29:02,584 --> 00:29:04,417 "Well, is it pop?" I don't know. 542 00:29:04,500 --> 00:29:06,000 You might think it might be pop. 543 00:29:06,876 --> 00:29:08,667 Those labels are tricky. 544 00:29:09,834 --> 00:29:12,918 I mean, my songs were played on pop radio. 545 00:29:13,000 --> 00:29:16,375 They were played on jazz radio. They were played on R&B radio. 546 00:29:16,459 --> 00:29:17,709 Am I an R&B artist? 547 00:29:18,792 --> 00:29:21,250 Am I a pop artist? Am I a jazz artist? 548 00:29:21,334 --> 00:29:23,918 I think maybe the answer is yes, just to everything. 549 00:29:24,000 --> 00:29:27,083 Now that we're taking a break, tell me, how is it going? 550 00:29:27,167 --> 00:29:28,334 PENNY: It's going great! 551 00:29:28,417 --> 00:29:30,334 I mean, seriously, are you getting what you want? 552 00:29:30,417 --> 00:29:31,834 -Yes! -Am I talking too long? 553 00:29:31,918 --> 00:29:33,417 -No! -Am I animated enough? 554 00:29:33,500 --> 00:29:34,792 Am I too animated? 555 00:29:34,876 --> 00:29:36,709 That's my problem, is that I always wanna be too good 556 00:29:36,792 --> 00:29:39,000 -at everything, and so-- -I think you're doing great. 557 00:29:39,083 --> 00:29:40,542 I want to be the best. See, my problem is, 558 00:29:40,626 --> 00:29:43,167 I wanna be the best interview you've ever had. 559 00:29:43,250 --> 00:29:45,751 And if that means sitting here for 12 hours 560 00:29:45,834 --> 00:29:47,542 and not eating or drinking, 561 00:29:47,626 --> 00:29:48,918 I'll do it. That's my problem. 562 00:29:49,000 --> 00:29:51,250 So I would give you whatever you want, 563 00:29:51,334 --> 00:29:52,792 -as long as you want. -We're doing great. 564 00:29:52,876 --> 00:29:54,000 Okay, good. 565 00:29:57,167 --> 00:30:00,042 KENNY G: There's a picture of me as a baby, this one, up there. 566 00:30:00,125 --> 00:30:01,959 That's me as a little baby. 567 00:30:02,042 --> 00:30:03,292 I was a very happy baby. 568 00:30:03,375 --> 00:30:05,876 I've been a happy kid my whole life. 569 00:30:05,959 --> 00:30:07,209 I really have. 570 00:30:07,292 --> 00:30:09,709 I might worry, or we call it kvetching. 571 00:30:09,792 --> 00:30:12,125 You know, it's a Jewish word called kvetching. 572 00:30:12,209 --> 00:30:15,083 It's like, okay, you might be kind of complaining 573 00:30:15,167 --> 00:30:16,876 about this and that, but it doesn't last, 574 00:30:16,959 --> 00:30:19,417 it just kind of... (WHISTLES) ...and I'm back to normal. 575 00:30:19,500 --> 00:30:21,792 Oh, there's my grandpa. Lived to 103. 576 00:30:21,876 --> 00:30:24,500 And he was always happy. Never complained. 577 00:30:24,584 --> 00:30:26,876 Like my father, my father never complains either. 578 00:30:26,959 --> 00:30:28,792 And my dad now is 98. 579 00:30:29,876 --> 00:30:31,500 My dad started off as a plumber, 580 00:30:31,584 --> 00:30:34,834 and then he created a wholesale company for plumbing, 581 00:30:34,918 --> 00:30:38,751 hardware stuff called Thrifty Supply Company. 582 00:30:38,834 --> 00:30:40,584 It was always kind of expected 583 00:30:40,667 --> 00:30:44,876 that I would end up working at Thrifty Supply. 584 00:30:44,959 --> 00:30:48,417 I graduated from college, and we had a talk. 585 00:30:48,500 --> 00:30:50,542 And I said, "Dad, listen... 586 00:30:50,626 --> 00:30:52,250 I've done a bunch of gigs." 587 00:30:52,334 --> 00:30:54,918 ♪ ("SOMEBODY'S GONNA BURN YA" BY COLD, BOLD & TOGETHER PLAYING) ♪ 588 00:30:55,000 --> 00:30:57,459 I played for different people that would come to town. 589 00:30:57,542 --> 00:30:59,125 Like, Sammy Davis Jr. 590 00:30:59,209 --> 00:31:01,375 So, I played with Sammy Davis Jr. 591 00:31:01,459 --> 00:31:03,042 Liberace. I played with Liberace. 592 00:31:03,125 --> 00:31:05,834 The Ringling Bros. Circus would come to Seattle, 593 00:31:05,918 --> 00:31:08,709 I'm in the Ringling Bros. Circus band. 594 00:31:08,792 --> 00:31:12,334 I'm also with an R&B band, Cold, Bold & Together. 595 00:31:12,417 --> 00:31:15,000 So I'm becoming well known in Seattle 596 00:31:15,083 --> 00:31:17,042 as a guy that can play. 597 00:31:17,125 --> 00:31:19,667 "Dad, I'd really like to give this a couple more years." 598 00:31:19,751 --> 00:31:23,626 "And if nothing works out, I'll come to Thrifty." 599 00:31:25,459 --> 00:31:27,959 He says, "No problem." I said, "Great." 600 00:31:28,042 --> 00:31:30,209 One, two, three. 601 00:31:30,292 --> 00:31:31,959 ♪ (UPBEAT SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 602 00:31:32,042 --> 00:31:33,417 In Portland, Oregon, 603 00:31:33,500 --> 00:31:36,876 this guy named Jeff Lorber is putting together his band. 604 00:31:38,000 --> 00:31:39,250 So I drive down, audition, 605 00:31:39,334 --> 00:31:40,250 I get the gig, 606 00:31:40,334 --> 00:31:42,250 and now I'm playing with Jeff Lorber. 607 00:31:42,334 --> 00:31:48,792 ♪ (SAXOPHONE SOLO PLAYING) ♪ 608 00:31:54,834 --> 00:31:57,417 Jeff Lorber's record company, Arista Records, 609 00:31:57,500 --> 00:31:58,918 and the big man there, Clive Davis, 610 00:31:59,042 --> 00:32:01,167 would come down to see Jeff Lorber play. 611 00:32:01,250 --> 00:32:04,083 So Clive Davis saw me play many times. 612 00:32:04,167 --> 00:32:05,626 And after five years 613 00:32:05,709 --> 00:32:08,042 and watching the audience react to my playing, 614 00:32:08,876 --> 00:32:10,459 which was positive, 615 00:32:10,542 --> 00:32:12,083 he said to me one day, 616 00:32:12,167 --> 00:32:14,292 "Would you like to have your own record deal?" 617 00:32:14,375 --> 00:32:16,500 (AUDIENCE CHEERING) 618 00:32:16,584 --> 00:32:19,334 NARRATOR: The resident genius of Arista Records, 619 00:32:19,417 --> 00:32:21,000 Mr. Clive Davis. 620 00:32:21,083 --> 00:32:24,209 REPORTER: Davis's track record of success began in 1967. 621 00:32:24,292 --> 00:32:26,626 Back then as president of CBS Records, 622 00:32:26,709 --> 00:32:28,209 he sensed a revolution in music 623 00:32:28,292 --> 00:32:31,250 and signed up artists such as Santana, Janis Joplin, 624 00:32:31,334 --> 00:32:33,918 Blood, Sweat & Tears, and Chicago. 625 00:32:34,000 --> 00:32:37,125 CLIVE DAVIS: I went to see a tour performance 626 00:32:37,209 --> 00:32:40,792 of the Jeff Lorber group. And... 627 00:32:40,876 --> 00:32:45,584 there was Kenny, standing up and doing his magic. 628 00:32:45,667 --> 00:32:48,417 I was very impressed. 629 00:32:48,500 --> 00:32:53,250 He had a very natural gift of relating to the audience. 630 00:32:53,334 --> 00:32:54,834 ♪ (FAST SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 631 00:32:54,918 --> 00:32:57,667 KENNY G: Clive Davis, he's just a music man. 632 00:32:57,751 --> 00:32:59,459 It's a puzzle, I think, to him. 633 00:32:59,542 --> 00:33:00,876 He puts pieces together. 634 00:33:00,959 --> 00:33:02,042 He sees it 635 00:33:02,125 --> 00:33:04,417 and he can put it together. Like he's-- for example, 636 00:33:05,584 --> 00:33:08,167 he would find a Whitney Houston 637 00:33:08,250 --> 00:33:09,459 and then he would think, 638 00:33:09,542 --> 00:33:10,876 "Who should write the songs for her?" 639 00:33:10,959 --> 00:33:12,334 And then he puts the people together, 640 00:33:12,417 --> 00:33:14,167 and then he puts the producers together, 641 00:33:14,250 --> 00:33:15,709 and they come out with this record. 642 00:33:15,792 --> 00:33:18,792 And, of course, she becomes an international superstar. 643 00:33:18,876 --> 00:33:23,542 ♪ ("SAVING ALL MY LOVE FOR YOU" BY WHITNEY HOUSTON PLAYING) ♪ 644 00:33:23,626 --> 00:33:26,417 JASON: Popular music doesn't just show up. 645 00:33:26,500 --> 00:33:28,959 It's constructed, it's mediated. 646 00:33:29,042 --> 00:33:32,167 Often, we make assessments or evaluations 647 00:33:32,250 --> 00:33:35,125 about what an artist has done, or what their intentions are. 648 00:33:35,209 --> 00:33:38,250 But we fail to realize that those artistic choices 649 00:33:38,334 --> 00:33:41,417 are being made in a much larger context. 650 00:33:41,500 --> 00:33:44,876 ♪ (UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 651 00:33:44,959 --> 00:33:47,542 So to talk about Kenny G properly, 652 00:33:47,626 --> 00:33:50,500 you have to talk about the business aspect. 653 00:33:50,584 --> 00:33:53,042 ♪ ("MERCY MERCY MERCY" PLAYING) ♪ 654 00:33:53,125 --> 00:33:56,042 KENNY G: My first album was produced by Jeff Lorber. 655 00:33:56,125 --> 00:33:58,209 Clive Davis is basically saying, 656 00:33:58,292 --> 00:33:59,709 "We're gonna have the Jeff Lorber sound, 657 00:33:59,792 --> 00:34:02,042 but now it's just gonna feature you." 658 00:34:02,125 --> 00:34:04,500 It's the one where I look like Richard Simmons. 659 00:34:06,125 --> 00:34:10,334 That one did not so great. Sold about 40,000 records. 660 00:34:10,417 --> 00:34:13,375 JASON: Clive Davis's approach was to put an album out 661 00:34:13,459 --> 00:34:14,959 and if it didn't quite hit, 662 00:34:15,042 --> 00:34:17,584 you would re-jigger it a little bit, 663 00:34:17,667 --> 00:34:20,834 change the sounds, alter the marketing. 664 00:34:22,000 --> 00:34:24,250 CLIVE: It was dawning on me 665 00:34:24,334 --> 00:34:27,459 that although he's a soloist 666 00:34:27,542 --> 00:34:29,584 in what was a jazz band, 667 00:34:29,667 --> 00:34:33,042 that his primary appeal 668 00:34:33,709 --> 00:34:34,918 would really be pop. 669 00:34:35,000 --> 00:34:37,792 So they said, "We'll have you work with Kashif." 670 00:34:37,876 --> 00:34:41,584 ♪ ("STONE LOVE" BY KASHIF PLAYING) ♪ 671 00:34:41,667 --> 00:34:45,417 JASON: Kashif was a legendary R&B performer, 672 00:34:45,500 --> 00:34:48,000 producer, a songwriter. 673 00:34:48,083 --> 00:34:50,459 They were interested in results and getting hits. 674 00:34:50,542 --> 00:34:52,334 Kashif was the hot producer at the time. 675 00:34:52,417 --> 00:34:56,125 He had a song out with Evelyn "Champagne" King. 676 00:34:56,209 --> 00:34:57,918 ♪ Love come down ♪ 677 00:34:58,000 --> 00:35:02,375 ♪ Ooh, you make my love Come down ♪ 678 00:35:04,209 --> 00:35:05,500 He did that song. 679 00:35:05,584 --> 00:35:06,918 And that was huge. 680 00:35:07,000 --> 00:35:09,626 Clive Davis and Arista were trying to find the formula 681 00:35:09,709 --> 00:35:10,959 that would work, 682 00:35:11,042 --> 00:35:13,000 and they were mercenaries 683 00:35:13,083 --> 00:35:14,667 at doing that, whatever it took. 684 00:35:16,292 --> 00:35:17,500 ♪ ("HI, HOW YA DOIN'?" PLAYING) ♪ 685 00:35:17,584 --> 00:35:19,626 PENNY: I want to talk about your first music video. 686 00:35:19,709 --> 00:35:21,542 -KENNY G: That's awful. -I think it's great. 687 00:35:21,626 --> 00:35:22,959 KENNY G: If you show that in this film, 688 00:35:23,042 --> 00:35:24,375 I'm going to boycott the premiere. 689 00:35:24,459 --> 00:35:25,876 (PENNY LAUGHING) 690 00:35:25,959 --> 00:35:29,000 PENNY: Okay, if I show it, it will be in the context 691 00:35:29,083 --> 00:35:31,459 of you saying how you feel about it. 692 00:35:31,542 --> 00:35:32,667 -Good, I'm glad. -Okay. 693 00:35:32,751 --> 00:35:35,876 It's just ridiculous, that thing. 694 00:35:35,959 --> 00:35:38,584 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES) ♪ 695 00:35:40,667 --> 00:35:42,709 The philosophy of the record company was, 696 00:35:42,792 --> 00:35:44,876 there's no format for instrumentals, 697 00:35:44,959 --> 00:35:46,292 so we're gonna do vocal songs. 698 00:35:46,375 --> 00:35:48,792 That's what is going to get radio airplay. 699 00:35:48,876 --> 00:35:50,459 You're going to play the sax solo. 700 00:35:50,542 --> 00:35:52,459 They'll discover you through this. 701 00:35:54,292 --> 00:35:56,500 And I thought, "That sounds awful." 702 00:35:57,584 --> 00:35:58,751 People are gonna be tricked 703 00:35:58,834 --> 00:36:00,250 into thinking that I'm the singer, 704 00:36:00,334 --> 00:36:02,375 and who knows if they're gonna like sax stuff? 705 00:36:03,459 --> 00:36:06,167 Can't we just put out instrumental music? 706 00:36:06,250 --> 00:36:07,542 "Nope, not gonna to work." 707 00:36:09,417 --> 00:36:11,626 There's a point where I'm break-dancing on the floor 708 00:36:11,709 --> 00:36:15,209 like some weird, like, rotating. And then I come up, 709 00:36:15,292 --> 00:36:17,417 and I start playing my sax solo. 710 00:36:17,500 --> 00:36:20,667 ♪ (SAXOPHONE SOLO PLAYING) ♪ 711 00:36:20,751 --> 00:36:22,667 And that is supposed to change everybody's mind. 712 00:36:22,751 --> 00:36:25,542 Like, oh, all of a sudden, "Oh, he's the artist?" Yeah. 713 00:36:26,334 --> 00:36:27,375 Never worked. 714 00:36:29,042 --> 00:36:30,918 By the way, have you ever seen the single 715 00:36:31,000 --> 00:36:32,709 for "Hi, How Ya Doin'?" 716 00:36:32,792 --> 00:36:35,876 The single shows a "silhouette" of a guy. 717 00:36:35,959 --> 00:36:38,834 You can't tell whether he's white or Black. 718 00:36:38,918 --> 00:36:42,709 At that time, the most success we have is in Black radio. 719 00:36:42,792 --> 00:36:44,083 And they wanted to make sure 720 00:36:44,167 --> 00:36:46,167 that people didn't know I was white. 721 00:36:46,250 --> 00:36:48,500 I thought they were a bunch of shenanigans. 722 00:36:48,584 --> 00:36:50,626 Like, you ever seen the cover of G Force? 723 00:36:50,709 --> 00:36:51,751 Same thing. 724 00:36:51,834 --> 00:36:53,125 But that record did pretty well. 725 00:36:53,209 --> 00:36:55,292 I think it sold, like, 200,000 records. 726 00:36:55,375 --> 00:36:56,584 So me and Kashif 727 00:36:56,667 --> 00:36:58,000 were gonna make another record together. 728 00:36:58,083 --> 00:37:00,250 ♪ ("LOVE ON THE RISE" PLAYING) ♪ 729 00:37:01,292 --> 00:37:03,250 It's called Gravity. 730 00:37:03,334 --> 00:37:07,417 I hated that record. Hated it. And it didn't sell well. 731 00:37:07,500 --> 00:37:09,626 Which I was actually kind of happy about. 732 00:37:09,709 --> 00:37:12,626 I thought, "I don't want to do any of this again." 733 00:37:12,709 --> 00:37:14,626 I want to do my own kind of music. 734 00:37:18,167 --> 00:37:19,500 So, 1986, 735 00:37:19,584 --> 00:37:21,250 the fourth record comes, 736 00:37:21,334 --> 00:37:24,209 and I had written a whole bunch of instrumentals. 737 00:37:24,292 --> 00:37:27,792 So I sent them to the guys at Arista Records, 738 00:37:27,876 --> 00:37:30,334 They go, "Eh, yeah, these are all right, but 739 00:37:30,417 --> 00:37:31,834 we're looking for songs 740 00:37:31,918 --> 00:37:35,626 that the 15-year-old kids in the ghetto can groove to." 741 00:37:36,500 --> 00:37:38,334 And I said... 742 00:37:38,417 --> 00:37:41,709 "You know I'm a Jewish sax player from Seattle." 743 00:37:41,792 --> 00:37:43,167 "You realize that, right?" 744 00:37:43,250 --> 00:37:45,834 I said, "You know what? I quit." 745 00:37:45,918 --> 00:37:48,792 "I quit. You guys need to drop me from the label." 746 00:37:48,876 --> 00:37:50,209 He goes, "What are you talking about?" 747 00:37:50,292 --> 00:37:53,000 I said, "What am I talking about?" 748 00:37:53,083 --> 00:37:54,459 "What do I know 749 00:37:54,542 --> 00:37:56,125 about 15-year-old kids in the ghetto?" 750 00:37:56,209 --> 00:37:58,459 "What do you mean? We need to write songs 751 00:37:58,542 --> 00:38:00,500 they can groove to, from me?" 752 00:38:00,584 --> 00:38:02,459 "I have no idea what you're talking about." 753 00:38:02,542 --> 00:38:06,042 So he goes, "Look, look, before..." 754 00:38:06,125 --> 00:38:07,626 "Well, do me a favor." 755 00:38:07,709 --> 00:38:09,167 "There's a Junior Walker song..." 756 00:38:09,250 --> 00:38:11,459 ♪ ("WHAT DOES IT TAKE" BY JR. WALKER & THE ALL STARS PLAYING) ♪ 757 00:38:11,542 --> 00:38:13,125 "...and we think that if you do a redo, 758 00:38:13,209 --> 00:38:14,584 it could be really good." 759 00:38:16,125 --> 00:38:18,584 "Has vocals, but it's really a sax song." 760 00:38:20,375 --> 00:38:22,584 So I listened to the song and I went, 761 00:38:22,667 --> 00:38:24,959 "Okay, that seems like a good compromise." 762 00:38:25,709 --> 00:38:27,292 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES) ♪ 763 00:38:28,209 --> 00:38:29,584 Record comes out. 764 00:38:29,667 --> 00:38:31,209 It's kind of a hit. 765 00:38:31,292 --> 00:38:33,584 And we're at 300,000 records. 766 00:38:33,667 --> 00:38:34,792 That's good for me. 767 00:38:34,876 --> 00:38:37,000 ♪ ("WHAT DOES IT TAKE" PLAYING) ♪ 768 00:38:37,083 --> 00:38:40,751 I got a call from my manager who said, 769 00:38:40,834 --> 00:38:43,375 "I'm gonna see if I can get you on Johnny Carson." 770 00:38:45,042 --> 00:38:47,834 So exciting. So I-- So I get the shot. 771 00:38:47,918 --> 00:38:50,334 ANNOUNCER: From Hollywood, 772 00:38:50,417 --> 00:38:52,125 The Tonight Show, starring... 773 00:38:52,209 --> 00:38:54,292 And they say, "You're gonna do your single, 774 00:38:54,375 --> 00:38:56,125 'What Does It Take (To Win Your Love).'" 775 00:38:56,209 --> 00:38:57,667 "That's why you're here." 776 00:38:57,751 --> 00:39:00,209 "And then as Johnny's going off air, 777 00:39:00,292 --> 00:39:01,959 you play-- We don't really care what you play 778 00:39:02,042 --> 00:39:04,250 'cause we're signing off anyway." 779 00:39:04,334 --> 00:39:06,459 I said, "Well, I'm gonna play my song 'Songbird.'" 780 00:39:06,542 --> 00:39:07,584 "We don't care." 781 00:39:07,667 --> 00:39:08,667 Great young musician, 782 00:39:08,751 --> 00:39:09,918 plays great saxophone in his group. 783 00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:11,459 -Kenny G is here tonight. -(AUDIENCE APPLAUDS) 784 00:39:11,542 --> 00:39:12,959 Stay where you are... 785 00:39:13,042 --> 00:39:14,918 So, I'm back there waiting for the thing to happen, 786 00:39:15,000 --> 00:39:17,334 and they come on the door, knocking on the door. 787 00:39:17,417 --> 00:39:20,042 "Hey, Johnny's running late tonight. Sorry." 788 00:39:20,125 --> 00:39:21,876 "We got to cut you down to only one song, 789 00:39:21,959 --> 00:39:23,667 so come out and do your single." 790 00:39:23,751 --> 00:39:26,334 I said, "Okay, cool." Door closes, I look to the guys. 791 00:39:26,417 --> 00:39:28,500 I go, "We're playing 'Songbird.'" 792 00:39:28,584 --> 00:39:31,542 I knew that I needed to play that song. 793 00:39:31,626 --> 00:39:33,083 I wanted to play from my heart, 794 00:39:33,167 --> 00:39:35,918 I wanted people to hear my music. 795 00:39:36,000 --> 00:39:38,959 Because "Songbird" was a song that I just did all by myself. 796 00:39:39,042 --> 00:39:40,709 I mean, I played every instrument on the song, 797 00:39:40,792 --> 00:39:42,959 I recorded it in my own little room. 798 00:39:43,042 --> 00:39:44,209 I wanted that to be heard, 799 00:39:44,292 --> 00:39:47,626 not the single that the record company came up with. 800 00:39:47,709 --> 00:39:49,167 I want to play my instrumental. 801 00:39:49,250 --> 00:39:50,959 Would you welcome, please, Kenny G. 802 00:39:51,042 --> 00:39:52,876 -Kenny? -(AUDIENCE APPLAUDS) 803 00:39:54,876 --> 00:39:56,751 KENNY G: My band got so scared. 804 00:39:56,834 --> 00:39:59,209 I said, "Don't screw me up here." 805 00:39:59,292 --> 00:40:01,375 "When the curtains go up, start playing 'Songbird.'" 806 00:40:01,459 --> 00:40:03,918 "Don't start playing the other song." 807 00:40:04,000 --> 00:40:06,667 "I'm on the Johnny Carson show, tonight, now." 808 00:40:06,751 --> 00:40:09,209 "I am gonna play the song I want to play." 809 00:40:09,292 --> 00:40:14,334 ♪ ("SONGBIRD" PLAYS) ♪ 810 00:40:30,751 --> 00:40:33,459 And the guy that hired us is behind the cameras 811 00:40:33,542 --> 00:40:36,500 looking at me like he wants to kill me. 812 00:40:36,584 --> 00:40:39,500 He's doing a lot of finger, hand gestures to me 813 00:40:39,584 --> 00:40:41,959 while I'm playing, and not just this kind of stuff. 814 00:40:42,042 --> 00:40:45,709 We're talking about some single-digit finger moves. 815 00:40:52,375 --> 00:40:57,292 But that night, the wife of the head of promotion, 816 00:40:57,375 --> 00:41:00,000 Donnie Ienner, says to him, 817 00:41:00,083 --> 00:41:03,083 "Honey, now that's the kind of music you guys should be doing." 818 00:41:03,167 --> 00:41:04,751 "That's beautiful." 819 00:41:06,959 --> 00:41:08,542 So Donnie Ienner now walks into-- 820 00:41:08,626 --> 00:41:10,334 Monday morning, into Clive Davis's office 821 00:41:10,417 --> 00:41:12,500 and says, "Hey, Clive, we got it all wrong." 822 00:41:12,584 --> 00:41:15,918 And so, Clive Davis with his brilliance, 823 00:41:16,000 --> 00:41:19,375 no ego attached, goes, "Boom, let's do the new single." 824 00:41:19,459 --> 00:41:22,083 And he starts writing letters to the radio people. 825 00:41:22,167 --> 00:41:24,834 CLIVE: I wrote a personal letter, 826 00:41:24,918 --> 00:41:26,667 which I had never done before, 827 00:41:26,751 --> 00:41:29,417 to radio programmers 828 00:41:29,500 --> 00:41:31,292 of every genre. 829 00:41:31,375 --> 00:41:33,959 ANNOUNCER: Start your day the easy way. 830 00:41:34,042 --> 00:41:38,375 I said, "Look, I've given you a lot of good music by now, 831 00:41:38,459 --> 00:41:41,459 and I need a favor here. 832 00:41:41,542 --> 00:41:42,876 Play the record." 833 00:41:44,167 --> 00:41:45,459 Three-twenty-three, this is... 834 00:41:45,542 --> 00:41:48,500 KENNY G: Finally, one station, KMEL, "Camel," puts it on. 835 00:41:48,584 --> 00:41:50,918 And it's 4:00 in the afternoon, so it's drive time. 836 00:41:51,000 --> 00:41:53,584 This is a big deal. Their phones light up. 837 00:41:53,667 --> 00:41:55,250 "We love it. This song's beautiful." 838 00:41:55,334 --> 00:41:57,042 "Why don't you play more songs like that?" 839 00:41:57,125 --> 00:41:58,751 "We really like that, who is that?" 840 00:41:58,834 --> 00:42:00,250 "I never heard a sound like that before." 841 00:42:00,334 --> 00:42:02,375 It's the demographic they're looking for. 842 00:42:02,459 --> 00:42:05,292 I guess it's 25 to 35-year-old women. 843 00:42:05,375 --> 00:42:10,542 So, he calls his contemporary in Chicago at their station. 844 00:42:10,626 --> 00:42:12,709 And he calls Detroit, and they call Atlanta, 845 00:42:12,792 --> 00:42:14,626 and they call Miami, and they call Houston. 846 00:42:14,709 --> 00:42:16,876 And all of a sudden, these guys are talking and saying, 847 00:42:16,959 --> 00:42:18,042 "Hey, we don't know why, 848 00:42:18,125 --> 00:42:21,667 but this instrumental is working." 849 00:42:21,751 --> 00:42:24,334 And it becomes a huge national hit song. 850 00:42:25,459 --> 00:42:32,250 ♪ ("SONGBIRD" PLAYING) ♪ 851 00:42:44,542 --> 00:42:47,083 I remember the first time I heard "Songbird," 852 00:42:47,167 --> 00:42:50,292 and I heard it on the radio. 853 00:42:50,375 --> 00:42:53,417 And it was just beautiful. 854 00:42:53,500 --> 00:42:55,542 That song is haunting. 855 00:42:55,626 --> 00:42:57,292 You know, when Kenny came along 856 00:42:57,375 --> 00:42:59,542 there was just something different about that song. 857 00:42:59,626 --> 00:43:02,417 The saxophone was mixed more like a vocalist. 858 00:43:03,042 --> 00:43:04,083 It was more up front. 859 00:43:04,167 --> 00:43:06,083 And then the melody, I mean, you know, that's one 860 00:43:06,167 --> 00:43:07,584 of the great melodies of all time. 861 00:43:07,667 --> 00:43:11,125 Say the name Kenny Gorelick, and many people will ask, who? 862 00:43:11,209 --> 00:43:14,375 But say the name Kenny G, and many will say "Songbird." 863 00:43:14,459 --> 00:43:17,334 TV HOST: His current Arista album, Duotones, is now double platinum 864 00:43:17,417 --> 00:43:20,876 thanks to a top five smash song called "Songbird." 865 00:43:20,959 --> 00:43:24,292 -Ladies and gentlemen, Kenny G. -(AUDIENCE CHEERS) 866 00:43:24,375 --> 00:43:26,042 Please welcome Kenny G. 867 00:43:26,125 --> 00:43:27,417 (AUDIENCE CHEERS) 868 00:43:27,500 --> 00:43:29,209 There he is, Kenny G. 869 00:43:30,626 --> 00:43:33,167 OPRAH WINFREY: It's like you are talking to 870 00:43:33,250 --> 00:43:36,000 and doing a few other things with this instrument. 871 00:43:36,083 --> 00:43:38,083 -What-- When you... (CHUCKLES) -Well... 872 00:43:38,167 --> 00:43:39,542 Well, I was gonna say-- 873 00:43:39,626 --> 00:43:41,292 KENNY G: I'm thinking about a few other things when I'm playing. 874 00:43:41,375 --> 00:43:45,709 OPRAH: It's like making love to this instrument, it's incredible. 875 00:43:45,792 --> 00:43:48,083 TV HOST: Do you marvel at the breadth of your popularity? 876 00:43:48,167 --> 00:43:50,876 That you've been able to go outside the jazz world? 877 00:43:50,959 --> 00:43:53,751 Well, it's so unusual that pop stations 878 00:43:53,834 --> 00:43:55,500 have played my stuff. 879 00:43:55,584 --> 00:43:56,834 Why do you think that is? 880 00:43:57,292 --> 00:43:58,751 Clive Davis. 881 00:43:58,834 --> 00:44:01,167 KENNY G: If it wasn't for his personal letters 882 00:44:01,250 --> 00:44:02,751 to the radio programmers, 883 00:44:02,834 --> 00:44:05,918 that record "Songbird" probably wouldn't have been a hit. 884 00:44:07,584 --> 00:44:09,000 And then to finish the story, 885 00:44:09,083 --> 00:44:12,167 six months go by and guess who calls? 886 00:44:12,250 --> 00:44:14,542 The guys from Johnny Carson. 887 00:44:14,626 --> 00:44:17,000 "We'd love to have you back on the show." (CHUCKLES) 888 00:44:17,083 --> 00:44:19,042 "Please play 'Songbird.'" (CHUCKLES SOFTLY) 889 00:44:20,417 --> 00:44:22,709 (BIRDS CHIRPING) 890 00:44:25,918 --> 00:44:29,500 It's not-- like, it's normally a lot more neater than this, 891 00:44:29,584 --> 00:44:33,626 but I'm doing laundry right now, so, you know... 892 00:44:33,709 --> 00:44:36,584 Nice golf shirt, see? Nice perfect color. 893 00:44:36,667 --> 00:44:38,626 Look at these white pants. They came out perfect. 894 00:44:38,709 --> 00:44:40,042 Look, there are no stains in there. 895 00:44:40,125 --> 00:44:42,500 They were dirty before, no stains, perfect. 896 00:44:43,792 --> 00:44:46,083 Household chores are actually a lot of fun for me. 897 00:44:46,167 --> 00:44:48,250 We want to make sure that's all mixed up. 898 00:44:48,334 --> 00:44:50,667 It's like a detail thing. 899 00:44:50,751 --> 00:44:52,542 Like playing an instrument, it's details 900 00:44:52,626 --> 00:44:55,459 that you get a reward for doing them well. 901 00:44:55,542 --> 00:44:58,417 I'm folding the top under the bottom, see? 902 00:44:58,500 --> 00:45:00,334 That's the story of my life, pretty much. 903 00:45:00,417 --> 00:45:02,709 I'm into the details, working hard, 904 00:45:02,792 --> 00:45:04,209 putting in the reps. 905 00:45:04,292 --> 00:45:05,751 Timer, 20. 906 00:45:05,834 --> 00:45:08,959 And then reaping the reward of, "Hey, I'm really good at this." 907 00:45:09,042 --> 00:45:11,417 "Hey, I'm really good at that. Hey, I do this well." 908 00:45:11,500 --> 00:45:13,375 Mm, smells so good. 909 00:45:13,459 --> 00:45:16,626 Everything I try to get good at, I've gotten good at. 910 00:45:16,709 --> 00:45:18,459 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 911 00:45:20,709 --> 00:45:23,792 -MAN: Well hit, man. -KENNY G: Yes! On the green, on the green... 912 00:45:23,876 --> 00:45:25,417 PENNY: I wanna talk to you about golf. 913 00:45:25,500 --> 00:45:28,792 TV HOST: Golf Digest once called you the best golfer in music. 914 00:45:28,876 --> 00:45:30,918 (AUDIENCE APPLAUDS, CHEERS) 915 00:45:31,876 --> 00:45:32,792 And last Friday, 916 00:45:32,876 --> 00:45:34,250 Aviation's version of the Oscars-- 917 00:45:34,334 --> 00:45:37,250 I want you to know how proud I am to be a pilot. 918 00:45:37,334 --> 00:45:39,751 It's got a lot of the same qualities 919 00:45:39,834 --> 00:45:41,250 that go into being a musician. 920 00:45:41,334 --> 00:45:43,459 You have to practice, you have to work hard-- 921 00:45:43,542 --> 00:45:45,083 You also are an investor. 922 00:45:45,167 --> 00:45:48,125 How did you select Starbucks as an investment? 923 00:45:48,209 --> 00:45:51,792 I was one of the original ten guys that-- part of Starbucks 924 00:45:51,876 --> 00:45:54,667 so that turned out to be a really great investment. 925 00:45:54,751 --> 00:45:56,542 PENNY: (LAUGHING) That's like the understatement... 926 00:45:56,626 --> 00:45:57,667 Yeah. 927 00:45:57,751 --> 00:45:59,834 REPORTER: Give us your best pirate impression. 928 00:45:59,918 --> 00:46:01,792 I leave that to my son Max. 929 00:46:01,876 --> 00:46:03,000 Arr, matey! 930 00:46:03,083 --> 00:46:04,125 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES CONTINUE) ♪ 931 00:46:04,209 --> 00:46:05,500 KENNY G: I have two boys, 932 00:46:05,584 --> 00:46:07,918 so how am I going to become the best father 933 00:46:08,000 --> 00:46:09,292 the world has ever seen? 934 00:46:09,375 --> 00:46:10,709 I'm gonna start studying it. 935 00:46:10,792 --> 00:46:13,667 So I started reading books. I started asking questions. 936 00:46:13,751 --> 00:46:16,500 They actually turned out really, really good. 937 00:46:16,584 --> 00:46:18,209 And, by the way, both of them grew up 938 00:46:18,292 --> 00:46:19,751 watching their father, 939 00:46:19,834 --> 00:46:21,167 who's already super famous, 940 00:46:21,250 --> 00:46:24,709 every day, practicing, practicing. 941 00:46:28,918 --> 00:46:31,125 I still haven't hit one I like yet. 942 00:46:31,209 --> 00:46:33,292 When I do, I'll tell you, okay? 943 00:46:33,375 --> 00:46:37,375 ♪ ("SILHOUETTE" PLAYING) ♪ 944 00:46:43,792 --> 00:46:46,167 Okay, so I'm not gonna play Name That Tune with you. 945 00:46:46,250 --> 00:46:47,959 That's "Silhouette" though, right? 946 00:46:48,042 --> 00:46:53,584 So this is the thing about "Silhouette" after "Songbird." 947 00:46:53,667 --> 00:46:55,792 Because almost every instrumental hit 948 00:46:55,876 --> 00:46:57,209 up until this time... 949 00:46:59,417 --> 00:47:01,542 Ramsey Lewis, "The 'In' Crowd." 950 00:47:03,876 --> 00:47:05,876 "Feels So Good," Chuck Mangione. 951 00:47:07,584 --> 00:47:10,459 Average White Band, "Pick Up the Pieces." 952 00:47:10,542 --> 00:47:13,167 You know, tunes that made it on the pop charts 953 00:47:13,250 --> 00:47:15,000 that were instrumental 954 00:47:15,083 --> 00:47:18,709 kind of became one-hit wonders in pop radio. 955 00:47:18,792 --> 00:47:21,918 And then here comes Kenny with a second hit, 956 00:47:22,000 --> 00:47:24,250 and then a third and, you know, and a fourth. 957 00:47:24,334 --> 00:47:26,959 You could tell that this was something different. 958 00:47:27,042 --> 00:47:28,417 Hi, this is Kenny G, 959 00:47:28,500 --> 00:47:30,584 and here's my new video called "Silhouette," 960 00:47:30,667 --> 00:47:32,375 and I hope you like it. 961 00:47:32,459 --> 00:47:36,250 ♪ ("SILHOUETTE" PLAYING) ♪ 962 00:47:41,125 --> 00:47:43,709 BEN: He does have a style. He does have a style. 963 00:47:43,792 --> 00:47:48,250 This intensely gauzy, very, very breathy thing. 964 00:47:48,334 --> 00:47:53,042 Um, sort of trembly, uh, lots of dynamics. 965 00:47:53,125 --> 00:47:56,083 And he adds this little extra, 966 00:47:56,167 --> 00:48:01,083 over-the-top, um, vulnerable emotionality. 967 00:48:01,167 --> 00:48:03,459 Perhaps that is the Kenny G stamp. 968 00:48:05,250 --> 00:48:08,918 CLIVE: He was coming up with these melodies 969 00:48:09,000 --> 00:48:12,083 that were unique, and a style of play 970 00:48:12,167 --> 00:48:14,083 that was unique. 971 00:48:14,167 --> 00:48:19,083 I do have a sixth sense, in a sense, of melody. 972 00:48:19,167 --> 00:48:20,250 I just do. 973 00:48:20,334 --> 00:48:23,626 I know when the melody is right, and I know how to-- 974 00:48:23,709 --> 00:48:25,792 I know how to come up with a melody. 975 00:48:25,876 --> 00:48:27,375 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 976 00:48:27,918 --> 00:48:28,918 A lot of times, 977 00:48:29,000 --> 00:48:32,417 I hear the beginning of a song in my head. 978 00:48:32,500 --> 00:48:34,626 In my practice session, I'll play a little... 979 00:48:34,709 --> 00:48:35,918 "Ooh, I like that." 980 00:48:36,000 --> 00:48:38,250 "I can hear some chords going on with that little thing." 981 00:48:38,334 --> 00:48:39,918 "That's gonna turn into a song." 982 00:48:40,042 --> 00:48:42,209 Then I have to find someone to help me. 983 00:48:42,292 --> 00:48:45,500 I need somebody that knows the chords, 984 00:48:45,584 --> 00:48:47,584 and will be patient with me when I go, 985 00:48:47,667 --> 00:48:53,000 "No, no, no, yes, hmm, no, yeah, hmm, try again, 986 00:48:53,083 --> 00:48:55,500 give me 17 other options on that chord." 987 00:48:55,584 --> 00:48:57,667 "There's only 12." "Okay, well, give me all 12." 988 00:48:57,751 --> 00:49:00,000 "There's another one? Well, yeah, that one." 989 00:49:00,083 --> 00:49:02,626 Music theory will tell you things about chords 990 00:49:02,709 --> 00:49:04,959 and the notes that go along with the chords. 991 00:49:05,042 --> 00:49:07,834 But in college, I did not want to study music theory. 992 00:49:07,918 --> 00:49:09,167 Just didn't appeal to me. 993 00:49:09,250 --> 00:49:10,709 I thought, "You know what I'm gonna do?" 994 00:49:10,792 --> 00:49:11,959 "I'm gonna take that hour 995 00:49:12,042 --> 00:49:13,626 and go into the practice room and practice." 996 00:49:13,709 --> 00:49:15,167 So that's what I did. 997 00:49:15,250 --> 00:49:18,375 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 998 00:49:20,584 --> 00:49:23,000 -(DOG YAWNS) -(LAUGHS) 999 00:49:23,083 --> 00:49:24,876 I know what sounds good to me. 1000 00:49:24,959 --> 00:49:26,292 I don't need to know theoretically 1001 00:49:26,375 --> 00:49:28,250 that that note goes with that note. 1002 00:49:28,334 --> 00:49:31,626 And I come up with melodies that the whole world likes. 1003 00:49:32,250 --> 00:49:33,209 I do. 1004 00:49:33,292 --> 00:49:35,626 So if I think it sounds good, 1005 00:49:35,709 --> 00:49:37,834 it's probably sounding good. 1006 00:49:37,918 --> 00:49:41,626 ♪ (MELODIC SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 1007 00:49:43,334 --> 00:49:47,250 Duotones sold about 5 million records. 1008 00:49:50,584 --> 00:49:52,375 Next record, Silhouette. 1009 00:49:52,459 --> 00:49:54,083 Boom, another big hit. 1010 00:50:01,042 --> 00:50:04,834 Kenny G Live sold another four, five million records. 1011 00:50:08,500 --> 00:50:11,042 1992, Breathless comes out, 1012 00:50:11,125 --> 00:50:13,083 and everything goes bonkers. 1013 00:50:13,167 --> 00:50:16,125 And it sells 12 million records. 1014 00:50:17,667 --> 00:50:20,334 TV HOST: How would you describe the kind of music you play? 1015 00:50:20,417 --> 00:50:22,709 Well, it's hard to say in words, you know. 1016 00:50:22,792 --> 00:50:26,125 Categorizing it, making some sort of a descriptive label 1017 00:50:26,209 --> 00:50:28,375 will make some people think one thing 1018 00:50:28,459 --> 00:50:29,584 and other people think another. 1019 00:50:29,667 --> 00:50:31,876 So you heard it just a minute ago, 1020 00:50:31,959 --> 00:50:33,834 so what do you think? What's your words for it? 1021 00:50:33,918 --> 00:50:35,209 It might be different than somebody else. 1022 00:50:35,292 --> 00:50:36,459 -I think it's sexy. -Okay. 1023 00:50:36,542 --> 00:50:38,834 -Do people call your music sexy? -Some do. 1024 00:50:38,918 --> 00:50:42,083 ♪ (MELODIC SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 1025 00:50:48,042 --> 00:50:50,584 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES OVER RADIO) ♪ 1026 00:50:53,000 --> 00:50:56,375 BEN: Wasn't part of the marketing around Kenny G's music 1027 00:50:56,459 --> 00:50:58,500 that it was romantic? 1028 00:50:58,584 --> 00:51:01,584 And that maybe it was like music, 1029 00:51:01,667 --> 00:51:04,792 you know, that people wanted in the background 1030 00:51:04,876 --> 00:51:06,959 as they had sex, and stuff like that? 1031 00:51:07,042 --> 00:51:09,751 Yeah. Um... 1032 00:51:09,834 --> 00:51:12,417 That's always been a little bit of a mystery to me. 1033 00:51:12,834 --> 00:51:13,918 You know... 1034 00:51:18,167 --> 00:51:20,667 ♪ (SONG CONTINUES) ♪ 1035 00:51:23,709 --> 00:51:26,417 Oh, maybe not. Maybe it makes sense. 1036 00:51:26,500 --> 00:51:28,667 Maybe it makes sense. 1037 00:51:28,751 --> 00:51:30,209 KENNY G: People have told me that, you know. 1038 00:51:30,292 --> 00:51:34,083 They'll come and they'll whisper in my ear what circumstances, 1039 00:51:34,167 --> 00:51:36,459 they might have used my music in very, very intimate, 1040 00:51:36,542 --> 00:51:37,667 romantic situations. 1041 00:51:37,751 --> 00:51:40,000 It's great. I mean, to be-- To be with somebody 1042 00:51:40,083 --> 00:51:42,167 even in a spiritual, musical sense 1043 00:51:42,250 --> 00:51:43,792 when they're either meditating, 1044 00:51:43,876 --> 00:51:46,375 making love and relaxing in a certain way, 1045 00:51:46,459 --> 00:51:50,375 getting introspective with that music of mine helping them. 1046 00:51:50,459 --> 00:51:53,209 It's flattering. It's, uh... 1047 00:51:53,292 --> 00:51:55,626 I'm glad to be part of it. 1048 00:51:55,709 --> 00:51:57,459 I think my music is romantic. 1049 00:51:57,542 --> 00:51:59,209 By the way, I think I'm romantic. 1050 00:51:59,292 --> 00:52:01,500 I'm not sure that you would get that same response 1051 00:52:01,584 --> 00:52:03,959 from the people that are in my life, 1052 00:52:04,042 --> 00:52:05,334 the close people in my life. 1053 00:52:05,417 --> 00:52:07,584 And I think to myself, how can I not be romantic 1054 00:52:07,667 --> 00:52:10,042 if I can play this beautiful music 1055 00:52:10,125 --> 00:52:11,375 and write these beautiful songs? 1056 00:52:11,459 --> 00:52:13,876 I must be at least somewhat romantic. 1057 00:52:13,959 --> 00:52:16,250 People have gotten married to his music, 1058 00:52:16,334 --> 00:52:18,667 had babies by his music. 1059 00:52:18,751 --> 00:52:20,542 I mean, in the hospital and everything. 1060 00:52:20,626 --> 00:52:23,626 I have a very good friend who has twin sons who... 1061 00:52:23,709 --> 00:52:28,250 Uh, they played Kenny's music in the delivery room. 1062 00:52:28,334 --> 00:52:29,876 -(PENNY LAUGHING) -And I will tell you, 1063 00:52:29,959 --> 00:52:31,751 the wife was crazy about it. 1064 00:52:31,834 --> 00:52:33,000 The husband was like, 1065 00:52:33,083 --> 00:52:36,083 "Oh, God, Kenny G in the delivery..." 1066 00:52:36,167 --> 00:52:38,334 (LAUGHS) 1067 00:52:38,417 --> 00:52:41,042 His music has been a part of a lot of our lives 1068 00:52:41,125 --> 00:52:44,209 as a soundtrack, and so as a result of that, 1069 00:52:44,959 --> 00:52:46,375 we feel connected to him. 1070 00:52:47,334 --> 00:52:53,083 ♪ ("GOING HOME" PLAYING) ♪ 1071 00:52:53,167 --> 00:52:55,292 KENNY G: One of my songs is super popular in China 1072 00:52:55,375 --> 00:52:57,209 called "Going Home." 1073 00:52:57,292 --> 00:53:02,792 ♪ (VOCALIZES "GOING HOME") ♪ 1074 00:53:02,876 --> 00:53:04,959 Okay, that's my song. 1075 00:53:05,042 --> 00:53:08,584 It's been played now for over 30 years 1076 00:53:08,667 --> 00:53:13,584 every day throughout China at the end of the day. 1077 00:53:14,709 --> 00:53:17,876 They really literally took the title "Going Home," 1078 00:53:17,959 --> 00:53:20,375 and they decided that this song is going to be 1079 00:53:20,459 --> 00:53:23,209 the national song for the end of the workday. 1080 00:53:25,083 --> 00:53:26,834 They listen, and then they start packing up, 1081 00:53:26,918 --> 00:53:28,292 and it's time to go home. 1082 00:53:30,209 --> 00:53:31,876 Yeah, I know. I don't know. 1083 00:53:32,000 --> 00:53:33,417 You don't know how that happened? 1084 00:53:33,500 --> 00:53:35,334 I don't know exactly how that happened. 1085 00:53:36,876 --> 00:53:38,375 YIN ZHI YUAN: (IN MANDARIN) 1086 00:53:42,417 --> 00:53:44,709 (IN MANDARIN) 1087 00:54:01,417 --> 00:54:02,500 (CHUCKLES) 1088 00:54:10,334 --> 00:54:13,292 (IN MANDARIN) 1089 00:54:22,542 --> 00:54:24,876 ♪ ("GOING HOME" PLAYING) ♪ 1090 00:54:25,918 --> 00:54:29,125 YIN ZHI YUAN: (IN MANDARIN) 1091 00:54:38,083 --> 00:54:41,918 BEN: The song "Going Home," like a lot of his songs, 1092 00:54:42,000 --> 00:54:45,500 has a calming effect, I guess, 1093 00:54:45,584 --> 00:54:48,167 which will reduce people's desire 1094 00:54:48,250 --> 00:54:51,542 to resist things or cause trouble. 1095 00:54:52,375 --> 00:54:54,334 It's not protesting anything. 1096 00:54:54,417 --> 00:54:56,584 It's not against anything. 1097 00:54:56,667 --> 00:55:00,167 Is Kenny G's music a weapon of consent? 1098 00:55:00,250 --> 00:55:03,876 You know, like, um, does it make people... 1099 00:55:03,959 --> 00:55:07,584 agree to comply? 1100 00:55:09,167 --> 00:55:13,167 Um... And if so, why? 1101 00:55:13,250 --> 00:55:15,209 -♪ ("GOING HOME" PLAYING) ♪ -(CHILD YELLING) 1102 00:55:15,292 --> 00:55:20,083 YIN ZHI YUAN: (IN MANDARIN) 1103 00:55:30,417 --> 00:55:31,792 (IN MANDARIN) 1104 00:55:50,834 --> 00:55:53,918 ♪ (PLAYING "GOING HOME") ♪ 1105 00:55:54,000 --> 00:55:55,459 YIN ZHI YUAN: (IN MANDARIN) 1106 00:56:18,292 --> 00:56:20,000 KENNY G: I just have to time it perfectly 1107 00:56:20,083 --> 00:56:21,459 when I do my shows there, 1108 00:56:21,542 --> 00:56:22,959 because the first time I played it, 1109 00:56:23,042 --> 00:56:24,334 I played it in the middle of the set. 1110 00:56:24,417 --> 00:56:25,918 I looked up, the audience left. 1111 00:56:27,083 --> 00:56:29,083 (SPEAKING IN MANDARIN) 1112 00:56:29,167 --> 00:56:31,000 (AUDIENCE LAUGHS) 1113 00:56:31,083 --> 00:56:34,792 -(SPEAKING IN MANDARIN) -(AUDIENCE LAUGHS) 1114 00:56:34,876 --> 00:56:36,542 KENNY G: When I came into the scene, 1115 00:56:36,626 --> 00:56:39,292 I created maybe a new sound. 1116 00:56:39,375 --> 00:56:40,751 You know, you can call it what you want, 1117 00:56:40,834 --> 00:56:42,834 but you could call it a new sound of jazz, 1118 00:56:42,918 --> 00:56:46,375 a new jazz sound that appealed to a lot of people. 1119 00:56:46,459 --> 00:56:48,626 And I don't think a lot of people can say 1120 00:56:48,709 --> 00:56:51,584 that they created a sound of music. 1121 00:56:51,667 --> 00:56:53,083 And I think I did. 1122 00:56:53,167 --> 00:56:55,250 ♪ (SMOOTH JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 1123 00:56:56,250 --> 00:56:57,751 And then people decided 1124 00:56:57,834 --> 00:57:01,500 there should be a whole radio format like my music. 1125 00:57:01,584 --> 00:57:02,709 RADIO HOST: Welcome to the birth 1126 00:57:02,792 --> 00:57:04,834 of Philadelphia's newest radio station, 1127 00:57:04,918 --> 00:57:07,918 WJJZ 106.1 FM. 1128 00:57:08,000 --> 00:57:09,959 We're proud to present a music format 1129 00:57:10,042 --> 00:57:12,167 that's never been showcased here before. 1130 00:57:12,250 --> 00:57:13,918 We call it smooth jazz. 1131 00:57:14,000 --> 00:57:15,417 In our debut hour, 1132 00:57:15,500 --> 00:57:18,000 we'll hear "Champagne" from Kenny G. 1133 00:57:18,083 --> 00:57:21,584 So I became, like, this face of this sound. 1134 00:57:21,667 --> 00:57:24,250 And they decided to call it "smooth jazz," 1135 00:57:24,334 --> 00:57:27,292 because if they called it jazz, it was gonna turn people away. 1136 00:57:28,709 --> 00:57:29,792 In the late '80s, 1137 00:57:29,876 --> 00:57:32,125 the ratings game was very competitive, 1138 00:57:32,209 --> 00:57:35,250 so everybody was doing research. 1139 00:57:35,334 --> 00:57:36,792 We were market researchers, 1140 00:57:36,876 --> 00:57:39,292 and we really let the listeners 1141 00:57:39,375 --> 00:57:41,626 take over the format. 1142 00:57:41,709 --> 00:57:44,500 We would come in and get at least a hundred people, 1143 00:57:44,584 --> 00:57:47,292 and we would run hooks of songs by them. 1144 00:57:47,375 --> 00:57:49,626 They had a little dial in their hand, 1145 00:57:49,709 --> 00:57:50,959 and if they liked it-- 1146 00:57:51,042 --> 00:57:52,375 What do you do when you like a song? 1147 00:57:52,459 --> 00:57:54,167 You turn it up, like the volume. 1148 00:57:54,250 --> 00:57:55,626 So they would just turn it up. 1149 00:57:55,709 --> 00:57:57,959 And they could go to 100 if they loved the song. 1150 00:57:58,042 --> 00:58:00,209 We would watch these lines go up and down. 1151 00:58:01,500 --> 00:58:02,876 And then Kenny G would come on... 1152 00:58:02,959 --> 00:58:05,918 Right up to the top. Everybody loved it. 1153 00:58:06,000 --> 00:58:08,417 Nine out of the top 15 songs would be Kenny G songs, 1154 00:58:08,500 --> 00:58:11,626 out of, like, 650 songs that we researched. 1155 00:58:11,709 --> 00:58:13,167 And then we would say, 1156 00:58:13,250 --> 00:58:15,959 "Just tell us what words pop to mind." 1157 00:58:16,042 --> 00:58:17,500 And almost everybody would say, 1158 00:58:17,584 --> 00:58:19,834 "It's jazz, but..." 1159 00:58:19,918 --> 00:58:23,459 And I still-- I still remember this woman's face. 1160 00:58:23,542 --> 00:58:25,459 I can see it as clear as day. 1161 00:58:25,542 --> 00:58:29,250 She's thinking, she says, "It's jazz." 1162 00:58:29,334 --> 00:58:31,459 She said, "It's smooth jazz." 1163 00:58:31,542 --> 00:58:34,792 It was almost like it just came to her like a lightning bolt. 1164 00:58:34,876 --> 00:58:36,417 And we were all like, "That's it." 1165 00:58:36,500 --> 00:58:38,042 You know, I mean, that's got to be it. 1166 00:58:39,626 --> 00:58:42,584 WNUA in Chicago was the first station in the country 1167 00:58:42,667 --> 00:58:44,167 to use the term "smooth jazz." 1168 00:58:44,250 --> 00:58:46,584 You know, it later was adopted in a lot of places 1169 00:58:46,667 --> 00:58:49,042 where we were consulting. 1170 00:58:49,125 --> 00:58:51,083 MAN: You're a bit too old for rock and roll 1171 00:58:51,167 --> 00:58:54,542 and classical music for you might be a little cerebral. 1172 00:58:54,626 --> 00:58:56,626 And jazz is a little esoteric. 1173 00:58:56,709 --> 00:58:58,709 But you want to be part of what's going on in music. 1174 00:58:58,792 --> 00:59:00,209 What's for me? 1175 00:59:01,125 --> 00:59:02,751 I listen to it at work. 1176 00:59:02,834 --> 00:59:04,542 Uh, actually, I listen to it all the time. 1177 00:59:04,626 --> 00:59:07,209 It fits in perfectly with everything I do. 1178 00:59:07,292 --> 00:59:10,500 I think I perform better. I hope my bosses say that. 1179 00:59:10,584 --> 00:59:11,792 I've never heard music like this... 1180 00:59:11,876 --> 00:59:15,542 This format got a lot of traction in offices. 1181 00:59:15,626 --> 00:59:18,959 It was something that everybody could agree on 1182 00:59:19,042 --> 00:59:20,250 in the office. 1183 00:59:20,334 --> 00:59:22,125 No one was going to be offended 1184 00:59:22,209 --> 00:59:24,125 by anything that you hear. 1185 00:59:24,209 --> 00:59:27,209 It was never too loud or rowdy. 1186 00:59:27,292 --> 00:59:29,334 But it also had enough tempo 1187 00:59:29,417 --> 00:59:30,876 to keep it interesting, 1188 00:59:30,959 --> 00:59:33,250 to have you nod your head a little bit. 1189 00:59:33,334 --> 00:59:36,792 ALLEN KEPLER: The key was to make it palatable for a big tent. 1190 00:59:36,876 --> 00:59:39,751 There are certain people that love smooth jazz 1191 00:59:39,834 --> 00:59:43,083 that would never listen to jazz. 1192 00:59:43,167 --> 00:59:45,083 And we used to hear this in focus groups. 1193 00:59:45,167 --> 00:59:49,500 "I didn't really know I liked jazz, but I like this." 1194 00:59:50,417 --> 00:59:53,584 ♪ ("SENTIMENTAL" PLAYING) ♪ 1195 00:59:59,334 --> 01:00:02,083 CHRIS: In the 1980s and the 1990s, 1196 01:00:02,167 --> 01:00:05,292 traditional jazz had been quite marginalized economically, 1197 01:00:05,375 --> 01:00:08,459 and the opportunities for jazz musicians were dwindling. 1198 01:00:08,542 --> 01:00:12,209 But at the same time, you have someone named Kenny G, 1199 01:00:12,292 --> 01:00:15,292 and some other musicians, too, that were playing in this 1200 01:00:15,375 --> 01:00:18,334 that were being extremely successful financially, 1201 01:00:18,417 --> 01:00:21,667 and they were using that four letter word "jazz." 1202 01:00:21,751 --> 01:00:24,667 He was having a huge impact on society, 1203 01:00:24,751 --> 01:00:27,918 in terms of defining what jazz is, 1204 01:00:28,000 --> 01:00:30,375 even though within the jazz community, 1205 01:00:30,459 --> 01:00:32,709 people were looking at his music with disdain 1206 01:00:32,792 --> 01:00:34,542 and really distancing themselves 1207 01:00:34,626 --> 01:00:36,167 from what he was doing. 1208 01:00:40,626 --> 01:00:42,375 WILL LAYMAN: People sometimes legitimately ask, 1209 01:00:42,459 --> 01:00:44,000 you know, "Why do jazz musicians..." 1210 01:00:44,083 --> 01:00:46,375 "Why are they so irritated by Kenny G?" 1211 01:00:46,459 --> 01:00:49,042 And I was thinking about this and, you know, 1212 01:00:49,125 --> 01:00:53,000 the Harlem Globetrotters are a basketball team 1213 01:00:53,083 --> 01:00:55,500 that's existed for decades. 1214 01:00:55,584 --> 01:00:58,167 ♪ (LIGHTHEARTED MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 1215 01:00:59,959 --> 01:01:02,500 WILL: And they do not play competitive basketball. 1216 01:01:02,584 --> 01:01:04,834 They are a group of entertainers, 1217 01:01:04,918 --> 01:01:07,334 and they spin the basketball on their finger, 1218 01:01:07,417 --> 01:01:10,250 and they do trick shots, and they clown around. 1219 01:01:10,334 --> 01:01:12,542 I would say that most players in the NBA 1220 01:01:12,626 --> 01:01:14,000 love the Globetrotters. 1221 01:01:14,083 --> 01:01:16,042 But imagine a world 1222 01:01:16,125 --> 01:01:20,167 in which legitimate competitive basketball 1223 01:01:20,250 --> 01:01:21,542 is not popular, 1224 01:01:21,626 --> 01:01:25,709 and LeBron James and Michael Jordan in his day, 1225 01:01:25,792 --> 01:01:29,209 they worked their whole lives to be great basketball players, 1226 01:01:29,292 --> 01:01:31,250 and now the only way they can afford the rent 1227 01:01:31,334 --> 01:01:35,500 on their apartment is to part-time be, like, waiters. 1228 01:01:35,584 --> 01:01:38,542 Imagine how they would feel about the Harlem Globetrotters 1229 01:01:38,626 --> 01:01:40,334 spinning the ball on their finger 1230 01:01:40,417 --> 01:01:42,417 and making a lot of money from it. 1231 01:01:42,500 --> 01:01:44,542 And I think that's how jazz musicians 1232 01:01:44,626 --> 01:01:46,584 feel about Kenny G. 1233 01:01:46,667 --> 01:01:49,751 -♪ (PLAYING SINGLE NOTE) ♪ -(AUDIENCE CHUCKLES) 1234 01:01:53,792 --> 01:01:57,792 -(AUDIENCE LAUGHS, APPLAUDS) -♪ (NOTE CONTINUES) ♪ 1235 01:01:59,375 --> 01:02:02,626 Every single jazz saxophone player 1236 01:02:02,709 --> 01:02:04,042 can do circular breathing, 1237 01:02:04,125 --> 01:02:07,292 and every player in the NBA can spin the ball on their finger 1238 01:02:07,375 --> 01:02:09,459 and, like, have it roll across their shoulders. 1239 01:02:09,542 --> 01:02:12,459 They can all do it because it's fun and they do it. 1240 01:02:12,542 --> 01:02:13,834 But it's not basketball. 1241 01:02:13,918 --> 01:02:16,459 ♪ (UPBEAT SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 1242 01:02:19,876 --> 01:02:22,918 JASON: You know, to me, I look at him in two ways. 1243 01:02:23,000 --> 01:02:24,959 On one hand, he's introduced people 1244 01:02:25,042 --> 01:02:26,751 all over the world to jazz 1245 01:02:26,834 --> 01:02:29,876 in a way that is probably unquantifiable, 1246 01:02:29,959 --> 01:02:31,584 given the number of records that he's sold. 1247 01:02:31,667 --> 01:02:33,626 There's a lot of people for whom they would never 1248 01:02:33,709 --> 01:02:36,667 have heard jazz unless they had first heard Kenny G. 1249 01:02:36,751 --> 01:02:38,667 And maybe it was a kind of gateway 1250 01:02:38,751 --> 01:02:40,292 into all kinds of other jazz. 1251 01:02:40,375 --> 01:02:41,709 It certainly was for me. 1252 01:02:41,792 --> 01:02:43,250 And yet, at the same time, 1253 01:02:43,334 --> 01:02:46,667 he seems to draw from this rich and venerated history 1254 01:02:46,751 --> 01:02:50,292 of Black music without necessarily contributing much 1255 01:02:50,375 --> 01:02:51,626 back to the form. 1256 01:02:51,709 --> 01:02:52,751 PRESENTER: ...artist, Kenny G! 1257 01:02:52,834 --> 01:02:54,250 He's such a deeply problematic figure, 1258 01:02:54,334 --> 01:02:59,000 because he really extends this long and troubling history 1259 01:02:59,083 --> 01:03:01,250 of appropriation in popular music 1260 01:03:01,334 --> 01:03:03,459 where Black artists innovate, 1261 01:03:03,542 --> 01:03:05,292 and then white artists come along and stylize, 1262 01:03:05,375 --> 01:03:07,918 and then receive greater financial renumeration, 1263 01:03:08,000 --> 01:03:09,959 and greater critical acclaim. 1264 01:03:10,042 --> 01:03:12,042 Never th-- I've honestly never put a lot of thought 1265 01:03:12,125 --> 01:03:16,083 into the color of my skin, and my career, and my success. 1266 01:03:16,626 --> 01:03:17,876 Honestly haven't. 1267 01:03:17,959 --> 01:03:20,542 I mean, if I was a Black guy, 1268 01:03:20,626 --> 01:03:22,709 would Clive Davis have signed me as easily? 1269 01:03:22,792 --> 01:03:24,042 I think he probably would have. 1270 01:03:24,125 --> 01:03:26,167 I don't think that would have made a difference. 1271 01:03:26,250 --> 01:03:29,209 Would I have been as big of an artist, you know? 1272 01:03:29,292 --> 01:03:32,292 Then we have to look at what was pop radio like in, 1273 01:03:32,375 --> 01:03:33,709 let's say, 1986. 1274 01:03:33,792 --> 01:03:35,500 Because that's when I had my song "Songbird." 1275 01:03:35,584 --> 01:03:38,000 Are they more apt to play it because I'm white? 1276 01:03:38,083 --> 01:03:41,000 What if I was a Black guy with the same song? 1277 01:03:41,083 --> 01:03:42,209 They might go, 1278 01:03:42,292 --> 01:03:45,167 "You know, we'll leave that to the R&B stations." 1279 01:03:45,250 --> 01:03:49,375 So I'm gonna say I probably benefited from that. 1280 01:03:50,083 --> 01:03:51,292 I'm kind of thinking 1281 01:03:51,375 --> 01:03:53,000 that I got that door opened for me. 1282 01:03:53,083 --> 01:03:54,500 Yeah. I think that's a good question. 1283 01:03:54,584 --> 01:03:56,292 I've never really thought about it like that, 1284 01:03:56,375 --> 01:03:59,083 and I think-- I think I benefited. 1285 01:03:59,167 --> 01:04:01,709 I mean, historically, in this country, 1286 01:04:01,792 --> 01:04:04,709 certainly, African American artists who have-- 1287 01:04:04,792 --> 01:04:07,918 You know, who are great players with incredible talent, 1288 01:04:08,000 --> 01:04:10,292 who get to watch others, you know, 1289 01:04:10,375 --> 01:04:13,083 like your Elvis Presley's and all these people, 1290 01:04:13,167 --> 01:04:16,876 take their music and then become rich from it. 1291 01:04:16,959 --> 01:04:19,042 That's not a fun thing to watch. 1292 01:04:19,125 --> 01:04:23,209 I can understand where some of the resentment comes from. 1293 01:04:23,292 --> 01:04:26,918 ♪ (SAXOPHONE PLAYS TUNE OF "WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD" BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG) ♪ 1294 01:04:29,834 --> 01:04:30,876 Uh-oh. 1295 01:04:34,626 --> 01:04:37,542 ♪ (TRANSITIONS INTO "WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD" BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG) ♪ 1296 01:04:37,626 --> 01:04:39,709 (AUDIENCE CHEERING) 1297 01:04:41,125 --> 01:04:44,250 ♪ I see trees of green ♪ 1298 01:04:45,584 --> 01:04:47,959 ♪ Red roses too ♪ 1299 01:04:48,918 --> 01:04:51,000 ♪ I see them bloom ♪ 1300 01:04:52,334 --> 01:04:54,626 ♪ For me and you ♪ 1301 01:04:54,709 --> 01:04:57,125 ♪ And I think to myself ♪ 1302 01:04:59,792 --> 01:05:02,250 ♪ What a wonderful world ♪ 1303 01:05:02,334 --> 01:05:04,417 KENNY G: The Louis Armstrong duet happened 1304 01:05:04,500 --> 01:05:07,292 when I was sitting in my driveway in Seattle. 1305 01:05:07,375 --> 01:05:09,751 I just got through hearing that song... 1306 01:05:09,834 --> 01:05:11,459 ♪ Unforgettable ♪ 1307 01:05:11,542 --> 01:05:13,876 ♪ (UNFORGETTABLE BY NAT KING COLE PLAYS) ♪ 1308 01:05:13,959 --> 01:05:15,209 KENNY G: With Natalie Cole 1309 01:05:15,292 --> 01:05:17,667 and her late father, Nat King Cole. 1310 01:05:19,167 --> 01:05:22,292 I thought, "Wow, that's cool." 1311 01:05:22,375 --> 01:05:24,417 "I want do a song like that." 1312 01:05:25,876 --> 01:05:27,584 We needed permission to do it, 1313 01:05:27,667 --> 01:05:29,500 from the Louis Armstrong Foundation. 1314 01:05:29,584 --> 01:05:31,459 And we said, "Look, we want to give all the money 1315 01:05:31,542 --> 01:05:32,834 to whatever charity you want. 1316 01:05:32,918 --> 01:05:35,959 And we want to pay tribute to this beautiful song." 1317 01:05:36,042 --> 01:05:37,542 And it became a huge hit. 1318 01:05:37,626 --> 01:05:39,167 But there's a few musicians out there 1319 01:05:39,250 --> 01:05:41,167 that felt protective of 1320 01:05:41,250 --> 01:05:42,959 Louis Armstrong and his legacy, 1321 01:05:43,042 --> 01:05:45,417 and they felt like it was tainted by me playing with him, 1322 01:05:45,500 --> 01:05:47,626 and they were very vocal about it. 1323 01:05:47,709 --> 01:05:49,876 ♪ (GUITAR TUNE PLAYING) ♪ 1324 01:05:51,292 --> 01:05:54,334 KENNY G: It was a guitar player named Pat Metheny. 1325 01:05:54,417 --> 01:05:56,751 BEN: Pat Metheny had written something 1326 01:05:56,834 --> 01:05:59,542 like a screed against the song 1327 01:05:59,626 --> 01:06:02,667 and against what Kenny G was doing. 1328 01:06:02,751 --> 01:06:05,292 CHRIS: He is highly respected in the jazz world, 1329 01:06:05,375 --> 01:06:07,709 so that was kind of like jazz aristocracy 1330 01:06:07,792 --> 01:06:10,334 coming out and speaking against Kenny G. 1331 01:06:10,417 --> 01:06:12,292 -COMPUTER: You've got mail. -BEN: More and more people 1332 01:06:12,375 --> 01:06:15,125 started forwarding me this thing. 1333 01:06:15,209 --> 01:06:16,542 (EMAIL NOTIFICATION TUNE) 1334 01:06:16,626 --> 01:06:19,459 It was a moment of going viral, 1335 01:06:19,542 --> 01:06:20,792 but through email. 1336 01:06:20,876 --> 01:06:22,500 (NOTIFICATIONS CONTINUE) 1337 01:06:23,626 --> 01:06:25,334 You want me to read it out loud for you? 1338 01:06:27,542 --> 01:06:29,834 "This type of musical necrophilia 1339 01:06:29,918 --> 01:06:33,209 was weird when Natalie Cole did it with her dad, 1340 01:06:33,292 --> 01:06:35,000 but it was her dad." 1341 01:06:35,083 --> 01:06:37,500 "When Kenny G decided that it was appropriate 1342 01:06:37,584 --> 01:06:40,042 for him to defile the music of the man 1343 01:06:40,125 --> 01:06:41,918 who's probably the greatest jazz musician 1344 01:06:42,000 --> 01:06:45,042 that has ever lived by spewing his lame-ass..." 1345 01:06:45,125 --> 01:06:48,876 JOHN: "...jive, pseudo-bluesy, out-of-tune noodling..." 1346 01:06:48,959 --> 01:06:51,292 BEN: "...wimped-out, fucked-up playing 1347 01:06:51,375 --> 01:06:53,834 all over one of Louis' tracks..." 1348 01:06:53,918 --> 01:06:55,167 "...he did something 1349 01:06:55,250 --> 01:06:57,292 that I would not have imagined possible." 1350 01:06:57,375 --> 01:07:00,584 JOHN: "He shit all over the graves of all the musicians 1351 01:07:00,667 --> 01:07:04,334 who have risked their lives by going out there on the road 1352 01:07:04,417 --> 01:07:07,375 for years and years, developing their own music..." 1353 01:07:07,459 --> 01:07:10,709 "...inspired by the standards of grace that Louis Armstrong 1354 01:07:10,792 --> 01:07:13,000 brought to every single note that he played." 1355 01:07:13,083 --> 01:07:16,250 "There are some things that are sacred." 1356 01:07:17,417 --> 01:07:18,751 "And amongst any musician 1357 01:07:18,834 --> 01:07:20,834 that has ever attempted to address jazz 1358 01:07:20,918 --> 01:07:22,918 at even the most basic of levels, 1359 01:07:23,000 --> 01:07:26,459 Louis Armstrong and his music is hallowed ground." 1360 01:07:26,542 --> 01:07:29,751 "By disrespecting Louis, his legacy and, by default..." 1361 01:07:29,834 --> 01:07:32,876 "Everyone who has ever tried to do something positive 1362 01:07:32,959 --> 01:07:34,334 with improvised music..." 1363 01:07:34,417 --> 01:07:39,125 "Kenny G has created a new low point in modern culture, 1364 01:07:39,209 --> 01:07:42,959 something that we should all be totally embarrassed about 1365 01:07:43,042 --> 01:07:45,209 and afraid of." 1366 01:07:45,292 --> 01:07:48,459 "We ignore this at our own peril." 1367 01:07:48,542 --> 01:07:51,042 That's the line that always gets me. 1368 01:07:51,125 --> 01:07:53,459 "The only reason he could possibly have 1369 01:07:53,542 --> 01:07:55,751 for doing something this inherently wrong 1370 01:07:55,834 --> 01:07:58,042 on both human and musical terms 1371 01:07:58,125 --> 01:08:01,125 was for the record sales and the money it would bring." 1372 01:08:01,209 --> 01:08:03,584 "Everything I said here is exactly the same 1373 01:08:03,667 --> 01:08:07,250 as what I would say to Gorelick if I ever saw him in person." 1374 01:08:07,334 --> 01:08:09,292 "And if I ever do see him, 1375 01:08:09,375 --> 01:08:10,959 he will get a piece of my mind, 1376 01:08:11,042 --> 01:08:14,292 and maybe a guitar wrapped around his head." 1377 01:08:16,751 --> 01:08:18,500 He's entitled to his opinion. 1378 01:08:20,000 --> 01:08:21,834 I think he was being super protective 1379 01:08:21,918 --> 01:08:24,542 of the traditional jazz genre, 1380 01:08:24,626 --> 01:08:26,751 and I understand it. 1381 01:08:26,834 --> 01:08:28,209 So I'm not mad at him. 1382 01:08:28,292 --> 01:08:31,751 I never get mad at anybody for pretty much anything... 1383 01:08:33,292 --> 01:08:35,959 because it doesn't do me any good. 1384 01:08:36,042 --> 01:08:37,876 I mean, when have you ever gotten mad at somebody 1385 01:08:37,959 --> 01:08:39,292 and then they go, 1386 01:08:39,375 --> 01:08:41,334 "You're right, I was wrong"? 1387 01:08:41,417 --> 01:08:42,459 Nobody ever does that. 1388 01:08:42,542 --> 01:08:43,959 Sometimes you say the word "jazz," 1389 01:08:44,042 --> 01:08:46,292 and people think of some of the worst music on earth. 1390 01:08:46,375 --> 01:08:48,584 Like, for instance, Kenny G. I mean, you know, 1391 01:08:48,667 --> 01:08:51,292 there's nothing more stupid than that, let's face it. 1392 01:08:51,375 --> 01:08:54,542 That's the dumbest music there ever could possibly be 1393 01:08:54,626 --> 01:08:56,500 in the history of human beings. 1394 01:08:56,584 --> 01:09:02,042 Pat Metheny was attacking the song within a jazz context. 1395 01:09:02,125 --> 01:09:03,918 From my point of view, I felt that 1396 01:09:04,000 --> 01:09:06,876 both Kenny G and Louis Armstrong, 1397 01:09:06,959 --> 01:09:09,209 via that song, "What a Wonderful World," 1398 01:09:09,292 --> 01:09:13,167 were operating within the larger sphere of popular culture. 1399 01:09:13,250 --> 01:09:16,209 And the sacredness of jazz, 1400 01:09:16,292 --> 01:09:20,918 and the ethics of dealing with jazz... 1401 01:09:21,000 --> 01:09:23,459 I don't know, I just felt like those questions were so-- 1402 01:09:23,542 --> 01:09:25,167 like, didn't apply. 1403 01:09:25,250 --> 01:09:26,751 ♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 1404 01:09:26,834 --> 01:09:29,125 JOHN: You know, this idea that Louis Armstrong 1405 01:09:29,209 --> 01:09:31,918 regarded his music as sacred? 1406 01:09:32,000 --> 01:09:34,375 What? (LAUGHS) 1407 01:09:34,459 --> 01:09:37,167 I mean, even if it were true, 1408 01:09:37,250 --> 01:09:43,000 sacralization of any art form is what destroys it. 1409 01:09:43,083 --> 01:09:46,876 -♪ (SINGLE TRUMPET NOTE) ♪ -(AUDIENCE APPLAUDS) 1410 01:09:48,000 --> 01:09:51,375 I kind of cheered on Pat Metheny's complaint, 1411 01:09:51,459 --> 01:09:54,000 because I hated hearing Louis 1412 01:09:54,083 --> 01:09:55,959 kind of like gooped up like that. 1413 01:09:56,042 --> 01:09:58,334 And at the same time, I kind of just thought, like, 1414 01:09:58,417 --> 01:10:00,083 "Oh, man, you know, 1415 01:10:00,167 --> 01:10:01,959 don't complain about him that hard." 1416 01:10:02,042 --> 01:10:04,375 It felt like it discredited the rest of us 1417 01:10:04,459 --> 01:10:07,709 who were just disliking Kenny G at a lower simmer. 1418 01:10:07,792 --> 01:10:10,709 Now, of course, the irony is, it's one of the best things 1419 01:10:10,792 --> 01:10:12,375 Kenny G ever did, 1420 01:10:12,459 --> 01:10:15,000 because it's elevated by Louis. 1421 01:10:15,083 --> 01:10:18,042 And Kenny brings it down a little bit, 1422 01:10:18,125 --> 01:10:19,876 to my hearing of it, 1423 01:10:19,959 --> 01:10:21,751 but he can't bring it down that low, 1424 01:10:21,834 --> 01:10:23,959 because Louis is still there. 1425 01:10:24,042 --> 01:10:27,083 ♪ ("WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD" BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG PLAYS) ♪ 1426 01:10:28,209 --> 01:10:30,000 JASON: It's hard to say if Kenny G 1427 01:10:30,083 --> 01:10:34,375 has elevated the jazz form artistically. 1428 01:10:34,459 --> 01:10:36,584 But maybe we're looking at the wrong 1429 01:10:36,667 --> 01:10:38,375 set of, you know, criteria. 1430 01:10:38,459 --> 01:10:40,000 There's something deeply powerful 1431 01:10:40,083 --> 01:10:42,792 about the fact that that music has reached millions of people, 1432 01:10:42,876 --> 01:10:45,542 and that people have found their way into that music. 1433 01:10:45,626 --> 01:10:47,209 That has to be at least addressed. 1434 01:10:47,292 --> 01:10:50,542 It can't simply be that millions of people are just stupid, 1435 01:10:50,626 --> 01:10:53,209 and Pat Metheny is the smart one. 1436 01:10:53,292 --> 01:10:55,792 There is some music that some people call bad. 1437 01:10:55,876 --> 01:10:59,000 There's some music that some people call good. 1438 01:10:59,083 --> 01:11:01,000 That doesn't really tell us anything about the music, 1439 01:11:01,083 --> 01:11:03,334 but it tells us a lot about society and culture, 1440 01:11:03,417 --> 01:11:04,667 and about those people. 1441 01:11:04,751 --> 01:11:06,792 YOUTUBER: Kenny G, Breathless. 1442 01:11:06,876 --> 01:11:09,042 I listened to this, and this is complete crap. 1443 01:11:09,125 --> 01:11:10,167 (BULLETS FIRING) 1444 01:11:10,250 --> 01:11:12,083 CHRIS: As soon as I say, "Kenny G sucks," 1445 01:11:12,167 --> 01:11:15,250 then I'm aligning myself with a bunch of other people, 1446 01:11:15,334 --> 01:11:18,042 and one of the functions of bad music is just that. 1447 01:11:18,125 --> 01:11:20,459 It's a way that we separate each other 1448 01:11:20,542 --> 01:11:21,959 and distinguish each other, 1449 01:11:22,042 --> 01:11:24,667 and create distance or create allegiances. 1450 01:11:26,834 --> 01:11:29,709 Some guy says, "Kenny G's trash," 1451 01:11:29,792 --> 01:11:33,125 and then there's some person that, like, 1452 01:11:33,209 --> 01:11:35,667 played a song by Kenny G at their wedding, 1453 01:11:35,751 --> 01:11:38,250 and it's deeply meaningful to them. 1454 01:11:38,334 --> 01:11:40,751 ♪ (SAXOPHONE PLAYING TUNE BY KENNY G) ♪ 1455 01:11:46,834 --> 01:11:48,459 JOHN: Every time it comes on, 1456 01:11:48,542 --> 01:11:52,834 they just have these really wonderful associations with it, 1457 01:11:52,918 --> 01:11:54,542 and then they're being told, 1458 01:11:54,626 --> 01:11:57,751 "No, you should not have those experiences, 1459 01:11:57,834 --> 01:12:01,167 or if you have them, you should be apologizing for them." 1460 01:12:12,000 --> 01:12:14,167 KENNY G: When you love a piece of music, 1461 01:12:14,250 --> 01:12:17,459 you're basically exposing something about you. 1462 01:12:17,542 --> 01:12:20,000 "I like this, don't you?" "No, I hate that." 1463 01:12:20,083 --> 01:12:25,000 They're basically saying to you, they hate something about you. 1464 01:12:26,667 --> 01:12:29,042 "It's good. It's no good. It's good. It's no good." 1465 01:12:29,125 --> 01:12:31,584 You're basically saying, "You're good, you're no good." 1466 01:12:31,667 --> 01:12:32,751 "You're good, you're no good." 1467 01:12:32,834 --> 01:12:35,918 And then people fight for their own self-worth. 1468 01:12:36,000 --> 01:12:39,167 ♪ (SOFT SAXOPHONE MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 1469 01:12:45,417 --> 01:12:48,834 JOHN: Ultimately, what the musical experience resides in 1470 01:12:48,918 --> 01:12:51,459 is how this music communicates to you, 1471 01:12:51,542 --> 01:12:53,542 what its meaning is to you, 1472 01:12:53,626 --> 01:12:56,542 why it actually conveys some really deep, 1473 01:12:56,626 --> 01:13:00,000 ineffable meaning that we can't even put words on. 1474 01:13:00,083 --> 01:13:02,709 That's the ultimate musical experience. 1475 01:13:15,751 --> 01:13:17,792 ♪ (MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪ 1476 01:13:21,834 --> 01:13:24,292 Yeah, what the hell's not to like? 1477 01:13:25,500 --> 01:13:26,751 Like, I totally... 1478 01:13:29,709 --> 01:13:30,751 Yeah. 1479 01:13:38,667 --> 01:13:41,500 (INDISTINCT AUDIENCE CHATTER) 1480 01:13:41,584 --> 01:13:44,834 VENUE ORGANIZER: If you're waiting in line for Kenny G, 1481 01:13:44,918 --> 01:13:47,000 then please line up this way. 1482 01:13:47,083 --> 01:13:48,500 We'll make it really quick. 1483 01:13:48,584 --> 01:13:50,918 That's what I'm here for, to make it really quick. 1484 01:13:51,000 --> 01:13:52,667 So have your CDs ready. 1485 01:13:52,751 --> 01:13:54,667 KENNY G: This feels good. Okay, here we are. 1486 01:13:54,751 --> 01:13:58,667 All right, ready? And smile. Good. Excellent. Come on out. 1487 01:13:58,751 --> 01:14:01,334 -FAN 1: Thank you. See you later. -Bye. Thanks. Next in line. 1488 01:14:01,417 --> 01:14:02,792 -FAN 2: How are you? -KENNY G: All right, you? 1489 01:14:02,876 --> 01:14:04,375 Fourth time seeing you. I love it. 1490 01:14:04,459 --> 01:14:05,500 -KENNY G: Fourth? -Fourth. 1491 01:14:05,584 --> 01:14:06,959 -KENNY G: Good, we like that. -Thank you. 1492 01:14:07,042 --> 01:14:08,167 KENNY G: Thanks for doing that. 1493 01:14:08,250 --> 01:14:09,459 You got your raffle ticket already? 1494 01:14:09,542 --> 01:14:11,959 -FAN 2: I did. -ORGANIZER: Ready? One, two, three. 1495 01:14:12,042 --> 01:14:13,083 Excellent, excellent. 1496 01:14:13,167 --> 01:14:14,459 All right, right this way. 1497 01:14:14,542 --> 01:14:15,626 All right! 1498 01:14:15,709 --> 01:14:18,125 I want you to know that we were married in 1989, 1499 01:14:18,209 --> 01:14:19,959 and "Silhouette" was our wedding song. 1500 01:14:20,042 --> 01:14:21,626 KENNY G: Yeah! That's awesome. 1501 01:14:21,709 --> 01:14:23,209 Good job. Good job. 1502 01:14:23,292 --> 01:14:24,876 FAN 3: So many Christmas trees that she... 1503 01:14:24,959 --> 01:14:26,334 -KENNY G: I love that. -FAN 3: ...decorated. 1504 01:14:26,417 --> 01:14:27,918 FAN 4: Oh, with listening to your music. 1505 01:14:28,000 --> 01:14:29,751 KENNY G: Well, we'll come out with a new Christmas record soon. 1506 01:14:29,834 --> 01:14:31,250 Be ready with the raffle, 1507 01:14:31,334 --> 01:14:33,417 because I'm going to make an announcement for the raffle. 1508 01:14:33,500 --> 01:14:35,000 And they're just gonna want raffle tickets. 1509 01:14:35,083 --> 01:14:36,417 So, you know, it's three for twenty, right? 1510 01:14:36,500 --> 01:14:37,792 Do you know that or not know that? 1511 01:14:37,876 --> 01:14:38,918 -Yes. -Yeah, we know. 1512 01:14:39,000 --> 01:14:40,709 I would break them off into threes. 1513 01:14:40,792 --> 01:14:42,209 Oh, you're already ready in threes. 1514 01:14:42,292 --> 01:14:43,626 Okay, you're ready to go, aren't you? 1515 01:14:43,709 --> 01:14:45,375 -Okay, all right. -We're ready to go. 1516 01:14:45,459 --> 01:14:47,083 ASSISTANT: One more. Yes. Which one, hon? 1517 01:14:49,000 --> 01:14:52,417 -Give him three tickets. -ASSISTANT: Okay. 1518 01:14:52,500 --> 01:14:55,542 KENNY G: Okay, Harry, come on in. Harry, come over here. 1519 01:14:55,626 --> 01:14:57,125 Come over here and look at the picture, 1520 01:14:57,209 --> 01:14:58,667 look at your camera now, here we go. 1521 01:14:58,751 --> 01:15:00,292 ASSISTANT: Beautiful. 1522 01:15:00,375 --> 01:15:03,417 That little boy, he said, "Give him three tickets." 1523 01:15:03,500 --> 01:15:07,042 ASSISTANT 2: I know. He's very sweet. And he's good to his fans. 1524 01:15:08,000 --> 01:15:09,459 -One more. -ASSISTANT 1: Okay. 1525 01:15:09,542 --> 01:15:11,250 Ready for the next round. 1526 01:15:12,667 --> 01:15:16,167 ♪ (SAXOPHONE PLAYING RIFFS) ♪ 1527 01:15:20,417 --> 01:15:22,375 KENNY G: One thing that I've-- we've been doing lately, 1528 01:15:22,459 --> 01:15:24,792 like, in the last six months or so, 1529 01:15:24,876 --> 01:15:27,709 I've been introducing old jazz tunes. 1530 01:15:27,792 --> 01:15:29,876 And they've never heard this stuff before. 1531 01:15:29,959 --> 01:15:32,375 And they-- honestly, they probably don't really care 1532 01:15:32,459 --> 01:15:33,667 that much about it. 1533 01:15:33,751 --> 01:15:35,209 Maybe they don't even want to hear it. 1534 01:15:35,292 --> 01:15:37,083 But I think it's part of my job. 1535 01:15:39,626 --> 01:15:41,834 All right, we're gonna turn it into a jazz club. 1536 01:15:44,876 --> 01:15:46,792 All right, by that lack of enthusiasm, 1537 01:15:46,876 --> 01:15:49,167 I see we need some sax education. 1538 01:15:49,876 --> 01:15:50,876 That's all right. 1539 01:15:50,959 --> 01:15:53,375 I'll be your sax professor for the night. 1540 01:15:53,459 --> 01:15:56,125 So let's have some sax education right now. 1541 01:15:56,209 --> 01:15:59,584 In the 1950s and '60s, that's when the jazz masters 1542 01:15:59,667 --> 01:16:01,667 lived and played their great jazz music. 1543 01:16:01,751 --> 01:16:04,417 One of the jazz masters was Stan Getz. 1544 01:16:04,500 --> 01:16:05,792 Stan Getz was the guy 1545 01:16:05,876 --> 01:16:08,292 that brought bossa nova music to the world. 1546 01:16:08,375 --> 01:16:10,250 So we're gonna go back and play 1547 01:16:10,334 --> 01:16:12,792 one of his famous bossa novas from the '60s. 1548 01:16:12,876 --> 01:16:15,042 We're gonna play it just like they did back then, 1549 01:16:15,125 --> 01:16:17,083 which means lots of jazz improvisation, 1550 01:16:17,167 --> 01:16:19,417 and that means we actually don't know how long 1551 01:16:19,500 --> 01:16:21,709 the song's going to be or how it's going to end. 1552 01:16:22,626 --> 01:16:24,125 And that's the way it is. 1553 01:16:26,167 --> 01:16:30,125 ♪ (INSTRUMENTS HARMONIZING) ♪ 1554 01:16:42,584 --> 01:16:45,918 KENNY G: People, I'm hoping, will go home and go, 1555 01:16:46,000 --> 01:16:47,584 "I like that song, honey, that he played." 1556 01:16:47,667 --> 01:16:49,000 "What was the name of that artist?" 1557 01:16:49,083 --> 01:16:50,959 "Stan Getz, honey." "Well, let's look him up." 1558 01:16:51,042 --> 01:16:52,751 And then they listen to that, "Ooh, we like that." 1559 01:16:52,834 --> 01:16:55,000 We're going to play something else for you right now, 1560 01:16:55,083 --> 01:16:57,709 something was made famous by, I would say, 1561 01:16:57,792 --> 01:17:00,792 probably the most famous and well-deserved 1562 01:17:00,876 --> 01:17:03,292 saxophone player of all time, tenor sax player. 1563 01:17:03,375 --> 01:17:04,792 His name was John Coltrane. 1564 01:17:04,876 --> 01:17:06,334 It's called "Naima." 1565 01:17:06,417 --> 01:17:09,334 ♪ (SAXOPHONE PLAYS TUNE OF "NAIMA" BY JOHN COLTRANE) ♪ 1566 01:17:14,959 --> 01:17:16,417 KENNY G: When I started my career, 1567 01:17:16,500 --> 01:17:19,042 I hadn't listened a lot to traditional jazz. 1568 01:17:19,125 --> 01:17:21,209 It was mostly just R&B stuff. 1569 01:17:21,292 --> 01:17:24,751 Then I started to play and listen to John Coltrane, 1570 01:17:24,834 --> 01:17:26,918 and Miles, and Stan Getz. 1571 01:17:27,000 --> 01:17:31,876 And as, over the years, as that stuff has been absorbed by me, 1572 01:17:31,959 --> 01:17:34,626 I think my music and the way that I play my music, 1573 01:17:34,709 --> 01:17:38,334 and the way I write it is changing, and rightfully so. 1574 01:17:41,125 --> 01:17:43,459 Well, I'm gonna play whatever happens. 1575 01:17:43,542 --> 01:17:45,918 The new album is called New Standards. 1576 01:17:46,000 --> 01:17:47,167 I've written the songs 1577 01:17:47,250 --> 01:17:49,334 with just slightly different melodies 1578 01:17:49,417 --> 01:17:50,876 than I would normally do, 1579 01:17:50,959 --> 01:17:52,918 but the chords are gonna be way different. 1580 01:17:53,000 --> 01:17:57,083 I want sophisticated jazz chords, 1581 01:17:57,167 --> 01:18:00,417 but I don't want it to sound unrelatable. 1582 01:18:00,500 --> 01:18:03,500 So I want to marry a melody that's relatable 1583 01:18:03,584 --> 01:18:07,959 with the sophistication of the '50s and '60s jazz. 1584 01:18:08,876 --> 01:18:09,918 And that was my challenge. 1585 01:18:10,000 --> 01:18:12,709 Can I do that, or is it just gonna sound off? 1586 01:18:14,000 --> 01:18:16,125 One of the songs on the record is, 1587 01:18:16,209 --> 01:18:20,083 and hopefully, is gonna be a virtual duet with Stan Getz. 1588 01:18:20,167 --> 01:18:22,542 Nobody-- Nobody knows this. This is brand-new info. 1589 01:18:22,626 --> 01:18:24,459 ♪ (SOFT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 1590 01:18:28,792 --> 01:18:31,167 Stan Getz's sax was such a beautiful sound. 1591 01:18:31,250 --> 01:18:33,667 In fact, his nickname, from what I've read, 1592 01:18:33,751 --> 01:18:35,584 was called "The Sound." 1593 01:18:35,667 --> 01:18:38,459 So we're gonna feature the sound of Stan Getz 1594 01:18:38,542 --> 01:18:40,292 on this tune, and it's gonna be beautiful. 1595 01:18:44,083 --> 01:18:45,125 I wrote the song. 1596 01:18:45,209 --> 01:18:47,000 We recorded it the other night. 1597 01:18:47,083 --> 01:18:48,834 I played all the parts. 1598 01:18:48,918 --> 01:18:50,542 Steve is gonna go, 1599 01:18:50,626 --> 01:18:53,959 and he's gonna go take the Stan Getz saxophone parts, 1600 01:18:54,042 --> 01:18:55,626 that we're going to find in the world, 1601 01:18:55,709 --> 01:18:58,876 and we're gonna adjust them to play my song. 1602 01:18:58,959 --> 01:19:01,834 And I've spoken to his daughter and his son. 1603 01:19:01,918 --> 01:19:04,584 Obviously wanted and needed their blessing, 1604 01:19:04,667 --> 01:19:06,167 which they've given me on this. 1605 01:19:06,250 --> 01:19:07,584 So everybody's onboard. 1606 01:19:07,667 --> 01:19:09,751 We're just trying to put this thing together. 1607 01:19:09,834 --> 01:19:12,083 And the jazz community's gonna hate it. 1608 01:19:12,167 --> 01:19:13,334 I know they're gonna hate it, 1609 01:19:13,417 --> 01:19:17,167 which is not something that concerns me, by the way. 1610 01:19:17,250 --> 01:19:20,334 The jazz police will just have to do what they have to do. 1611 01:19:20,417 --> 01:19:22,667 I'm prepared for it. I'm strong. 1612 01:19:22,751 --> 01:19:25,667 I've had reps with the jazz police not liking me, 1613 01:19:25,751 --> 01:19:28,250 so I've already got my scar tissue. 1614 01:19:28,334 --> 01:19:31,667 It's not gonna-- It's not gonna rock my world in a negative way. 1615 01:19:32,125 --> 01:19:33,375 (LAUGHS) 1616 01:19:33,459 --> 01:19:35,500 (BIRDS CHIRPING) 1617 01:19:35,584 --> 01:19:37,459 -KENNY G: You want to see this picture? -PENNY: Yeah. 1618 01:19:37,542 --> 01:19:41,000 Okay, so this picture is a picture that was taken 1619 01:19:41,083 --> 01:19:44,667 when they first gave out awards for an album 1620 01:19:44,751 --> 01:19:46,125 that sold over 10 million. 1621 01:19:46,209 --> 01:19:47,876 It was called a Diamond Award. 1622 01:19:47,959 --> 01:19:50,959 We got a bunch of Billboard, uh, music awards. 1623 01:19:51,042 --> 01:19:53,959 Those are NAACP Image Awards. 1624 01:19:54,042 --> 01:19:55,876 This is my only Grammy. 1625 01:19:55,959 --> 01:19:58,834 There's a good picture of me and Jack Nicklaus right there. 1626 01:19:58,918 --> 01:20:01,125 Playing golf with him at the Honda Classic. 1627 01:20:01,209 --> 01:20:03,417 That's a golf award right there. 1628 01:20:03,500 --> 01:20:06,334 My golf stuff, I think I like to talk more than the music stuff. 1629 01:20:06,417 --> 01:20:08,459 That's also a golf trophy back there. 1630 01:20:08,542 --> 01:20:10,667 The music stuff is-- It's kind of subjective. 1631 01:20:10,751 --> 01:20:12,709 Like, how did I earn a Grammy? 1632 01:20:12,792 --> 01:20:14,334 Well, because some people decided 1633 01:20:14,417 --> 01:20:18,250 that they liked the way that I played my song. 1634 01:20:18,334 --> 01:20:20,584 How did I earn that golf award? Well, I won. 1635 01:20:20,667 --> 01:20:24,667 I won it by literally beating other people. 1636 01:20:24,751 --> 01:20:27,334 Back in 1994, you know, my... 1637 01:20:27,417 --> 01:20:30,709 my album had sold more than any of the other... 1638 01:20:30,792 --> 01:20:33,292 contempor-- adult contemporary artists. 1639 01:20:33,375 --> 01:20:36,042 And that's what the American Music Award was, really, was a-- 1640 01:20:36,125 --> 01:20:37,834 It's just a sales award. 1641 01:20:37,918 --> 01:20:40,209 We don't sell records like we used to back then. 1642 01:20:40,292 --> 01:20:43,250 Boy, those were the good days. Those were the good days. 1643 01:20:43,334 --> 01:20:45,417 ♪ ("THE MOMENT" PLAYING) ♪ 1644 01:20:53,083 --> 01:20:55,709 CLIVE: With so many huge artists, 1645 01:20:55,792 --> 01:20:59,709 there comes a time when it peaks. 1646 01:21:01,000 --> 01:21:03,792 That familiarity. 1647 01:21:03,876 --> 01:21:06,417 You don't have to guess when you hear that sax, 1648 01:21:06,500 --> 01:21:07,959 "Oh, that's Kenny G." 1649 01:21:09,459 --> 01:21:12,125 The sound was too familiar. 1650 01:21:12,209 --> 01:21:17,500 I felt that we're not gonna have hit singles again. 1651 01:21:17,584 --> 01:21:21,834 PAT: For a lot of listeners, I think it was just overplayed. 1652 01:21:21,918 --> 01:21:26,417 I think we just overplayed Kenny G. 1653 01:21:26,500 --> 01:21:28,083 It was too much Kenny G. 1654 01:21:28,167 --> 01:21:30,167 You can play music to death. 1655 01:21:30,250 --> 01:21:33,125 WEATHER FORECASTER: Get out the snowshoes and the shovels. 1656 01:21:33,209 --> 01:21:38,125 CLIVE: As an executive, you're more aware of it. 1657 01:21:38,209 --> 01:21:43,834 And you're certainly aware of it much earlier than the artist. 1658 01:21:43,918 --> 01:21:46,584 KENNY G: When I think about selling 75 million records, 1659 01:21:46,667 --> 01:21:49,500 I feel like I was super lucky. 1660 01:21:49,584 --> 01:21:52,834 Lucky that I happened to be an artist at the time period 1661 01:21:52,918 --> 01:21:58,209 when people were buying albums and cassettes and CDs, 1662 01:21:58,292 --> 01:21:59,918 because that was the technology. 1663 01:22:00,000 --> 01:22:01,584 And we had record stores, 1664 01:22:01,667 --> 01:22:05,334 and we had radio that was promoting these things. 1665 01:22:05,417 --> 01:22:07,876 RADIO PRESENTER: The VH1 ticket hotline is brought to you by... 1666 01:22:07,959 --> 01:22:09,500 KENNY G: Artists now, they come out. 1667 01:22:09,584 --> 01:22:11,751 There's no platform to sell a lot of records. 1668 01:22:11,834 --> 01:22:15,334 Now you're looking at views and you're talking about plays. 1669 01:22:15,417 --> 01:22:17,792 How many plays equals a "sale"? 1670 01:22:17,876 --> 01:22:21,083 I reminisce and wish that the old days 1671 01:22:21,167 --> 01:22:22,667 would come back, but they're not gonna come back. 1672 01:22:22,751 --> 01:22:25,459 So, for me, and my audience that's out there, 1673 01:22:25,542 --> 01:22:29,125 we have to relearn how to connect with each other. 1674 01:22:29,209 --> 01:22:30,334 That's what's really tricky. 1675 01:22:30,417 --> 01:22:32,792 Hey, Kenny G here for the 22 push-up challenge. 1676 01:22:32,876 --> 01:22:37,584 -...11, 12, 13, 14, 15... -♪ (HIGH SPEED NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 1677 01:22:37,667 --> 01:22:39,042 Hey, everybody, it's Kenny G 1678 01:22:39,125 --> 01:22:42,500 wishing you a very happy Valentine's Day. 1679 01:22:42,584 --> 01:22:43,751 ♪ (PLAYS TUNE) ♪ 1680 01:22:43,834 --> 01:22:46,042 KENNY G: It's like an old dog learning new tricks, 1681 01:22:46,125 --> 01:22:48,375 so I've had to be on Instagram, 1682 01:22:48,459 --> 01:22:50,292 and try to be current. 1683 01:22:50,375 --> 01:22:52,709 And, you know, I post what I post. 1684 01:22:52,792 --> 01:22:53,792 Sometimes it's funny. 1685 01:22:53,876 --> 01:22:55,959 Sometimes it looks kind of corny. 1686 01:22:56,042 --> 01:22:57,375 Hey, it's Kenny G here, modeling 1687 01:22:57,459 --> 01:22:59,500 my new saxy Christmas sweater. 1688 01:22:59,584 --> 01:23:02,751 You can get yours at tipsyelves.com. 1689 01:23:02,834 --> 01:23:03,959 I try my best. 1690 01:23:04,042 --> 01:23:05,584 So now, with my management, 1691 01:23:05,667 --> 01:23:07,500 I've got all these young people around 1692 01:23:07,584 --> 01:23:10,500 that think the way that they should think, 1693 01:23:10,584 --> 01:23:13,417 so that they get the old guy... hip. 1694 01:23:13,500 --> 01:23:17,500 MANAGER: So, viral moments, release, and consistency 1695 01:23:17,584 --> 01:23:19,959 -are the three things that we gotta stay on. -I see. 1696 01:23:20,042 --> 01:23:21,500 -Good. -MANAGER: And we're lacking... 1697 01:23:21,584 --> 01:23:23,417 KENNY G: I'm working on it. I'm gonna get it, 1698 01:23:23,500 --> 01:23:25,459 because I'm a good student. 1699 01:23:26,626 --> 01:23:28,834 So I'm going to-- I'm gonna get it. 1700 01:23:28,918 --> 01:23:30,626 (AUDIENCE CHEERS) 1701 01:23:33,209 --> 01:23:36,918 Here with the song "Regulate," Kenny and Warren G! 1702 01:23:37,000 --> 01:23:39,459 ♪ (PLAYING TUNE OF "REGULATE" BY WARREN G) ♪ 1703 01:23:42,167 --> 01:23:44,334 ♪ (MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪ 1704 01:23:58,000 --> 01:23:59,751 Kenny G, take us to break! 1705 01:24:01,334 --> 01:24:03,959 GORBURGER: We kidnapped Kenny G, and he's being held hostage 1706 01:24:04,042 --> 01:24:05,209 here with some cement shoes. 1707 01:24:07,125 --> 01:24:09,250 ♪ ("REGULATE" CONTINUES) ♪ 1708 01:24:26,167 --> 01:24:27,792 HOLEY MOLEY ANNOUNCER: And she putts it in 1709 01:24:27,876 --> 01:24:30,751 with Kenny G playing right in her face. 1710 01:24:30,834 --> 01:24:32,250 ♪ (SAXOPHONE NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 1711 01:24:32,334 --> 01:24:34,167 KENNY G: I think people like celebrities. 1712 01:24:34,250 --> 01:24:36,250 They get the joke. Like, I get the joke. 1713 01:24:36,334 --> 01:24:40,000 You know, I know, I know for a fact that if I cut my hair, 1714 01:24:40,083 --> 01:24:42,167 my career will go right down the toilet. 1715 01:24:42,250 --> 01:24:44,042 I know that, so I get it. 1716 01:24:44,125 --> 01:24:45,250 (LAUGHS) 1717 01:24:45,334 --> 01:24:47,918 ♪ (SAXOPHONE TUNE PLAYS) ♪ 1718 01:24:56,834 --> 01:25:00,042 NEWSCASTER: Well, Kanye West took it to an entirely different level 1719 01:25:00,125 --> 01:25:02,834 for wife Kim Kardashian for Valentine's Day. 1720 01:25:02,918 --> 01:25:06,667 That's the legendary saxophonist Kenny G, 1721 01:25:06,751 --> 01:25:08,500 serenading Kim in a sea of roses. 1722 01:25:08,584 --> 01:25:12,167 How did that conversation go? Is Kanye a big Kenny G fan? 1723 01:25:13,250 --> 01:25:15,125 Apparently, I mean... 1724 01:25:15,209 --> 01:25:18,626 I got a message through a third party, 1725 01:25:18,709 --> 01:25:19,918 and they said, "Hey, you know, 1726 01:25:20,000 --> 01:25:21,667 Kanye wants you to come over tomorrow 1727 01:25:21,751 --> 01:25:25,459 and serenade Kim for Valentine's Day." 1728 01:25:25,542 --> 01:25:29,542 I mean, I'm thinking, "Okay, but is this a good thing to do?" 1729 01:25:29,626 --> 01:25:30,792 "Is it a...?" 1730 01:25:30,876 --> 01:25:33,918 I mean, I'm not a reality TV kind of guy, 1731 01:25:34,000 --> 01:25:36,959 so is it gonna look like I'm, you know, 1732 01:25:37,042 --> 01:25:40,459 just doing anything to get exposure, or is it cool? 1733 01:25:40,542 --> 01:25:43,334 And so I talked to both my sons and they both said, 1734 01:25:43,417 --> 01:25:46,125 "No, this is cool. This is gonna be cool." 1735 01:25:50,375 --> 01:25:51,500 I had never met him before, 1736 01:25:51,584 --> 01:25:54,334 and just was immediate warmth. 1737 01:25:54,417 --> 01:25:57,000 He says, "Why don't you come to the studio with me?" 1738 01:25:57,083 --> 01:25:59,500 "I want you to see my studio." 1739 01:25:59,584 --> 01:26:01,000 So I went there, and he started playing me 1740 01:26:01,083 --> 01:26:02,375 some music and one of the songs, 1741 01:26:02,459 --> 01:26:04,000 he played me a part of it, and I said, 1742 01:26:04,083 --> 01:26:06,792 "Whoa, let me play on this one." 1743 01:26:09,375 --> 01:26:12,751 When I heard that song, I could hear my sax on it, 1744 01:26:12,834 --> 01:26:15,292 and so he let me take his music home. 1745 01:26:15,375 --> 01:26:17,667 I took it back to my studio, did my thing, 1746 01:26:17,751 --> 01:26:19,959 sent it back to him, and he loved what I did. 1747 01:26:20,042 --> 01:26:21,667 So that's how it started. 1748 01:26:21,751 --> 01:26:25,000 ♪ ("USE THIS GOSPEL" BY KANYE WEST FT. KENNY G PLAYING) ♪ 1749 01:26:28,834 --> 01:26:31,959 WILL: I will confess, I love that track. 1750 01:26:32,042 --> 01:26:35,209 The melody Kenny plays is kind of great. 1751 01:26:36,417 --> 01:26:39,709 He was immediately identifiable as Kenny G, 1752 01:26:39,792 --> 01:26:42,792 and there seems to be almost like a play in that moment, 1753 01:26:42,876 --> 01:26:45,709 hoping that you're going to recognize that sound 1754 01:26:45,792 --> 01:26:49,542 and sort of enjoy the decontextualization of it. 1755 01:26:58,500 --> 01:27:01,083 BEN: Kenny G's music sounds to us now 1756 01:27:01,167 --> 01:27:02,876 like music from another time, 1757 01:27:02,959 --> 01:27:04,417 if not another planet. 1758 01:27:04,500 --> 01:27:07,167 ♪ ("LAST FRIDAY NIGHT" BY KATY PERRY FT. KENNY G PLAYING) ♪ 1759 01:27:07,250 --> 01:27:10,834 BEN: It's full of, you know, like, excesses of a past age 1760 01:27:10,918 --> 01:27:14,334 and ignorance of a past age, and whatever. 1761 01:27:14,417 --> 01:27:17,125 But there are also things about it that are so alien 1762 01:27:17,209 --> 01:27:19,334 to us now that they're kind of cool. 1763 01:27:20,500 --> 01:27:21,792 Younger people, especially, 1764 01:27:21,876 --> 01:27:24,584 are gonna be able to put it in new piles, 1765 01:27:24,667 --> 01:27:27,375 juxtapose it with other things. 1766 01:27:27,459 --> 01:27:30,334 ♪ (IN YOUR EYES BY THE WEEKND FT. KENNY G PLAYING) ♪ 1767 01:27:32,876 --> 01:27:36,292 BEN: So, I wouldn't have said this ten years ago, 1768 01:27:36,375 --> 01:27:38,834 but I think there's a future in Kenny G's music 1769 01:27:38,918 --> 01:27:40,834 that I'm kind of looking forward to. 1770 01:27:42,125 --> 01:27:44,125 -♪ (MUSIC CONCLUDES) ♪ -Whoo! 1771 01:27:44,834 --> 01:27:46,000 Whenever someone says, 1772 01:27:46,083 --> 01:27:47,334 "I don't know if you could do this, 1773 01:27:47,417 --> 01:27:48,792 I don't know if you could do all that," 1774 01:27:48,876 --> 01:27:52,125 Kenny takes that in and goes, "Okay, now check this out." 1775 01:27:52,209 --> 01:27:54,417 "You see?" Then he goes back up again... 1776 01:27:54,500 --> 01:27:56,042 (MUMBLES TUNE) 1777 01:27:56,125 --> 01:27:57,167 (LAUGHS) 1778 01:28:02,083 --> 01:28:05,292 (JAMES LAUGHING) 1779 01:28:06,792 --> 01:28:08,375 Oh, it's been so long. 1780 01:28:09,000 --> 01:28:11,083 Oh, my God. 1781 01:28:11,167 --> 01:28:12,500 Gosh, I can't believe it. 1782 01:28:12,584 --> 01:28:13,959 It's so great to see you. 1783 01:28:14,042 --> 01:28:16,417 I can't believe you're here! 1784 01:28:16,500 --> 01:28:19,167 Whenever I see him, it puts a tear in my eye. 1785 01:28:19,250 --> 01:28:21,375 You know, because we go back so far. 1786 01:28:21,459 --> 01:28:24,209 And it's like, you know, seeing family. 1787 01:28:24,292 --> 01:28:27,709 Well, you know, I told them the funniest story. 1788 01:28:27,792 --> 01:28:32,417 JAMES: I said "Here's this 16-year-old kid, turned 17..." 1789 01:28:32,500 --> 01:28:35,042 JAMES: You know, it's like a young brother of mine. 1790 01:28:35,125 --> 01:28:39,292 And what he's worked at achieving is just amazing. 1791 01:28:39,375 --> 01:28:42,000 KENNY G: I got a surpr-- Yeah, I wanna play you something that's really cool. 1792 01:28:42,083 --> 01:28:44,042 -JAMES: Okay. -I had this idea. 1793 01:28:44,125 --> 01:28:46,542 I wanted to do a duet with Stan Getz. 1794 01:28:47,751 --> 01:28:49,500 JAMES: Oh, gosh, you gotta be kidding. 1795 01:28:49,584 --> 01:28:51,834 -Let's see where it is. -JAMES: No, you didn't. 1796 01:28:51,918 --> 01:28:54,209 ♪ (SOFT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS) ♪ 1797 01:29:13,042 --> 01:29:14,209 Jeez. 1798 01:29:30,626 --> 01:29:31,834 That's amazing. 1799 01:29:33,459 --> 01:29:35,500 -That's our duet. -JAMES: That's crazy. That's... 1800 01:29:35,584 --> 01:29:37,876 So when I was writing the melody... 1801 01:29:37,959 --> 01:29:41,584 (IMITATES MELODY) 1802 01:29:41,667 --> 01:29:43,500 ♪ ...that's what I would do ♪ 1803 01:29:43,584 --> 01:29:45,584 But that's not what Stan would do. 1804 01:29:45,667 --> 01:29:48,667 (IMITATES MELODY) 1805 01:29:48,751 --> 01:29:51,834 That takes it somewhere else. It takes it to... 1806 01:29:52,918 --> 01:29:55,792 I don't know. It sounds more like... 1807 01:29:56,667 --> 01:30:00,626 It sounds less happy and less normal, 1808 01:30:00,709 --> 01:30:01,959 and more... 1809 01:30:02,959 --> 01:30:05,542 uh... mysterious. 1810 01:30:05,626 --> 01:30:09,083 More-- It's leading you down to another place. 1811 01:30:09,167 --> 01:30:12,417 I felt really kind of proud that I could 1812 01:30:12,500 --> 01:30:14,375 take myself out of the equation, 1813 01:30:14,459 --> 01:30:19,209 not just autopilot my way of putting a melody together. 1814 01:30:19,292 --> 01:30:22,125 -Oh, my God. -KENNY G: How cool is that? 1815 01:30:22,209 --> 01:30:26,667 -That's frigging, you know, insane. -(CLAPPING) 1816 01:30:26,751 --> 01:30:29,459 You know, I was telling Penny the other day, I said, 1817 01:30:29,542 --> 01:30:31,918 "You know, when you got bit by that bug, 1818 01:30:32,000 --> 01:30:33,250 you left the planet Earth." 1819 01:30:33,334 --> 01:30:36,626 You know, you've been getting downloads from heaven 1820 01:30:36,709 --> 01:30:39,250 -ever fucking since. -KENNY G: Thanks, man. 1821 01:30:39,334 --> 01:30:40,918 Let me play you something on tenor. 1822 01:30:41,000 --> 01:30:43,417 -JAMES: Oh, sure. -KENNY G: Here's one more New Standard. 1823 01:30:43,500 --> 01:30:44,500 JAMES: Oh, yeah. 1824 01:30:44,584 --> 01:30:46,751 ♪ (JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪ 1825 01:30:53,375 --> 01:30:55,792 JAMES: It's not so much that, "Oh, it's jazz," 1826 01:30:55,876 --> 01:30:57,125 or if you play chord changes, 1827 01:30:57,209 --> 01:30:59,667 or it's this kind of music. 1828 01:30:59,751 --> 01:31:04,334 It's how you can affect other people 1829 01:31:04,417 --> 01:31:07,751 to be able to communicate with the other person 1830 01:31:07,834 --> 01:31:10,626 that's next to you, and they understand you. 1831 01:31:11,751 --> 01:31:13,375 Then you've succeeded. 1832 01:31:21,876 --> 01:31:23,792 KENNY G: They're beautiful melodies. 1833 01:31:23,876 --> 01:31:26,000 Beautiful melodies with chords that go, 1834 01:31:26,083 --> 01:31:29,083 "Ooh," rather than just, "nice." 1835 01:31:29,167 --> 01:31:33,209 Not that I'm not proud of my past work because I am. 1836 01:31:33,292 --> 01:31:35,834 Because what I created, when I created, 1837 01:31:35,918 --> 01:31:37,292 exactly the way I wanted it. 1838 01:31:37,375 --> 01:31:40,125 Wouldn't change a thing. Probably would change a thing. 1839 01:31:40,209 --> 01:31:42,834 I would change some notes, not necessarily the composition. 1840 01:31:42,918 --> 01:31:44,667 I'd change some notes because, you know, 1841 01:31:44,751 --> 01:31:46,042 I can play better now. 1842 01:31:46,125 --> 01:31:48,375 ♪ (FAST PACED NOTES PLAYING) ♪ 1843 01:31:53,334 --> 01:31:56,417 KENNY G: You know, after you've done 23 or 24 records, 1844 01:31:56,500 --> 01:31:58,250 I don't want to repeat myself. 1845 01:31:58,334 --> 01:32:02,042 So there's a lot of new ground that I need to discover. 1846 01:32:03,292 --> 01:32:06,083 For example, I've always wanted to do classical music. 1847 01:32:06,167 --> 01:32:07,209 Like New Standards, 1848 01:32:07,292 --> 01:32:09,500 I'm gonna have to write new classical music, 1849 01:32:09,584 --> 01:32:11,542 and you're gonna hear it, and you're gonna go, 1850 01:32:11,626 --> 01:32:15,667 "Is that Beethoven? Is that Bach? Is that Brahms?" 1851 01:32:15,751 --> 01:32:18,792 I'm gonna go, "It's G." (LAUGHS) 1852 01:32:21,167 --> 01:32:23,709 Next album could be all lullabies. 1853 01:32:23,792 --> 01:32:26,959 I'm gonna give you the album that makes the babies, 1854 01:32:27,042 --> 01:32:28,709 then I'm gonna give you the album 1855 01:32:28,792 --> 01:32:30,209 that puts them to sleep. 1856 01:32:31,042 --> 01:32:32,000 (LAUGHS) 1857 01:32:32,083 --> 01:32:34,542 That's funny. That's a commercial. 1858 01:32:37,709 --> 01:32:39,292 You know what? I don't really hear 1859 01:32:39,375 --> 01:32:41,834 a lot of great film music, 1860 01:32:41,918 --> 01:32:43,375 and I actually have a couple of songs 1861 01:32:43,459 --> 01:32:48,083 that are in my little vault that will win an Oscar. 1862 01:32:48,167 --> 01:32:49,834 They will. 1863 01:32:49,918 --> 01:32:52,083 If Ron Howard were to make a film 1864 01:32:52,167 --> 01:32:55,375 about some circumstances that happened, 1865 01:32:55,459 --> 01:32:57,626 let's say, in Kansas City, Wichita, 1866 01:32:57,709 --> 01:33:00,250 somewhere in the middle of America. 1867 01:33:00,334 --> 01:33:03,209 Some beautiful cornfields, 1868 01:33:03,834 --> 01:33:06,125 drama that happens. 1869 01:33:06,209 --> 01:33:08,083 I've got the theme song for it. 1870 01:33:08,167 --> 01:33:12,417 Another one would be a film in European like-- 1871 01:33:12,500 --> 01:33:15,584 Like Austria, Switzerland, German. 1872 01:33:15,667 --> 01:33:18,000 Cold, like, post-war, 1873 01:33:18,083 --> 01:33:20,417 or during World War II or something, 1874 01:33:20,500 --> 01:33:21,667 something about that. 1875 01:33:21,751 --> 01:33:24,500 Dark, and it's just real sad. 1876 01:33:24,584 --> 01:33:26,667 It'd be like a movie, if they made it, called the... 1877 01:33:26,751 --> 01:33:29,209 like, The German Captain. 1878 01:33:29,292 --> 01:33:31,083 Or The Swiss Captain. 1879 01:33:31,167 --> 01:33:34,417 And it's about this sad life of this guy that goes out and, 1880 01:33:34,500 --> 01:33:37,584 you know, there's all these trench coats, it's gray. 1881 01:33:37,667 --> 01:33:39,667 And so, I got the music for that. 1882 01:33:39,751 --> 01:33:40,876 It's so perfect. 1883 01:33:40,959 --> 01:33:42,542 And it'll win the Academy Award. 1884 01:33:42,626 --> 01:33:43,667 I know it. 1885 01:33:53,250 --> 01:33:56,209 When I get in my 80s, if everything's still working, 1886 01:33:56,292 --> 01:33:58,125 I'm gonna be out there playing my shows. 1887 01:33:58,209 --> 01:34:00,209 Hopefully, you know, riffing just as fast 1888 01:34:00,292 --> 01:34:01,500 and playing just as good. 1889 01:34:01,584 --> 01:34:02,918 Or, I mean, hopefully a lot better. 1890 01:34:03,000 --> 01:34:04,792 20 years more practicing. 1891 01:34:04,876 --> 01:34:06,459 That's another 20,000 hours. 1892 01:34:07,334 --> 01:34:09,167 (LAUGHS) 1893 01:34:09,250 --> 01:34:11,167 ♪ ("GOING HOME" PLAYING) ♪ 1894 01:36:13,542 --> 01:36:17,459 ♪ (MUSIC CONCLUDES) ♪ 144549

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