Andy Grammer spent his pandemic downtime searching for joy.
The result was his βThe Art of Joy Tour,β which he launched with a handful of dates in February, resumed in June and will finish with a show at Fox Tucson Theatre on Sunday, Aug. 28.
The tour and an album that will be released late this year or early next is βa product of being kind of depressed Iβd say,β he confessed during a phone interview from his California home in late July.
βThe two years I went through COVID really rocked me hard. It was like a long break that kinda made me look back on myself,β he said. βThe Art of Joy Tour, I was looking into how to be more joyful and my favorite quote was, βJoy in life is not based on circumstance.β That means itβs gotta come from you.β
This revelation and some self-reflection, along with therapy via Zoom, led the father of two β his youngest daughter was born at home weeks into the pandemicβs start in March 2020 β to pen a handful of songs that helped lift him out of his doldrums. And like so much of the music of Grammerβs nearly dozen-year recording career, his new songs β βDamn It Feels Good to Be Me,β βLove Myself,β βJoyβ and βLease on Lifeβ β put an optimistic spin on our collective pain.
βI think that a lot of optimism, in the way that I understand it, is usually grounded in pain,β he explained, recalling that his 2011 debut single βKeep Your Head Upβ was his way of dealing with the death of his mother two years earlier.
βAnd I thought, βKeep Your Head Up.β Thatβs an optimism I can get down with,β he said. βThere was like a rebelliousness to that, so I think thereβs room for all of it.β
From that song on, Grammer has been seen by his fans as the king of optimism whose infectious songs β βFine By Me,β βHoney Iβm Good, βGood To Be Alive (Hallelujah)β and his latest single off the βJoyβ project, βSaved My Lifeβ β could lift their darkest spirits.
βAnd thatβs why I wrote a lot of these songs. I was expecting that I would be the guy, that this is my moment. Iβm the happy guy. I got this,β he said, until he realized he needed to find his happy before he could spread the joy.
βI think thatβs one of the reasons that Iβve jumped into the mental health stuff because I think it can be helpful to hear that someone you perceived as the happy guy was pretty depressed,β he said.
Therapy helped lift his spirits, but nothing worked better than getting back on stage in front of a live audience, Grammer said.
βThe crowds missed it just like I missed it, so there was an added excitement and intensity that I loved,β he said βWhen itβs done right, I think the songs, whether you hear them over the radio or live, are like spiritual chiropractors and you leave feeling you got adjusted in a way that you didnβt know you needed it. ... Music has a way of taking you out of yourself, and thatβs really important, especially live music.β
Sundayβs show at Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St., starts at 7 p.m. Tickets are $47.50 to $77.50 through foxtucson.com.



