Minneapolis is going to be a very special place to play," Josh Groban said the other day.
Does that sound like standard show-biz blather, or what? He probably says that about every city.
Well, no. Minneapolis is where Groban wrote six of the 13 songs on his new album, "Illuminations." He is genuinely excited to sing them Friday at Target Center.
The classical-meets-pop star left Los Angeles for the Land of 10,000 Musical Hooks at the insistence of Minneapolis songwriter-for-hire Dan Wilson. And Groban is glad he did.
"It makes my brain calmer when I get to sit in a room with someone like Dan," he said.
Bringing Groban to Minneapolis was "like the urban equivalent of going to the woods," said Wilson, who, ironically, recently relocated to Los Angeles to pursue more songwriting opportunities. "It's not calmer in L.A."
Groban, 30, had a specific vision for his fifth studio album: a singer/songwriter project driven more by songs and his voice and less by elaborate production. So producer Rick Rubin -- known for his work with Beastie Boys, Metallica and late-years Johnny Cash -- paired him with Wilson, who won a song-of-the-year Grammy for co-writing the Dixie Chicks' "Not Ready to Make Nice." He also co-wrote three songs on Adele's current blockbuster, "21."
Groban had never written more than three or four songs on an album, but on "Illuminations" -- thanks to Wilson and others -- he helped write all but two pieces.