Matt Butler Brings ‘Reckless Son’ Performance to Campus During Grum Project Visit

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Matt Butler Brings ‘Reckless Son’ Performance to Campus During Grum Project Visit

The second visit by a Grum Project visiting artist this year brought a lively, energetic performance to the Phillips Stevens Chapel as Matt Butler, a musician and creator, performed his one-man traveling show Reckless Son. Butler鈥檚 music is inspired by his journey touring and performing in more than 100 jails and prisons across the country.

Butler鈥檚 work has been described on his website as a 鈥21st century version of On the Road meets 鈥淔olsom Prison Blues,鈥 and the performer brought the weight of his performance to bear during his show. The popular music magazine Spin also named Butler a 2023 Artist of the Year, and Reckless Son earned an Album of the Year nomination from it, as well. While parts of the show were edited to fit the audience, Butler still brought the raw energy that has made his show so powerful.

鈥淭he show is really an attempt to humanize and give voice to the incarcerated,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y goal is to share with people who don鈥檛 necessarily have any exposure to that population or any real understanding of that population.鈥

Butler鈥檚 songs contain narratives about things he鈥檚 seen on his prison tours and personal reflections about his own journey. This give-and-take of sorts is something Butler learned as he started performing in prisons.

鈥淭he way this started was I would write some songs and bring them in, perform them, and use them as ways to facilitate a conversation,鈥 Butler said. 鈥淪ongs can penetrate people鈥檚 defenses and generate intimacy and create trust almost instantaneously.鈥

And while the venue was different from what Butler was used to, the reaction was similar. Students and faculty alike tapped toes and nodded heads during his performance, and that connection was special for the performer.

鈥淚鈥檒l often feel like no one out here gets me, and that sense of alienation is why I relate to the incarcerated so well,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel like people don鈥檛 want to hear me. And so, to come here to 91大神, which is an entirely different group of people, and to be greeted with such a gracious audience here, to connect with the people, is really affirming for me on a personal level.鈥

Butler鈥檚 visit included a question-and-answer segment after the show, as well, to allow students to ask questions. Butler also toured campus with his wife, Anna Mohrman 鈥97, and got to experience lunch in the Birch Dining Commons, just like Mohrman did as a student.

Learn more about Butler and his music on . The Grum Project is funded through a generation donation by a Northampton School for Girls alumna. Learn more about the Grum Project here.