The Start of Something Beautiful Ben Goldsmith
Album info
Album-Release:
2024
HRA-Release:
13.09.2024
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Crazy 02:49
- 2 Love Again 03:05
- 3 When I Said Goodbye 02:38
- 4 Graduate 03:15
- 5 I Miss NYC 03:34
- 6 Trying 03:14
- 7 Wish We Never Met 03:04
- 8 Look On 03:03
- 9 Easy 03:34
- 10 Treetops 03:46
- 11 The Start of Something Beautiful 04:14
Info for The Start of Something Beautiful
Goldsmith ist ein dynamischer Künstler und ein außergewöhnliches Talent. Er hat sein neues Album zusammen mit berühmten Künstlern wie Dan Wilson (Taylor Swift, Adele), Rick Nowels (Lana Del Rey) und Alex Hope (Troye Sivan, Alec Benjamin) entwickelt, um nur einige zu nennen. The Start of Something Beautiful“ umfasst Herzschmerz-Rocker, Coming-of-Age-Hymnen, Songs über die erste Liebe und vieles mehr und unterstreicht Goldsmiths einzigartiges musikalisches Können und Songwriting, denn der 18-Jährige hat an jedem Track mitgeschrieben und fast die Hälfte des Albums produziert. Der Multiinstrumentalist, der von The Hollywood Reporter als bemerkenswerter Nachwuchskünstler hervorgehoben wurde, spielt auf dem Projekt auch Gitarre, Klavier, Lap Steel, Orgel, Mellotron und Bass.
Ben Goldsmith
Ben Goldsmith
Singer-songwriter and multidimensional artist Ben Goldsmith would like to tell you he “never could’ve imagined” this for himself, but he’s quick to note that – call it confidence or a preternatural headstrongness years in the making – it’d just not be true. “In a way, I’ve been working towards this since I was 3 or 4,” he says on a Zoom call from his Long Island bedroom. “I’ve never strayed. It’s the only thing I’ve ever wanted to do.”
That “thing” Ben’s referring to is making music – more than music, really, it’s lyrically-driven art free from genre, with a sharp point of view and melodies as strong as some of the teen’s many influences. Ben was born and bred on acts like Aerosmith, Dave Mathews Band, Elton John, Queen, Stevie Wonder, John Mayer, and Bob Dylan. Modern artists like Zach Bryan, Maggie Rogers, Steve Lacy, and Sam Fender helped round out his style and his sonic influences, drawing inspiration from the sort of iconoclasts who – like Ben – float between worlds, genres, and sounds, a jack and master of all trades.
The singer (who started playing instruments at 4) wrote his first song after accompanying his father, a criminal defense attorney, to court at age 6. “It was called ‘Criminal Disguise,’ and I made it on GarageBand by just strumming my guitar into my iPad’s microphone,” he says. The guitar he used was the one he’d asked for Hanukkah after Hanukkah after spotting the model in a catalogue sent to his doorstep; he’d been taking lessons by that point, dedicating himself to the craft; eventually, he took up jazz guitar, studying every Sunday at the Manhattan School of Music, where his mother had taken violin instruction. After a year, he moved on to Mannes Prep at The New School where he studied jazz guitar with teacher Joe Ravo, who encouraged him to trust his ear and listen so he could play solos melodically.
As he grew, more musical opportunities began to unfold before him: a summer camp at Berklee, bands he formed with hometown friends, and a cross-country tour with the School of Rock all-stars program. The latter included a stop at Lollapalooza, where he met a guitarist who worked with famed and acclaimed instructor Tomo Fujita (who taught John Mayer and has performed with many of music’s greatest, including Susan Tedeschi and Phil Collins). Three years of lessons with Tomo followed. All the while, Ben says, “I was playing with friends, gigging around the South, learning about rock, soul, jazz, blues –expanding my palate and just growing and growing every day.” At age 12 Ben was introduced to industry veteran Mike Crowley, whose early career involved names such as Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, The Beach Boys and Tom Petty. Later He worked with many Texas songwriters including Hayes Carll and Bob Schneider. He recognized extraordinary talent in the young artist and decided to help Ben find his musical path. As it did for so many, 2020 shifted young Ben’s focus; quite literally no longer able to play in ensembles the way he’d grown accustomed to, what followed was solo bedroom songwriting and jam sessions. He learned how to properly record himself on his computer in between classes and homework assignments; on a parallel track, without other singers to rely on, Ben began sharpening his vocals, training himself to take the spotlight while concurrently learning to tell his own stories. “Things were happening so fast that I almost looked at school like, ‘this is taking time away from music,’” he says with a laugh. What followed was a jump into the deep end. Mike introduced Ben’s music to producer Brad Jones, who, immediately hooked by his melodies, traveled up to New York to see the budding star in person. Ben’s parents would soon be making regular road trips between Long Island and Nashville so Brad could spend time with Ben in the studio exploring ideas and concepts. Jones then started to introduce the budding artist to a carefully curated group of songwriters. Bobby Bare Jr., Olivia Wolf, Hayes Carll, and Aaron Raitiere. Brad became Ben’s Nashville shepherd, a producer, engineer, mixer, and musical visionary who brought him to the city and introduced him to his network, helping the artist stitch together the patchwork quilt of collaborators and confidantes he now calls his creative team. That chosen family, at Brad’s behest (“Let me be a teacher,” Ben remembers him saying as he helped open the new chapter to Ben’s career), took the teen’s vision seriously and started cutting tracks with him to help Ben grow and learn. “The energy is always there,” Ben says. “We were never working towards any goal other than making the best music we knew how to.” Calling his process “the least prescriptive you could imagine,” Ben says his inspiration is omnipresent and never dictated. “For me, it’s about melody first,” he says. “What I write flows afterward with the incredible family of cowriters I’ve surrounded myself with. They understand me, and I trust them – it’s been amazing to build these songs from the ground up together.” Speaking of songs: “One Day Believer,” his first official track, dropped in the summer of 2022, the culmination of two full years of work and dedication – “that’s the one that flipped the switch for us,” Ben says. Next up are soon-to-be earworms that transcend time, place, and genre – like “It’ll All Be Alright,” “Wolves,” “Glorious,” “Flowers In Your Hair,” and the utterly classic “Adios, Gracias, Goodnight.” Written and produced with close collaborators like poet Catie Trainor, who Ben met at a Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI) writers’ camp in Nashville and now calls “my Bernie Taupin,” the songs brim with promise, Ben’s powerful and emotionally resonant voice and lush, fully realized melodies on total display. Onfirst listen, they’ll feel immediately familiar and totally singular in the same breath. That’s Ben’s gift at work – the ability to supersede any one genre or sound while incorporating elements from across the musical spectrum in one fell swoop. Because at the end of the day, Ben is the anchor that grounds and centers his music. There’s vision and direction behind every choice; there’s passion and motivation in every note he sings. Armed with a talent beyond measure and a dream of sharing it with the world, Ben Goldsmith is an artist whose journey you won’t want to be late for.
This album contains no booklet.