Benjamin Scott "Ben" Folds
(born September 12, 1966) is an American singer-songwriter and the former frontman of the band Ben Folds Five.
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Biography
Early life and career
Folds became attached to a piano when his father brought one home when he was 9, the result of a
barter trade his father made with a customer who was unable to pay for his work.
[1] During this time, Folds listened to songs by
Elton John and
Billy Joel on
AM radio, and learned them by ear. During his years at
R.J. Reynolds High School in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Folds played in several bands as the pianist,
bassist or
drummer.
In the late 1980s, Folds (as a bassist) and longtime friend
Millard Powers formed the band
Majosha. The group released several locally-produced records. They played their first gig at
Duke University's Battle of the Bands in 1988 and won. They played at bars and
fraternity parties for a while, and eventually put out a self-produced
EP sold at a few local stores called
Party Night: Five Songs About Jesus
(1988). The record featured only four songs, none of which were actually about
Jesus. Gradually, their popularity grew and they played larger and farther-flung gigs. They recorded
Shut Up and Listen to Majosha
in 1989. It contains, among others, the four songs from
Party Night
(remixed and/or re-recorded), "Emaline", and "Video". At about the same time, they did a dance mix of "Get That Bug" that was released in
Japan.
Majosha broke up in early 1990, and Folds formed Pots and Pans with
Evan Olson (bass) and Britt "Snuzz" Uzzell (guitar and vocals). Folds played drums. They only lasted about a month, after which Olson and Uzzell went on to form Bus Stop
[2] with Folds's brother Chuck Folds on bass and Eddie Walker on drums.
[3]
Folds eventually got a music-publishing deal with Nashville music executive
Scott Siman who saw Folds open for another act (as well as playing bass for the showcasing act) and moved to
Nashville, Tennessee, to pursue it in 1990. He played drums for a short stint in Jody's Power Bill, headed by
Millard Powers,
Bill Owsley, and
Jody Spence. Jody's Power Bill was later renamed
The Semantics. Folds did not take a creative role in the band. He again attracted interest from major labels. He ended up playing drums there as a
session musician.
[4]
"In Nashville, I was running eight miles a day, hanging out with my friends, walking around eating chocolate-chip cookies and playing a lot of drums, which I enjoyed. Life was easy. I was never frustrated -- even though I wasn't fulfilling my contract obligations. If you are failing in Nashville, at least your standard of living is nice. Nashville is a nice way to fail."
Folds attended the
University of Miami's
Frost School of Music on a
percussion scholarship, but dropped out with one credit to go before graduating. He devoted a lot of time to working on piano technique. "I spent maybe six months just running scales with a
metronome like a freak," Folds said. "I suppose that did something."
[5]
Folds tells audiences about a jury recital while a student at the University of Miami’s music school. A jury recital consists of playing a prepared repertoire (and sometimes unprepared pieces from prior years of training) before faculty members who then apply a grade for the entire semester. Folds, a drummer, showed up with a hand broken from a previous night’s partying, but was required to play anyway. He ended up losing his scholarship, and threw his drumkit into a lake on campus.
[6]
After leaving Miami, Folds moved to Montclair, New Jersey and began to act in theater troupes in New York City. He had previously done some theater in high school. He enjoyed it in 1993 to the point where he didn't want to keep pursuing a musical career.
He also played weekly
gigs at
Sin-é, famous for being the cafe which had helped start
Jeff Buckley's career.
Soon after, Folds moved back to
North Carolina. The
trio of Ben Folds, bassist
Robert Sledge, and drummer
Darren Jessee formed
Ben Folds Five in 1994
[7] in
Chapel Hill. As Folds put it, “
Jeff Buckley was being signed at that time by
Columbia and I was talking to Steve, his
A&R guy, and somehow we knew the same people or something."
Ben Folds Five
In 1995,
Ben Folds Five released their self-titled
debut album (songs included "Philosophy" and "Underground"). The debut was followed by
Whatever and Ever Amen
in 1997, and the odds-and-ends compilation
Naked Baby Photos
was released in early 1998.
Whatever
spawned many hits, such as "
Brick", "Song for the Dumped", and "Battle of Who Could Care Less". In 1999, the band released their final album,
The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner
, which included the hit, "Army".
Folds has described his former band as "
punk rock for sissies", and his oddball lyrics often contain nuances of depression, melancholy, self-conflict, and humorous sarcasm.
Despite its presence on multiple
Billboard
genre charts, none of the songs reached the
Hot 100, though they did show well on both adult contemporary and modern rock charts.
Ben Folds Five reunited to perform its first concert appearance in nearly 10 years on September 18, 2008 at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Memorial Hall.
[8] The one-off gig was part of the
MySpace "Front to Back" series, in which artists play an entire album live. The band played its final album,
The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner
. The concert aired during October and can be viewed at Nowwhat.com.
[9] All proceeds from ticket sales benefitted the charity
Operation Smile.
[10]
The song "The Luckiest" was originally written for 2000 Amy Heckerling film
Loser
, but was deleted from the movie when the scene for which it was written was cut. It re-emerged the following year on the album
Rockin' the Suburbs
.
A
jukebox musical entitled "Big Fantastic" was written and performed in 1997 by a group of drama students at Franklin County High School in
Carnesville, Georgia, and included in its score the songs from the Ben Folds Five self-titled album. The band gave their permission for the use of its songs in the musical but was unable to attend the performance.
Solo career
As of 2008, Folds has released six
solo LPs, including an experimental side project called
Fear of Pop
, which was released while Ben Folds Five was still together.
Folds's first solo release after the breakup of the band was
Rockin' the Suburbs
in 2001, on which he played nearly all the instruments, notably
guitar, an instrument seldom used during the Ben Folds Five days.
Millard Powers, Britt "Snuzz" Uzzell, and
Jim Bogios joined him on the promotional tour of the album. A year later, he released
Ben Folds Live
, a collection of live solo recordings. In late 2003, two solo
EPs,
Speed Graphic
and
Sunny 16
, were released, and a third, titled
Super D
, was released in mid-2004.
Songs for Silverman
was released in the United States on April 26, 2005. The album featured Jared Reynolds on
bass and Lindsay Jamieson on the
drums, thus returning to the trio format. This album includes the track "Late", a tribute to the late singer-songwriter
Elliott Smith, and also features
backup vocals from
"Weird Al" Yankovic on "Time" (Folds had played piano for Yankovic's song "Why Does This Always Happen to Me?" on his
Poodle Hat
album. Yankovic also directed and appeared in Folds's video for the "
Rockin' the Suburbs" single).
Folds contributed to
William Shatner's most recent album,
Has Been
, as
producer,
arranger, musician, and
backup vocalist. Shatner also sang vocals on Folds's
Fear of Pop
song, "In Love", which was performed live on
Late Night with Conan O'Brien
on January 22, 1999.
Folds' friend and fellow musician John McCrea, lead singer of the band
Cake, contributed vocals to Ben's song "Fred Jones, Part 2".
The
soundtrack for the 2006
animated film Hoodwinked!
featured "Red is Blue", a
ballad underlying a
montage at the height of the sadness of Red, the main character.
In May 2006, Folds contributed three original songs to the soundtrack of
Over the Hedge
, a
DreamWorks production, as well as a cover of
The Clash song "Lost in the Supermarket", and a remix of "Rockin' The Suburbs" with some new lyrics written to complement the script of the film, to which Shatner contributed a spoken rant. Songs for the movie are "Heist", which became the main song for the movie, and "Family of Me", a short track which introduces the movie.
On October 24, 2006, Folds released
Supersunnyspeedgraphic, the LP
, a compilation of songs that were originally released on the EPs
Sunny 16
,
Speed Graphic
, and
Super D
. He announced on his
MySpace blog that he planned to work on his next
studio album in October 2006, although recording did not actually start until 2007.
On that same day, Folds became the first person to broadcast a live concert over
MySpace. The concert was complete with pranks staged ahead of time by Folds, including a drunk man falling over the balcony during "Jesusland" and a suicide attempt at the end. The concert is also notable for featuring a "guitorchestra", a group of acoustic guitarists from Nashville who accompanied Folds on some songs, as well as a ringtone orchestra featuring members of the audience playing their cellphone ringtones in unison.
Ben Folds produced
The Dresden Dolls'
Amanda Palmer's first solo album,
Who Killed Amanda Palmer
which was released September 16, 2008. He also performs on the album.
[11] [12]
During a concert at the National in
Richmond, Virginia on April 11, 2008, Folds announced that he had completed his newest album, and played four new tracks from this album. He played the first track, "Hiroshima", at the same show in Richmond on April 11. He also debuted new music at an impromptu gig at the
Exit/In on December 19, 2007 and at the Ann Arbor Folk Festival on January 25, 2008. Other new songs include "Errant Dog", "Effington", "The Bitch Went Nuts", "Free Coffee", and "Kylie From Connecticut". Folds played The 6th annual Langerado on March 8, 2008 and was a part of the lineup for the 2008
Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival.
On July 16, 2008, an anonymous user posted what they claimed was a "leak" of Ben's latest album on a fan site (eventually called
Way to Normal (Fake)
). The file contained nine tracks along with a PDF of supposed cover art, and was a mix of what appeared to be legitimate songs from
Way to Normal
, pastiches of dry humor and melodramatic pop interwoven with bright, energetic melodies. Ben explained on Triple J radio a few weeks later that in one overnight session in Dublin he and the band had recorded 'fake' versions of songs from the new album. His sources had then leaked them to the public as a light-hearted joke on his fans.
[13]
Folds' most recent studio album, entitled
Way To Normal
was released on September 30, 2008 in the
United States and on September 29 2008 in the
United Kingdom.
[14] [15] [16] It became Folds' highest-charting album ever in the US, debuting at #11 on the
Billboard 200.
[17]
Soon before
Way to Normal
was released, Folds announced that he planned to record an album with English author
Nick Hornby, with Hornby writing the lyrics and Folds writing the music. The idea of the collaboration come out of the 'fake' leak of the album
Way to Normal
released in July 2009. "(We will) write and record it in about three days, just like we did in Dublin with the fake record," Folds said.
[18]
In 2009, Folds collaborated with Japanese singer-songwriter
Angela Aki on the song "Black Glasses" on her new album
Answer
. The song is about the black glasses that both he and Angela wear.
On April 28, 2009, Folds released an album that consisted of commissioned a cappella arrangements of his music from some of the country's best college vocal troupes,
Ben Folds Presents University A Cappella
.
[19]
Folds' song "
Rockin' the Suburbs" has been featured as part of the music for
ABC's sitcom
Surviving Suburbia
.
Folds was also an inaugural member of the
Independent Music Awards' judging panel to support independent artists.
[20]
Tours
After Ben Folds Five split, Folds's first tour with a full band was to support the album
Rockin' The Suburbs
. He was accompanied by Britt "Snüzz" Uzzell on guitar and
keys,
Millard Powers on bass and keys, and
Jim Bogios on drums. Powers and Bogios later went on to join
Counting Crows.
On a tour of
Australia, Folds joined with solo artists
Ben Kweller and
Ben Lee to travel the country as
The Bens, at the suggestion of a fan on Kweller's official website. The trio also went on to record a
four-track EP together.
In the summer of 2004, Folds co-headlined an American tour with fellow singer-songwriters
Rufus Wainwright and
Guster. Folds again performed with Wainwright and Lee in the summer of 2005 as part of the "Odd Men Out" tour. In addition, Folds has performed with many other famous musical names, including
Weezer and
Tori Amos. After seeing
The Fray perform with Weezer, Folds asked the band to join him for 12 performances in 2005.
Folds also has shown the intricacy behind his original sound by performing with the
West Australian Symphony Orchestra (WASO) in March 2005, and with the
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (BSO) in November 2005. A
DVD of Folds playing with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra was released in December 2005. On
May 9,
2007, Folds performed with the
Boston Pops Orchestra. The orchestra's performance was marred when a fight broke out between two audience members in the balcony, although Folds had not yet taken the stage.
[21]
Folds performed with symphony orchestras again in August 2006 during a tour of Australia, which included performances with the
Sydney Symphony at the
Sydney Opera House,
Adelaide Symphony Orchestra,
Western Australian Symphony Orchestra,
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, and
The Queensland Orchestra.
After his
MySpace performance on October 24, 2006, Folds's tour performances began to feature a
synthesizer, which he uses in many of the songs when played live. The synthesizer is a red
Nord Lead II synthesizer. During his concerts, Folds performs two of his concert traditions: palm-smashing and throwing his stool at the piano. Folds is currently touring the United States with drummer Sam Smith and bassist Jared Reynolds. Former drummer Jamieson was allegedly unable to continue touring due to a ruptured disc in his neck.
Folds toured with
John Mayer as an opening act (though his set typically lasted an hour) in the summer of 2007. During this tour, Mayer sometimes joined Folds on the song "Narcolepsy", playing synth. At various concerts throughout the tour, parents of young children going to see Mayer would file complaints about Folds' lyrics. Folds responded by posting on his website, "We have kids too, but we don't take them out to rock shows that last until 11pm."
On March 29, 2008, Folds played the Cage Center Arena at Berry College in Mt. Berry, GA. During contract negotiations, he was asked by the administration to not play one of his songs due to its explicit lyrics. Folds refused, citing artistic freedom.
On May 9, 2008, Ben Folds played his first completely solo show in years at Western Connecticut State University due to the fact that his bassist Jared Reynolds was with his wife who had just given birth to their first son.
Work with William Shatner
According to the track "Meeting Shatner" on the
iTunes original album released in 2005, Ben Folds and
William Shatner became good friends after he did a speaking part on the track "In Love." This led to them later collaborating on each others' projects including Ben Folds's involvement in
Priceline.com and
Over The Hedge
, and the work on Shatner's album
Has Been
.
Shatner makes a
cameo appearance in the
music video for "Landed". Folds produced and arranged Shatner's album
Has Been
, with most of the songs co-written by Folds and Shatner. Through his friendship with Shatner, Folds appeared in a late-1990s advertisement for Priceline.com, and his song "Landed" was used in a 2006 Hilton Hotels commercial. Shatner later starred as 'Ozzie' in the 2006 animated film
Over The Hedge
, whose soundtrack features songs by Folds, including a reworking of "Rockin' the Suburbs" featuring Shatner.
In 2007, a ballet
Common People
, set to
Has Been
, was created by
Margo Sappington (of
Oh! Calcutta!
fame) and performed by the
Milwaukee Ballet. Shatner attended the premiere and had the event filmed. This footage became
Gonzo Ballet
, a feature film that world premiered at the
Nashville Film Festival on April 17, 2009, which includes interviews with Ben Folds, William Shatner, and
Henry Rollins.
Discography
- Ben Folds Five
, (1995), Passenger/Caroline
- Whatever and Ever Amen
, (1997), 550 #42 US
- The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner
, (1999) #35 US
- Rockin' the Suburbs
, (2001), Sony #42 US
- Songs for Silverman
, (2005), Epic (Bonus DVD) #13 US
- Way to Normal
, (2008), Epic #11 US
References
- According to Ben Folds on his iTunes Originals interview titled "My Inner White Man Came Out In Full Bloom"
- Ben Folds biography - 8notes.com
- Bus Stop - Self Titled
- Ben Folds Five - Winston-Salem Journal review
- Interesting Ben Folds article from the San Diego Union-Tribune
- Ben Folds Bares All Live - Ben Folds Live [PA - Ben Folds - Epinions.com]
- VH1 Bio
- Ben Folds Five to perform in Chapel Hill
- The Suburbs.co.uk: "Did You Just Shit Your Pants? Cause I Sure Did; Ben Folds Five Reunion"
- Rolling Stone: ""Ben Folds Five Reuniting for One-Night-Only MySpace Show"
- Dresden Doll Preps Solo Debut | Spin Magazine Online
- THESHADOWBOX.NET :: View topic - Speculation: Solo Album Title
- Buell, Gromt. "Way to Normal Leak". ''BenFolds.org''. 2008-07-16.
- http://www.thesuburbs.org.uk/news/_Way_To_Normal__UK_Release_Date_29th_September
- http://www.benfolds.com/info.html
- http://www.imeem.com/benfolds
- http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003871707
- [1]
- "Ben Folds Goes A Cappella, With Help - NPR Music"
- Independent Music Awards - Past Judges
- Fight breaks out at Boston Pops - MUSIC - MSNBC.com