Ben Lee
Benjamin Michael Lee (born 11 September 1978) is an Australian musician and actor. Lee began his career as a musician at the age of 14 with the Sydney band Noise Addict, but focused on his solo career when the band broke up in 1995. He appeared as the protagonist in the Australian film The Rage in Placid Lake (2003).[1] He has released eleven solo studio albums.
Ben Lee | |
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Lee at the 2008 Australia Day Live Concert in Canberra | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Benjamin Michael Lee |
Born | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia | 11 September 1978
Genres | Indie pop |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, bass, piano |
Years active | 1993–present |
Labels |
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Associated acts | Noise Addict, The Bens, Gerling, Jessica Chapnik, Radnor and Lee, Ling Ling |
Website | www |
Career
Noise Addict
Lee's musical career began in 1993 with the band Noise Addict, who were signed to Steve Pavlovic's independent label Fellaheen Records, on the strength of a self-produced and distributed four-track demo recorded in Lee's bedroom. Pavlovic's connections brought the band to the attention of Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Beastie Boys' Mike D, both of whom released the band's material in the US. The group put out several releases on the Beasties' Grand Royal Records.
These including the acoustic Young and Jaded EP in 1994, which contained Lee's Evan Dando tribute, "I Wish I Was Him". In 1995, Grand Royal released the band's only full-length album, the Brad Wood-produced Meet the Real You. Noise Addict made a music video for the song "16", toured with Sebadoh, but then broke up. Lee was also briefly a member of the alternative act Gerling. In 2009 Lee recorded a new Noise Addict album, It Was Never About the Audience, with a new lineup; Lou Barlow and Lara Meyerratken.
Solo career
Lee's solo career started at the age of 16, while he was still in Noise Addict. He began recording his first solo album, Grandpaw Would, in both Sydney and Chicago with producer Brad Wood. This was followed by the 1997 album, Something to Remember Me By, also produced by Wood. An alternate version of his song "Burn to Shine", produced by T-Bone Burnett, played over the end credits of the film Best Men. Lee was then featured on the There's Something About Mary soundtrack, with the song "How to Survive a Broken Heart". 1998's Breathing Tornados, released on Pavlovic's new label Modular, marked a new direction for Lee as he introduced synthesisers and increased instrumentation into his sound.
The album was a success in Australia, earning Lee ARIA Award nominations for Best Male Artist and Album of the Year. The album's first single, "Cigarettes Will Kill You", was also nominated for Single of the Year and finished second in that year's Triple J Hottest 100. In 2001, Lee contributed a track ("Sweet Is the Night") to a Jeff Lynne tribute album Lynne Me Your Ears.
Lee's fourth album, hey you. yes you., was released in 2002. The first single from the album, "Something Borrowed, Something Blue", reached number 67 on the ARIA Charts and number 22 on the 2002's Triple J Hottest 100. The second single, "Running with Scissors", peaked at number 82 on the ARIA charts. In 2003, he also contributed several songs to the Evan Dando solo album Baby I'm Bored.
In late 2004, Lee left Steve Pavlovic's Modular Recordings and started his own record label, Ten Fingers. The first release on the label was the single, "Gamble Everything for Love", followed by the album, Awake Is the New Sleep in February 2005, which went double platinum in Australia. A defining release in his career, the album showcased a much brighter, positive side of Lee's personality, in contrast to his previous darker musings. Awake Is the New Sleep received several nominations for the 2005 Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) awards, and Lee won Best Male Artist, Best Independent Release, and Single of the Year for "Catch My Disease", which Lee wrote with Mcgowan Southworth. "Catch My Disease" also went to No. 2 on the 2005 Triple J Hottest 100.
In addition, the song was featured on the soundtracks to the 2005 films Just Friends and Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo, as well as the soundtracks to the television series, Grey's Anatomy, Hidden Palms and Scrubs. In 2006 it was used in a television commercial for Dell Computers. On 26 March 2006, Lee performed "We're All in This Together" from Awake Is the New Sleep at the closing ceremony of the 2006 Commonwealth Games. The single for "We're All in This Together" was released on 8 April 2006. The CD includes cover versions of the song by Pony Up, Holidays on Ice and Gelbison. "We're All in This Together" is being used in commercials for Kohl's (2008), Coca-Cola (Remixed Australian Summer Series Ads in 2007), the South Australian Government (2006), the Salvation Army Red Shield Appeal (2007) and Telus Mobility's "My Faves" (2007).
Lee released his sixth album, Ripe, on 18 September 2007 with Benji Madden and Mandy Moore making appearances. Mandy Moore sung a light-hearted, '50s style duet with Lee called "Birds and Bees". "Mandy was very sweet and did her best Olivia Newton-John for me. I'm really psyched about this recording," Lee says. Madden helped out with some backing vocals, along with US band Rooney and Sara Watkins from the band Nickel Creek. "American Television" from the album was used in a VH1 advertisement for Flavor of Love 3 and the song "Ripe" appeared in an episode of One Tree Hill (Season 5, episode 2).
In 2007, Lee performed a cover of Crosby, Stills & Nash's "Our House" for Landmarks on The DL.[2]
In February 2009, Lee released his seventh studio album, The Rebirth of Venus, which received mixed reviews.[3] It featured guest performances from the likes of Missy Higgins and Patience Hodgson, and peaked at No.21 on the ARIA Charts.[4]
Lee's eighth studio album, Deeper into Dream, was released on 11 October 2011. It was Lee's first attempt at a concept album, basing the entire 12 tracks around the dream state. Despite not charting,[4] it was received fairly favourably by critics.
In April 2013, Lee released his ninth and arguably his most experimental studio album entitled Ayahuasca: Welcome to the Work,[5] with collaboration from Jessica Chapnik. The album is based upon his personal experience with the psychoactive South American drug known as Ayahuasca. Lee featured as the mentor for Joel Madden's team on the 2013 season of The Voice Australia.[6]
In June 2015, Lee released his 10th solo album, Love Is the Great Rebellion, his first on a major label, Warner Bros. Records.[7] According to Geoff Wood at ABC, Lee invented the term "Electroyoga" to describe a new form of music dedicated to the practice of yoga. Lee has since followed up this release with an acoustically-oriented album, entitled Freedom, Love and Recuperation of the Human Mind, in 2016; as well as a children's album, called Ben Lee Sings Songs About Islam for the Whole Family, in 2017. November 2017 also saw the release of Radnor and Lee, a collaborative album Lee made with former How I Met Your Mother star Josh Radnor.
2018 saw the release of B Is for Beer, a soundtrack to the musical based on the novel of the same name written by Tom Robbins. Lee and Robbins had collaborated for ten years to develop the musical. Funding for the album's development came via crowd-sourcing at Kickstarter.
Lee released Quarter Century Classix in 2019, a collection of cover songs he was influenced by during his teenage years. In 2020, Lee's second collaborative album with Radnor, "Golden State" was released under the Radnor and Lee moniker.
Personal life
Lee was born in Sydney and was raised in a Jewish household, but did not consider himself religious as a child.[8] Lee was educated at Moriah College, an independent, Modern Orthodox Jewish, co-educational, day school, located in Sydney's eastern suburbs.[9]
Lee dated Claire Danes for several years but their relationship ended in 2003, and he later married actress Ione Skye on 28 December 2008, in a Hindu wedding ceremony in India. They have one child.[10][11]
Lee stated that he follows a pescatarian diet.[12]
Discography
Albums
Title | Details | Peak | Certification |
---|---|---|---|
AUS [4] | |||
Grandpaw Would |
|
— | |
Something to Remember Me By |
|
— | |
Breathing Tornados |
|
13 | |
hey you. yes you. |
|
45 | |
Awake Is the New Sleep |
|
5 | |
Ben Lee Sings Against Me!'s New Wave |
|
— | |
Ripe |
|
11 | |
The Square (Motion Picture Sountrack) (with Jessica Chapnik Kahn) |
|
— | |
The Rebirth of Venus |
|
21 | |
Deeper into Dream |
|
— | |
Ayahuasca: Welcome to the Work |
|
— | |
A mixtape from Ben Lee |
|
— | |
Love Is the Great Rebellion |
|
71 | |
Freedom, Love and The Recuperation of the Human Mind |
|
— | |
Ben Lee Sings Songs about Islam for the Whole Family |
|
— | |
Radnor & Lee (with Josh Radnor) |
|
— | |
B Is for Beer: The Musical (with Tom Robbins) |
|
— | |
Quarter Century Classix |
|
— | |
Golden State (with Josh Radnor) |
|
— | |
Extended plays
- Pop Queen (1994)
- Away with the Pixies (1995)
- The Dirty Little Secret EP (2002)
Singles
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [4] |
UK [14] | |||
"Cigarettes Will Kill You" | 1998 | 46 | 92 | Breathing Tornados |
"Ship My Body Home" | — | — | ||
"Nothing Much Happens" | 1999 | 136 | 95 | |
"Tornados" | — | — | ||
"Something Borrowed, Something Blue" | 2002 | 67 | — | hey you. yes you. |
"Running with Scissors" | 2003 | 82 | — | |
"Gamble Everything for Love" | 2004 | 39 | — | Awake Is the New Sleep |
"Catch My Disease" | 2005 | 27 | — | |
"Into the Dark"[A] | 97 | — | ||
"We're All in This Together" | 2006 | 59 | — | |
"Love Me Like the World Is Ending" | 2007 | 18 | — | Ripe |
"Numb" | 54 | — | ||
"I Love Pop Music" | 2009 | 86 | — | The Rebirth of Venus |
"Rise Up" | — | — | ||
"Song for the Divine Mother of the Universe" | 2010 | — | — | |
"Big Love" | 2015 | — | — | Love Is the Great Rebellion |
Notes:
- A ^ The Australian peak for the "Into the Dark" EP is on the ARIA albums chart.
Promotional singles
Title | Year | Album |
---|---|---|
"Career Choice" | 1998 | Something to Remember Me By |
"Dead or Anything" (as part of Dando Lee Petersson Schwartzman) |
2002 | Dando Lee Petersson Schwartzman |
"In My Life" | 2005 | This Bird Has Flown – A 40th Anniversary Tribute to the Beatles' Rubber Soul |
"American Television" | 2008 | Ripe |
"What's So Bad (About Feeling Good)?" | 2009 | The Rebirth of Venus |
"Forgiveness" | 2015 | Love Is the Great Rebellion |
"The Body of Love" | ||
"Goodbye to Yesterday" | ||
Other appearances
- "Make Your Move" (featuring Ione Skye) from Spider (2007)
- "Beautiful Flirt" (with Ione Skye and Jack Graddis) from Bear (2011)
- "We're All in This Together" (with Jack River and Lime Cordiale) from Music from the Home Front (2020)
Awards and nominations
Awards
- 2005 ARIA Music Awards, Single of the Year – "Catch My Disease"
- 2005 ARIA Music Awards, Best Male Artist for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2005 ARIA Music Awards, Best Independent Release for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2005 ARIA Music Awards, Best Cover Art for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2006 APRA Music Awards, Song of the Year – "Catch My Disease"[15]
- 2006 APRA Music Awards, Most Performed Australian Work – "Catch My Disease"[16]
- 2016 TwoSet Violin ROAST, Sacrilegious Violinist for "Flight of the Bumblebee Butcher"
Nominations
- 1999 ARIA Music Awards, Album of the Year for Breathing Tornados
- 1999 ARIA Music Awards, Single of the Year for Cigarettes Will Kill You
- 1999 ARIA Music Awards, Best Male Artist for Breathing Tornados
- 2003 ARIA Music Awards, Best Male Artist for hey you. yes you.
- 2005 ARIA Music Awards, Album of the Year for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2005 ARIA Music Awards, Best Pop Release for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2005 Australian Music Prize, for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2006 AIR Awards of 2006 Independent Artist of the Year
- 2006 AIR Awards of 2006, Best Performing Independent Album for Awake Is the New Sleep
- 2006 ARIA Music Awards, Best Male Artist for We're All in This Together
- 2006 ARIA Music Awards, Best Pop Release for Into the Dark
- 2006 ARIA Music Awards, Best Independent Release for We're All in This Together
- 2008 ARIA Music Awards, Best Independent Release for Ripe
References
- Vagg, Stephen (14 July 2019). "Australian Singers Turned Actors". Filmink.
- "AOL Radio Stations | Free Internet Radio". Spinner.com. Archived from the original on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- "Reviews for The Rebirth of Venus by Ben Lee". Metacritic.com. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- Peaks in Australia:
- Top 50 peaks: "australian-charts.com – Discography Ben Lee". Hung Medien. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
- Top 100 peaks to December 2010: Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010. Mt. Martha, VIC, Australia: Moonlight Publishing.
- "Nothing Much Happens": "Response from ARIA re: chart inquiry, received 24 May 2016". Imgur.com. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
- Love Is the Great Rebellion: Ryan, Gavin (6 June 2015). "ARIA Albums: Florence + The Machine Debuts at No 1". Noise11. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- "Ben Lee". Pledgemusic.com. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- Annabel Ross. "The Voice | Ben Lee". Theage.com.au. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- "Album Premiere: Listen to Ben Lee's Love Is the Great Rebellion". Pastemagazine.com. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- "Pop Singer Ben Lee Comes Out of the 'Ayahuasca Closet' [INTERVIEW]". The Huffington Post. 24 June 2013.
- Molitorisz, Sacha (9 November 2002). "The ballad of Ben Lee". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
- "The many layers of Mr. Lee". The Sun-Herald. 2 September 2007.
- "A Wedding in India for Actress Ione Skye". People.com. 11 January 2009.
- "Vegetarian StarShould Ben Lee Be De-Throned?". Vegetarianstar.com. 22 September 2008. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
- "ARIA Charts – Accreditations – 2005 Albums". Australian Recording Industry Association. Archived from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
- "BEN LEE | full Official Charts history". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
- "Previous Winners Song of the Year". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 5 May 2010.
- "2006 Winners – APRA Music Awards". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Archived from the original on 8 March 2011. Retrieved 5 May 2010.