NAME benjamin michael lee
AGE 24
STAR SIGN virgo
ROLE IN BAND fearless
leader
FIRST RECORD jack
and the beanstalk/thriller
FAVE POP STAR avril
lavigne
TOP 10 FAVOURITE
SONGS the
first velvet
underground album
WORST NIGHTMARE playing
a show where
the entire audience
were girls i
have had crushes
on
WHERE YOU
WANT TO BE IN
TEN YEARS? no
plans
MODE OF TRANSPORT feet,
midsize car,
subway
LAST BOOK passionate
marriage - david
shnarch
FAVE SNACK rice
noodles
WHO IS YOUR
HERO? sinead
o'conner
WHY WOULD
I BUY YOUR RECORD? you
had some change
after spending
the better part
of your dole
cheque on gelbison,
waikiki and sleepy
jackson records
ARE YOU SUPERSTITIOUS? no.
YOUR GREATEST VICE i can be too judgemental
end transmission
BIO
"I'm trying to express on this record
the same things I'm trying to express in my life right
now. It's all about leaving rough edges, keeping it dirty,
not judging it" - Ben Lee, Sept 2002
It's been a stimulating three years for
Ben Lee. Sometimes great, sometimes complicated, never
anything less than inspiring.
Finally casting off
the "teen hero" tag
with which he was lumbered during the mid- to late-1990s
(both as a solo artist and out front of the band Noise
Addict), Lee emerged in 1999 with the single "Cigarettes
Will Kill You" and a breakthrough album in Breathing
Tornados, marked out by textured arrangements
and organic songwriting.
What followed, of course, was a whole
lot of touring. But then Ben's life spun off in multiple
directions. He wrote with Evan Dando and new-school Australian
bands Waikiki and Gelbison. He practised the Chinese
self-healing art of Qigong. He travelled several times
between his new base in America and his old home on the
beach at Bondi. He made his acting debut as the star
of indie flick The Rage In Placid Lake.
And there have naturally
also been life experiences
for Ben which haven't happened outwardly
or in public. Amongst them, emotional challenges
like grief and what he
describes as his "struggling against
numbness and non-feeling".
All up, that's some
pretty solid currency for
songwriting. Enter Ben Lee's new album "hey
you. yes you".
Right from hook-heavy
opener "Running
With Scissors", it's evident that Lee is determined
to make this new musical venture an adventure. "hey
you. yes you." will prove to any stray behind-the-timers
that, yes, Ben Lee is now all grown up. This
is an accessible pop album, certainly. But
it's also so much more than
that. It's a mature, honed work which explores
the hidden corners of songwriting and which
uses the studio setting
to full effect.
"Real danger in pop music should
always come from vulnerability. Emotional tightrope walking.
Risk," offers Ben. "I'm trying to change. I
use music to help me do that."
Lee recorded "hey you. yes you." in
late 2001 in San Francisco. At the helm as
producer was Dan The Automator
(Beastie Boys, Primal Scream, Herbie
Hancock), with whom Lee shared an omissible
rapport.
"Dan and I were
really musically compatible
from the get-go - even down to our favourite
Can record. I mean, we got each other. We
both love big pop songs,
big hooks. We both also have a pretty wide
and eclectic set of influences. It's rare
for me to find someone who
can sit with me and discuss obscure NYC noise
groups from the early-80s and then watch
MTV with me and get off on
the colours and the candy of the modern.
[Making this record with Dan] was about taking
all of that stuff and making
the best pop songs possible out
of it."
The resulting collection
of a dozen songs is dark
and sexy, a reflection of Lee standing at the
end of this latest stage in his life, declaring "I'm
a mess" and then creating art that, by turns, admits
wrongs, purges demons and celebrates the learning curve: "I
needed to just let it rip."
And rip it does.
Where "Running With
Scissors" screams with immediacy, "After Taste" is
built on a meandering, understated beat. The first single "Something
Borrowed, Something Blue" is an instant radio classic. "(Music
For) The Young and Foolish" is anything but what
it's title suggests - an excursion through quirky samples
and oscillating melody. "No Room To Bleed" stands
out for its gorgeous piano line, while "Chills" puts
a beautiful spin on melancholy.
"I guess I'd like to say that this
is a dirty, soulful album about imperfection," Ben
suggests.
It's also a mighty
strong one - songs bolder
than he has ever written before, an inventiveness
in production and arrangement which throws
sentimentality out the window,
and a big fat dose of staying power.
Not bad for an album half-written in the
studio. But Lee says it's
the "pure and uncontrolled" approach
he takes into recording which allows his work to breath
and take its inevitable, winning shape: "I try to
leave room to surprise myself."
Ben Lee may be surprised
by "hey
you. yes you.", but it's the rest of the planet
which has the biggest treat in store. |