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Ben's Brother new "Stuttering" video, free iTunes tracks

Ben's Brother new "Stuttering" video, free iTunes tracks
Ben's Brother's new fan-created "Stuttering" video on YouTube and free iTunes tracks

After hundreds of fan submissions, the final video for
Ben's Brother's "Stuttering - (Kiss Me Again)" is now up on YouTube and can be seen here:

The UK's Metro newspaper recently finished a competition in which fans could act out their inner rock star on camera for a chance to appear in the London-based band's new video, now you can see who made the cut! Stateside, the song has been getting television exposure since September as the soundtrack to Dentyne Ice's "Frog Kiss" commercial.

Following the massive response to the advertising campaign, Dentyne and Ben's Brother decided to further develop their relationship through an online campaign focused on
free downloads and a music quiz.

Just for hanging out on the site, Dentyne is offering up the tracks
"Stuttering" and another fan favorite, "Let Me Out", as free downloads via iTunes.

The quiz and free downloads are all part of a unique, multi-platform "widget," which functions on Facebook, MySpace and other social networking pages, giving fans the opportunity to share it with friends and even grab it for their own homepages. Fans can grab it here:

Ben's Brother Powered by Dentyne

Growing up in London, singer Jamie Hartman was known as Ben's brother - Ben being his cricket-star elder brother. But that all changed with the December 2007 release of Ben's Brother's full-length debut, Beta Male Fairytales. Jamie and his band mates -- Kiris Houston (keyboards/guitar), Dan McKinna (bass), Dave Hattee (drums) and Tim Vanderkuil (guitar) -- have received rave reviews for the album, which includes "Kiss Me Again" plus a dozen other equally irresistible compositions ranging from the old school soul of the anthemic "Rise" to gloriously vulnerable ballads such as "Let Me Out" (which was tapped for the Thanksgiving episode of the hit ABC series "Grey's Anatomy"). "Hartman...knows his way around a beautiful chord progression and an emotive lyric," said London's Sunday Times, going on to describe the band's songs as "immaculately rough-hewn."

Ben's Brother Official Website
MySpace.com - Bens Brother - London, UK - Acoustic / Pop - www.myspace.com/bensbrothermusic


BEN'S BROTHER - Bio

Perhaps it's only fitting that Jamie Hartman's London-based band, Ben's Brother, first
turned stateside heads in a television ad. Hartman was actually introduced to one of his
biggest influences in the same way. "There was a Levi's ad in the UK," he says. "That
was when I heard Sam Cooke for the first time."
So when the Ben's Brother song "Stuttering" provided the soundtrack for a
Dentyne Ice commercial, going on to sell 3,500 copies in its first week as a digital single,
in a way, it was just Hartman's earlier life being repeated. And digital single buyers have
one advantage Hartman didn't: "I had Sam Cooke
, The Man And His Music on LP," he
recalls, "but I wore it out and had to buy another copy."
As for the name, Jamie Hartman is, literally, the younger brother of Ben, a former
cricket star. The band's debut,
Beta Male Fairytales, reflects Jamie's wrestling with his
place as a middle son of three. But the band's name was less one that was chosen, and
more one that stuck.
"Ben moved down to South Africa to teach cricket for six months and took a CD
copy of my demos with him," Hartman says. "When he was down there he played this
CD for a few people and they asked for copies of it. So it ended up getting copied a lot
around Cape Town. They didn't know my name--he didn't even bother telling them. So
all they knew was that it was Ben's brother's band. I eventually met some of those
people, and they all knew me as Ben's brother. That had been the case through school,
anyway. If you're two or three years younger than your brother and you go to the same
school they all say, 'oh yeah, of course, I know Ben's brother.'"
At 16, overshadowed by his more athletic older brother, Hartman arrived at music
in search of an outlet, writing songs on the piano as soon as he began playing it. His first
performance was for a teenage crush. She wasn't impressed, but her friend was, and
Hartman soon began dating her as a result. "My voice was terrible and so was the song
but it really didn't matter," he recalls. "It felt good."
As a young adult, Hartman tried to get away from music, working a series of
jobs--including one in a bank--but nearly drank himself to death from sheer boredom.
So he formed bands, and even worked as a Notting Hill street performer for extra cash,
playing covers of Oasis and other popular artists on Portobello Road while learning to
project his unmistakably raspy voice. "I found I could make the equivalent of 50 to 60
pounds an hour doing that for a couple of hours. That was my main means of earning a
living for a while."
Later, Hartman fell in with a group of fellow songwriters and began improving his
craft while learning to write with others. "It was a real eye-opener for me. I realized how
many talented people there are, and how many different types of music and how many
great writing styles there are, and how much you can get from listening. I got my first
couple of cuts immediately from that. So I just thought, 'well, if I can't be an artist right
now, I can at least write for other people.'"
Eventually Hartman ended up in New York, writing advertising jingles and songs
while recording demos during studio downtime. "New York taught me so much," he
says. "It was so much more make-or-break than anything I'd ever experienced before.
You can be broke in London and find your way through. But in New York, if you're not
earning a living people just kick you out and say, 'thank you very much.' I had to learn
quickly."
As an artist, Hartman's journey is as old as the music industry, dotted with former
behind-the-scenes hit songwriters--everyone from Isaac Hayes to Willie Nelson--
who've stepped up to become artists. Like Hayes in Memphis and Nelson in Nashville,
Hartman labored for years, in both London and New York, writing songs for others--
everyone from Spice Girl Emma Bunton to Natalie Imbruglia.
Ironically, it was his biggest songwriting success, penning the #3 UK single "All
Time Love" for Will Young, that convinced him to put himself in the spotlight. "I was
very proud of it," he recalls. "However, I knew, as soon as I heard it on the radio, that it
wasn't enough for me to be a writer. Yeah, it's great, but it's not going to give me the
ultimate satisfaction of standing on stage with my band performing."
So Hartman assembled a band with extraordinary chemistry, beginning with
multi-instrumentalist Kiris Houston, with whom he performed low-key duo shows, and
began taking his soulful anthems to the masses. "I've played in a lot of bands over the
years," Houston says. "And you could immediately tell when we all started playing
together it was a really rare thing, where you play the first song the first time and it
sounds great."
The sound of
Beta Male Fairytales has already turned heads in the UK, with
single "Let Me Out" landing in rotation at BBC Radio Two and with the band winning
favorable notices in
Q, The Sunday Times and the Daily Mail, which called the band "The
Next Big Thing."
Hartman's songs often take their cues from trials or setbacks. "Bad Dream" is
about his mother's survival of a near-fatal car wreck, while "Carry On" is inspired by the
July 7, 2005 terrorist bombings of London Underground trains. But while deeply
personal, Hartman's songs nonetheless touch a universally uplifting chord. "It's a hopeful
album as opposed to a depressing album," he observes. "It's about getting through it, as
opposed to always feeling trapped."
Given Hartman's influences--from old-school jazz and soul like Billie Holiday,
Sam Cooke and Otis Redding, to the unavoidable British pop of The Beatles on through
to Radiohead--and with his Rod Stewart-esque voice, Ben's Brother sounds like nothing
else. Hartman draws a blank when asked if there's a "movement" he claims membership
in. "I wasn't listening to anybody else and going, 'that's great, why don't we do that?'"
It's undoubtedly this unique sound that has elicited such a response to the band's
TV ad-enabled U.S. debut. And Hartman says that's fine with him: "I don't really care
how the breakthrough comes. Being in my thirties, I know how hard it is to break through
in any way these days, and find a medium for people to hear your stuff."
And who knows, perhaps the next great artist is now discovering Ben's Brother in
the same way that Jamie Hartman once discovered Sam Cooke.


Ben's Brother is Hartman, Kiris Houston (keyboards/guitar), Dan McKinna
(bass), Dave Hattee (drums) and Tim Vanderkuil (guitar).


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