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Ben Cosgrove

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Years active
  
2010–present

Website
  
bencosgrove.com


Name
  
Ben Cosgrove

Genres
  
Instrumental


Born
  
January 30, 1988 (age 36) (
1988-01-30
)

Occupation(s)
  
Composer, Multi-instrumentalist, Producer

Instruments
  
piano, keyboards, organ, accordion, upright bass, guitar, percussion, trumpet, trombone, euphonium, violin, field recordings

Role
  
Composer · bencosgrove.com

Albums
  
Field Studies, Yankee Division, Empty Rooms, Kaleidoscope, Solo Piano

Similar People
  
Carl Weingarten, Jennifer Zulli, Erik Scott, 9 Bach, Wall

Ben cosgrove montreal song


Ben Cosgrove (born 30 January 1988) is an American composer and multi-instrumentalist from Methuen, Massachusetts, whose work mainly explores the intersection of sound and place.

Contents

Background

Cosgrove is a 2010 graduate of Harvard College, where he was a student of Hans Tutschku, and his music usually features his own performances on piano, guitar, mandolin, banjo, violin, trumpet, trombone, upright bass, and dynamic percussion, among other instruments.

Cosgrove's first instrument was the piano. He began taking lessons as a young child when his family moved into a house whose owners had left behind an upright.

Releases

His 2011 album Yankee Division is based upon landscapes around Massachusetts and the rest of New England and takes its name from the Yankee Division Highway. His fourth album Field Studies deals with the wider American landscape, from the Sierra Nevada to the Everglades. It was released in January 2014."It’s instrumental music intended to suggest the experience of certain physical landscapes," he stated in an interview with Sound of Boston. The album's first track, “Lafayette” is written about Mount Lafayette in New Hampshire; the song is meant to recreate the moment in the hike when “you get above the clouds and have a unique kind of clarity.”

In 2014, he produced the album Ellery for singer-songwriter Max Garcia Conover, composing and performing arrangements to underpin Conover's melodies.

In 2015, Cosgrove released a live album, "Solo Piano," which features recordings collected from performances in thirteen different states. One reviewer called it "a humbling reminder of just how much emotion can be conveyed without a word on a solo piano that is expertly played."

His latest studio album, "Salt," a concept record comparing landscapes of flux and amiguity to personal tumult and emotional unrest, came out in the spring of 2017 and was described by Sound of Boston as "the human condition set to gorgeous, lush piano." In Junction Magazine, reviewer James Napoli wrote that the music represented "a poetry of tones and turns and motion and play that transcends the gross signification of everyday language[...] Cosgrove’s music is about landscape, about place, about space. It reacts and responds and reflects and resonates in space. It creates and transforms space. This album, specifically, is about instability, uncertainty, liminality, disorientation. It’s about the unhinged feeling that comes from losing the solid ground on which one has comfortably and complicitly stood for too long, about the realization that the safety provided by such footholds is always illusory, and about learning to live with the shifting, floating impermanence that was there (and not there), enveloping us all along. It’s a break-up album. And it’s also a salve."

Literature

Cosgrove also writes nonfiction essays that touch upon place, sound, and art. He began selling a short collection, Seven Essays, at performances and online in early 2016, and his writing has appeared in Orion, Northern Woodlands, and other magazines. He was a two-time artist in residence at the Signet Society and has also served as the artist-in-residence at Isle Royale National Park, Acadia National Park, and White Mountain National Forest.

References

Ben Cosgrove Wikipedia