Owl City

born on 5/7/1986 in Owatonna, Minnesota, United States

Alias Adam Young

Adam Young

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Adam Randal Young (born July 5, 1986) is an American singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, best known for creating the electronica project Owl City.

Owl City, created in 2007, has enjoyed significant popularity since its inception. Posting songs to MySpace and iTunes, Young sold 2,000 tracks per week. Young, under Owl City, independently released Of June in 2007 and Maybe I'm Dreaming in 2008. In 2009, Young gained mainstream popularity after signing a deal with the record company Universal Republic and releasing the quadruple-platinum[1] song "Fireflies", from the album Ocean Eyes.

Young began his musical career by creating small musical projects, promoted by himself on PureVolume and MySpace. In 2002 Young co-founded Windsor Airlift with Anthony and Andy Johnson, which has released five studio albums to date.

Young also has other musical projects including Port Blue and Sky Sailing. He is also a co-founder of Swimming With Dolphins. Young is currently working on a monthly orchestral composition project called Adam Young Scores.

Career

2002–07: Early career

Throughout Young's early career, he created a number of small musical projects.

Windsor Airlift

In late 2002, Adam Young, with his childhood friends Anthony and Andy Johnson, founded the punk-pop band, Windsor Airlift. The band released The Basement EP in April 2003 and subsequently began performing at several local shows. Over the next several years, the band released multiple albums and extended plays as well as changed their genre from punk-pop to math rock, and ultimately to ambient post-rock which they are most known for. Though he is still technically in the band, Young ultimately became inactive in the group's life after the 2009 success of Owl City's Ocean Eyes. This, along with Owl City and Port Blue, is one of Young's biggest musical projects to date.

The Atlantic (Glacier Island)

In 2004, Andy Johnson, Anthony Johnson, and Adam Young created an electronic project called The Atlantic.[2][3] The group released a few songs before the band went dormant for a number of years.

In 2010, Andy and Anthony Johnson then reformed the project under the name Glacier Island. Since then, the group has released two studio albums entitled From Pelican Shores (2010)[4] and The Campfire Lullabies (2012).[5][6][7] Young has not been involved with the project since its resurrection and reform.

Other projects

In 2004, Young released a one-song electronic screamo project entitled Novel.[8][9]

In 2005, Young fronted a number of projects: He released a three-song project entitled Aquarium.[10] Like Novel, the project's genre was electronic screamo. Young was also the drummer in a heavy screamo band called Isle.[11][12] Fellow touring member and friend Michael DeMars (Windsor Airlift) was also in the band. In the same year, Adam Young, Andy Johnson, and Anthony Johnson created a three-song project entitled Charlton Heston and the Blast Beats.[13] The project's sound was humorous as it was a merging of a recording of Charlton Heston yelling (from the original Planet of the Apes film) with the band while pounding on a drum set. Also, Young created a three-song project entitled Can You Smell What The Rock Is Cooking?[14] The project's genre was experimental funk music. The project made use of sound bites from films and sport newscasters.

Young created many other projects in 2005 (some of which Andy and Anthony Johnson were involved in) including American Jesus,[15] Apes With Guns,[16] Beat Master Deluxe,[17] Blue Dallas,[18] Half Nelson Flying Corkscrew Clothesline,[19] Join The Dark Side, You Knob (a Star Wars inspired project),[20] Slam Dance,[21] Slingshot Powerbomb,[22] Spinning Skull Smash,[23] The Wellington Giggle-Bomb Experience,[24] Tombstone Piledriver,[25] and Understory.[26]

Among the genres of the projects, many were garage rock and instrumental. A few projects were experimental, funk, comedic, and variations of screamo.

In 2006, Adam Young, Andy Johnson, and Anthony Johnson started numerous small projects, including a band called Basketball.[27] The band's genre was pseudo rap and made use of the normal rag talk that goes along with the sport of basketball. The project released a couple "promotional"/music videos on Windsor Airlift's YouTube channel.[28][29][30] Young was in a wheelchair for part of the project's life, possibly from injury.

Other projects Young and the Johnsons also created included: a one-song project called Chester McWiggins and the Kowboy Kidz,[31] which poked fun at stereotyped yokels and ran on puns about guns, county fairs, and taking care of horses; El Uno Clarence, The One Clarence,[32] whose genre was heavy rock with lots of drums; Keehar[33][34] whose genre was instrumental rock and whose name came from the black-headed gull from Watership Down; Riders of Rohan,[35] whose genre was experimental and whose name was based off the Riders of Rohan in The Lord of the Rings.

Seagull Orchestra

In 2006, Adam Young created a project called Seagull Orchestra.[36] The project was mostly instrumental, however one song, entitled "Sailboats", had vocals. The song was later re-written and re-recorded for Sky Sailing's An Airplane Carried Me to Bed.

Other

Young created a few other projects in 2006 including Brother Reed, You Have Messed Up My Afro,[37] Nuclear Suplex,[38] and The Sports.[39]

The genres of the projects were garage rock, instrumental, experimental, funk, and comedic.

2007 saw Young and the Johnsons creating the ambient instrumental project, Dolphin Park.[40] The project released four songs which were later converted and re-recorded into Windsor Airlift's 2008 EP, Beneath The Crystal Waves. Windsor Airlift's recurring single, "The Theme for Moonglow", also originated from the project. Young created a project entitled Insect Airport in the same year.[41] The project's genre was electronic instrumental with drums. The project is very similar to Port Blue. Young also created a two-song project called The Grizzly.[42] The project's genre was experimental. It consisted of Young synthesizing his voice deeply to sound like a "grizzly bear" who was obsessed with food.

2007–present: Owl City

Young began creating music in his parents' basement while suffering from insomnia.[43] Working alone, Young created a new project in 2007 under the name Owl City. Posting his songs to MySpace and iTunes, Young sold about 2,000 tracks a week[44] and quickly developed a MySpace following.

Young's first musical release under Owl City, Of June, debuted on April 21, 2007. The extended play reached No. 15 on the US Dance/Electronic Albums chart. It has seven tracks, and one, "Hello Seattle", was re-released with Ocean Eyes.

Young's first full-length album, Maybe I'm Dreaming, was released on December 16, 2008, and reached No. 13 on the US Electronic Albums chart.

In 2009, Young signed a deal with the record company Universal Republic. Under this new label, Young released his second full-length album Ocean Eyes and re-released his two previous albums. A single on the album, "Fireflies", sold 650,000 copies in its first week and was the iTunes Single of the Week. It reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Ocean Eyes reached the top ten in the US album charts and topped the US rock and electronic charts. In February 2010, iTunes released their list of highest-selling songs since 2003 with "Fireflies" listed at No. 24.[45]

After the success of Ocean Eyes, Young began touring internationally. The touring band consisted of Young, Breanne Düren, Matthew Decker, Laura Musten, and Hannah Schroeder. A deluxe version of Ocean Eyes was released on January 26, 2010.

Young released his third album, All Things Bright and Beautiful, on June 14, 2011. The album reached No. 1 on the iTunes Top 10 Electronic Albums in both the US and Canada and received an average of 4.5 stars from customers. The album includes three singles, "Deer in the Headlights", "Alligator Sky", and "Galaxies". The album has[46] a track only available in Japan and the UK, "Shy Violet".

Young stated on his blog in January 2012 that his next album would have the artists JR Rotem, Dr. Luke, Stargate, Brian Kennedy and Emily Wright on board for writing and producing. On May 15, 2012, Owl City released a four-song EP entitled Shooting Star, and later announced that the new album would drop on August 14, which was later changed to August 21. In late May, Young made a four-quadrant revealing cover art event, revealing each of the four squares when 5,000, 10,000, 15,000, and finally 20,000 people share on Facebook or Twitter. On May 29, 2012, the official cover art was revealed. Originally referenced on Twitter as #OCTMS, the OC part being Owl City, TMS was announced as The Midsummer Station. The first single off the album was "Good Time" (featuring Carly Rae Jepsen), the second being "Shooting Star". "Good Time" was released on June 26 on iTunes, and posted to Owl City's SoundCloud account on June 22.

In April 2014, Young released the single "Beautiful Times" featuring Lindsey Stirling. Later, Young revealed that he would release "a series of EPs" in 2014 rather than an album.

On June 5, the first EP was announced as Ultraviolet (EP). It featured Beautiful Times as the lead single. Quickly afterwards, "Wolf Bite" was released as another single. On June 27, Ultraviolet was released. "This Isn't The End", the third song on the EP, later appeared on Mobile Orchestra, along with "Up All Night" on the Japanese edition.

In September 2014, Young announced via YouTube that two new Owl City songs entitled "Tokyo" and "You're Not Alone" would be released. On October 10, both were for sale via digital retailers.

In April 2015, Young announced he would be releasing a new album via his SoundCloud account with a track titled "2015". The song purposely shared identical traits to those of Garden Party by Ricky Nelson.

On May 5, a new Owl City song called "Verge" was previewed on ESPN's "Draft Academy". Verge featured guest vocals from American pop artist Aloe Blacc. The song was later released on May 15, and was announced as the first single on Young's next Owl City album, Mobile Orchestra.

On June 4, "My Everything" was revealed as the next single from the album. The next day, the song was officially released along with a music video.

On June 19, "Unbelievable" was released along with an animated music video. This track featured vocals from the 90s band Hanson.

On July 10, Mobile Orchestra was released.

A few months later, on September 11, Verge: The Remixes was released. It featured remixes from Low Steppa, Tom Swoon, and Transcode.

Port Blue

Port Blue is Young's platform for experimental instrumental, ambient and post-rock productions. Under this name Young has released one album, The Airship (2007), and one EP, The Albatross (2008). Besides Owl City, Port Blue is Young's main project.[47]

A great deal of his most successful Port Blue material still remain officially unreleased. Among these the early album How I Became a Sailor, which includes the popular tracks "Seagulls", "Setting Sail", "On Marlin Isle" and "Asleep in The Yacht". Furthermore, the unreleased 2006 Port Blue album Arctic that holds tracks such as "Snow Fox on Glacier Coast", "Glider" and "Deep Iceberg". In 2006 the 'Arctic' album was for a while available via the official Port Blue Myspace account. The - between 2004 and 2005 produced - EP The Pacific— includes prominent tracks "Base Jumping", "Pond Skater" and "Blue Marlin". The Pacific EP remains unreleased to a broader audience but since 2013 it is now publicly available via the official Port blue Soundcloud.

Commenting on the Port Blue project, Young said:

'Port Blue' is music that can be heard playing in elevators, hotel lobbies, airports, museums and restaurants inside my head. It is the soundtrack to my dreams. If I wrote music for movies, this is what my film scores would sound like. Much of the aesthetic of Port Blue is not what lies in the recordings but rather what is extracted from them...Dreamscapes. No vocals.

In my opinion, there is a huge lack of imaginative, unconventional music being created by artists today and what little there is, goes widely unappreciated by the masses. 'Port Blue' is my attempt at re-creating the music I want to hear and the emotions I want to feel.

I hope you enjoy my art as much as I enjoyed creating it. If by chance you ever feel as though you've come to know these songs, please consider yourself a friend because in a manner of speaking, you know me. This music is my heart and soul. This is who I am. (Adam R. Young, 2006)

I write a lot of ambient music in a solo project by the name of Port Blue which is largely inspired by bands like Unwed Sailor, Boards of Canada and Hammock. I love the idea of creating wordless abstract music without telling a listener specifically what to think or how to feel. It feels limitless because you can go anywhere, do anything or be anyone in your mind. You can let your imagination go and there’s no telling where it might take you. I find my escape in instrumental soundscapes and I definitely plan on writing and releasing more records under Port Blue. It’s very dreamy stuff.[48]

On June 1, 2011, Young announced via Twitter that he was working on a new Port Blue song.[49]

June 2012 Young uploaded three new Port Blue productions to his official Tumblr account.

On March 7, 2013, the unreleased Port Blue EP The Pacific,a five-track EP, produced back in 2004–2005, was uploaded to the official Port Blue Soundcloud account.[50]

Sky Sailing

Sky Sailing was started as Young's first solo project in 2007.[51] It is largely acoustic synthpop, recorded on piano, drum kit, and acoustic guitar. One album was released by the project, An Airplane Carried Me to Bed (on the Universal Republic Records label) on July 13, 2010. The album features some of the early recordings of Adam Young, before he toured as Owl City. It was made available through iTunes and physical CD release.[52]

For the project, Young donned a pilot's mask.[53][54][55] It has become the trademark look for Sky Sailing. Young also donned it during his time with Swimming With Dolphins.

Young described the collection of songs on his website:

Sky Sailing releases

Studio albums
  • An Airplane Carried Me to Bed (2010)
Singles
  • Flowers of the Field (2010)

Swimming With Dolphins

In 2008, Austin Tofte and Adam Young started the electronica band Swimming With Dolphins.[56][57][58][59] The name of the band was derived, according to Tofte, from "some old Jacques Cousteau documentaries from the 80s".[60] Though Young was never the front man or lead singer, he performed synths and programming for the act. He also served as the producer of the group.

For the act, Tofte and Young created trademark outfits. Tofte took on the appearance of a submariner wearing a classic scuba suit and Young donned a pilot's mask (which would later become Sky Sailing's trademark look).[61]

The band made its debut with the release of their 2008 EP, Ambient Blue.[62][63][64] In addition to the main release, the band also put out a cover version of Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" as B-sides single to the EP.[65] The song "Silhouettes", off the release, featured Breanne Düren, who then proceeded to join Owl City's live band shortly after being introduced to Young through Tofte.[66] Later that same year, Tofte, along with Düren, provided Young with backing vocals for a few songs on his debut Owl City album, Maybe I'm Dreaming.

Young departed the band in late 2008 as Owl City's popularity began to increase. Alone, Tofte signed Swimming With Dolphins on to Tooth & Nail Records in mid-2010.[61][67] About a year later, Tofte released Swimming With Dolphin's first full-length album Water Colours under Tooth & Nail in 2011.[68][69][70] On August 5, 2011, Swimming With Dolphins uploaded the official music video for the first single off the record, "Sleep To Dream", via YouTube.[71]

After Young's departure, Tofte was joined by Sarah Beintker and Torrie James as part of his live band.[72] Beinker contributed her vocals to the songs "Holiday" and "Sleep To Dream" off Water Colours. The release also featured the artists Sunsun and Mod Sun (Derek Smith, formerly of Four Letter Lie).

Since 2011, Austin Tofte has released a few singles independently under Swimming With Dolphins and had a successful kickstarter to fund the project's upcoming album, Catharsis.[73][74][75][76] In September 2013, Tofte did an interview with Chris Herlihy's weekly syndicated radio show and talked about the release.[77] Also in September, Swimming With Dolphins released a preview of the new album in the form of a single instrumental track, entitled "Tromsø", via SoundCloud.[78] Swimming With Dolphins also posted a video for "Tromsø" via Vimeo around the same time.[79] The album is expected sometime generally within 2014, as Tofte has not set a release date of yet.[80] According to Tofte, the album is very near completion.[81] On August 21, Tofte stated that the track listing for the album would be revealed shortly.[82] On August 29, Tofte released the raw rough draft of the track listing for the album as well as the cover art for a single entitled "Summer Skin", which is to be on the album.[83][84][85] On September 23, "Summer Skin" was released to Swimming With Dolphins' SoundCloud.[86] On December 18, Tofte announced that a big update on Catharsis was to be released soon.[87] On May 1, 2015, Tofte revaled the album art for Catharsis as well as its release date of August 8, 2015.[88]

Besides Swimming With Dolphins, Tofte was also a member of Owl City's live touring band in 2008.

Adam Young Scores

On December 18, 2015, Adam Young revealed that he would begin a new project, 'Adam Young Scores'.[89] The project involves composing and recording a score based on a different subject every month.

Setting out his ambitions for the project, Young said:

"Starting February 1, for as long as I feel moved to do so, I will release a conceptual “film score” each month based on my interpretation of stories that mean something to me."

[90]

Writing on his blog, Young explained the new direction for his music:

"I wanted to be a composer since I was 16 years old. When I first discovered film music and began to explore classical music and the universe it occupies, I was hooked. My friends didn’t get it, it wasn’t cool to listen to orchestral music, but I didn’t care. It was the first thing that made sense to me. At long last, I’m finally at a place in my life where I have time to work on the really important things I’ve wanted to do for over a decade."

[91]

On February 1, 2016, Young released his first orchestral album "Apollo 11". Inspired by the Apollo 11 moon landing, Young described the manned lunar mission as a historical event I wish I could've witnessed more than any other and that the album was his interpretation of the events of July 1969.[92] Young shared via Twitter that he was already working on his next score, set for release in March 2016.[93]

Adam Young Scores releases

Studio albums
  • Apollo 11 (February 1, 2016)
  • RMS Titanic (March 1, 2016)

Collaborations and other work

Young has provided vocals for different artists/producers and their projects,
including:

  • Chicane, Giants – "Middledistancerunner" (2010)
  • Armin van Buuren, Mirage – "Youtopia" (2010)
  • He Is We, Skip to the Good Part – "All About Us" (2011)
  • tobyMac, Christmas in Diverse City – "The First Noel" (2011)
  • Paul van Dyk, Evolution – "Eternity" (2012)
  • Schiller, Sonne – "Alive" (2012)
  • Carly Rae Jepsen, Kiss – "Good Time" (2012)
  • Lights, Siberia Acoustic – "Cactus in the Valley" (2013)
  • Relient K, Collapsible Lung – "That's My Jam" (2013)
  • Ørjan Nilsen, No Saint Out of Me – "In the Air" (2013)

He has also produced music for other artists, including:

  • Relient K, Forget and Not Slow Down (Amazon exclusive track) – "Terminals" (2009)
  • Jars of Clay, The Shelter (2010)

He has also written songs for other artists, including:

  • Abraham Mateo, AM – "Kill the Lights" (2013)
  • Zedd, True Colors - "Straight Into the Fire" (2015)

Young has remixed several songs by different artists (usually subtitled "Adam Young Remix"), including:

  • Lights, non-album release – "Saviour" (2010)
  • John Mayer, non-album release – "Half of My Heart" (2011)
  • Something Corporate, Played in Space: The Best of Something Corporate – "I Woke Up in a Car" (2010)
  • Breanne Düren, non-album release – "Daydreams (Owl City Remix)" (2011)
  • Switchfoot, Vice Re-Verses – "Blinding Light" (2012)
  • Fort Minor, non-album release – "Where'd You Go" (2012)[94]
  • Carly Rae Jepsen & Owl City, Good Times (Remixes) EP – "Good Time" (2012)

Personal life

Young resides in his hometown, Owatonna, Minnesota, where he writes and programs all his music. He is an only child, son to Randal and Joan Young.[95] He has often referred to himself as being deeply shy and socially introverted.[96] Young has said that he enjoys photography and considers himself to be an amateur photographer.[97] He identifies himself as a Christian, and writes about his faith on his blog and through his music.[98]

"Lonely Lullaby" is a tribute to Ann Marie Monson, a girl Young had dated.[99][100]

Young was an avid skateboarder in his childhood[101][102] and continues to do it presently in his spare time.[103][104][105][106]

Young's favorite book is Watership Down by Richard Adams.[107][108] His favorite television program is Kenan & Kel.[107]

In high school, Adam Young's favorite film was Heavyweights. His song "Gimme Burgers" from his 2005 side-project Can You Smell What The Rock Is Cooking?, is a tribute to the film.[109] Snippets of the film's audio are also played in the background of multiple songs by Young's project: El Uno Clarence, The One Clarence.[32]

Taylor Swift

On Valentine's Day of 2011, Adam Young published a post via his Tumblr blog in which he addressed the country pop singer Taylor Swift.[110][111][112][113] According to Young, the song "Enchanted" from Swift's 2010 Speak Now album was addressed to him. Flattered, Young composed a cover version of the song with some few minor altering of lyrics which he proceeded to send to her on Valentine's Day along with a note.[114]

In 2012, Young stated in an interview that Swift never replied to his message.[115] Months later, Young removed the cover from his website, and in turn, caused it to be no longer available officially.

The Adventures of Flames Pond

Through 2001-2003, Adam Young, and his childhood friends Andy and Anthony Johnson, created an amateur homemade film entitled The Adventures of Flames Pond (the title being a pun and reference to James Bond). The film was filmed in pieces over a period of a few years. The Adventures of Flames Pond was then released in segments on Windsor Airlift's official YouTube channel throughout late 2011 and 2012,[116][117][118][119][120] and then, in its entirety, on October 1, 2013[121](due to the success of Windsor Airlift's kickstarter for their album Music[122]). Besides the actual film, two small videos entitled "Flames Pond's Theme Song" and "The Fuzzy Guy's Theme Song" were released as well.[123][124]

Cast

  • Flames Pond – Adam Young
  • The Fuzzy Guy – Tony Johnson
  • Henchmen – Tony Johnson
  • Kid #1 – Phil Hammitt
  • Kid #2 – Andy Johnson

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External links

This page was last modified 03.03.2016 20:01:36

This article uses material from the article Adam Young from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.