Party Ben

Ben Gill, better known as Party Ben, is a DJ in San Francisco. He spent many years working at radio station Live 105 and producer of mashup music.

Party Ben
Birth nameBen Gill
Also known asDean Gray
OriginGothenburg, Nebraska
Genresmashup
Occupation(s)DJ
Associated actsTeam9
WebsiteParty Ben
Information Systems

Mashups

From June 2003 to December 30, 2005, Party Ben hosted the "Sixx Mixx" on Live 105, a weekly program of mashups. After the "Sixx Mixx" ended, he aired mixes on KJEE-FM in Santa Barbara and 91X in San Diego. Party Ben was a member of the "Untitled Friday Night Show" along with Madden and Miles the Intern on Live 105. In 2008 Party Ben started collaborating with Slacker Radio, an internet radio service, to mix and DJ their "New Sounds" station.

In late 2004, Party Ben created the "Boulevard of Broken Songs" mashup, featuring elements of Green Day's "Boulevard of Broken Dreams", Oasis' "Wonderwall", Travis' "Writing to Reach You", and Eminem's "Sing for the Moment", which itself sampled Aerosmith's "Dream On". A later version replaced the Eminem sample with the Aerosmith sample. The track became his most widely spread work and received worldwide attention, including that of Billie Joe Armstrong, who mentioned in an interview that he thought it was "cool".[1]

"Boulevard of Broken Songs" was the impetus for Party Ben to work with Team9 on the American Edit album under the alias AJ Music, where the two mashed up the songs from Green Day's American Idiot album. He later mashed "Every Breath You Take" by the Police and "Chasing Cars" by Snow Patrol to create "Every Car You Chase", which got the attention of Snow Patrol and appeared on 2011 romantic comedy Just Go with It.

Party Ben was one of the resident DJs at Bootie. One of his earliest works include a mashup of "Ohh La La" by the Wise Guys and "Summer Nights" from Grease.

Other work

Party Ben is a contributing writer for Mother Jones.[2]

References and notes

  1. Vaziri, Aidin (2005-05-03). "A DJ's 'mash-up' of sound-alike tunes by the likes of Green Day is getting mad airplay -- and no one's sued yet". Hearst Newspapers. Retrieved 2008-08-19.
  2. "Party Ben". Mother Jones.
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gollark: With end to end encryption, the server cannot see your messages, so you don't need to trust it for anything but metadata, which is admittedly somewhat bee.
gollark: You can compile the app yourself?
gollark: No, Signal is open source so you can check the client code.
gollark: And you can't verify that it's not sending off messages containing ccertain keywords or something.
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