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“They have been super supportive of me and my career,” she says. “There is something to be said for putting your heart and soul into your writing and getting it down in ink.”īenami wishes the revamped season of Idol all the best. “After Idol, I was so overwhelmed and didn’t get a chance to write back to everybody, and it’s a bummer because I love to write on notebooks and papers,” she said. STORY: The New ‘American Idol’: A Cheeseburger, a Coke and a Smile (And Shut the F- Up)
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Among the goodies offered is Benami’s very first Martin guitar, official Reverie tote bags and a Skype guitar lesson with the singer, who will teach a fan how to play her song, “Gasoline.” Plus, another nice touch: written lyrics provided by Benami herself. “They rescue dogs from the shelter and train them to assist disabled veterans,” she says.īenami is offering exclusives for fans donating to her campaign, which is 23 percent funded as of Jan. Benami’s passion for animals and her love of the show, Lucky Dog, hosted by Brandon McMillan, lead her to choose the star’s charity, the Argus Service Dogs Foundation, as the benefactor of her campaign. After a project reaches its goal, 10 percent of the profits go to a selected charity. She chose to go with Pledge Music for several reasons. We have the record pretty much done, but the marketing and PR…that’s really expensive.” It came down to the point where I had to. “I never wanted to ask for help, so it was really difficult for me.
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“I was so terrified of doing a crowdfunding campaign,” she says. “We have two ballads on the record, but the rest is upbeat.”īenami already paid for the album’s production costs out of her own pocket, but the startup marketing costs alone for a new album run up to at least $20,000. While she says the song, “Lost at Sea,” is one of the most “emotional and sensitive” songs on the album (“It hurt to write,” she says) she promises that the album is also optimistic. “It’s me fighting with myself,” she says of the clip. Fans got to see her star in the Theory of a Deadman video, “Hurricane,” last year, but in the video for “Trouble,” directed by Nick Militello and produced by Jordan Finnegan, she shows the duality in her nature by starring alongside…herself. STORY: Candice Glover Talks Finally Releasing ‘Music Speaks’ Debut Albumīenami is also excited to show off her acting chops. He was a dog lover and had a beautiful daughter and family, and is serious about music.” She is still a puppy, and it was nice to be able to bring my dog to the studio every day. I have my rescue dog, who is super great and well behaved. “Plus, he allowed dogs in his studio, and that was really important. “That was exactly the lane I wanted to go,” she says. One particular song, “Trouble,” sealed the deal. She said she chose Mohler as a producer particularly because he understood exactly the kind of record she wanted to make. “I wanted to have a little bit more darkness in this, and where I felt like where I was at - I was in a really dark place and I had to sort some things out, and I feel like I really have.” “My writing comes from a deep, dark place - it’s like my alter ego,” she says. In a video on Benami’s Pledge Music page, Mohler explains people expecting to hear “some sort of blown-out pop record…is not going to get that with this record.”īenami said that statement is accurate. Just this week, Benami launched a crowdfunding campaign on Pledge Music to raise publicity money for her nearly completed record, Reverie. Produced by Mohler (The Calling, Kelly Clarkson, AWOLNATION), Reverie chronicles Benami’s musical journey since moving to Los Angeles. “It was kind of a self-acknowledgement thing,” she says. The message of the song, available now on iTunes, is that everyone needs time to figure themselves out. You got to prep, and you got to look good!”īenami said the song - co-written by Jordan Lawhead (who also wrote “Sweet Serendipity” with season nine winner Lee DeWyze ) and her producer, Billy Mohler - is the very first one she wrote after her season of Idol. “We all take a little bit of time, especially her when she’s getting ready to be on national television. “They are all just waiting for Jennifer to show up, and of course, she’s a woman,” laughs Benami.