After the New Jersey-born singer Charlie Puth went viral in the early 2010s, from uploading performance videos to YouTube – most notably a cover of Adele’s Someone Like You – his rise to fame was positively stratospheric. Thanks to the release of Puth’s duet with Meghan Trainor on the song Marvin Gaye, and a star-making feature spot on Wiz Khalifa’s See You Again, in 2015, the pop singer began tentatively prepping his debut album, Nine Track Mind, at Atlantic Studios, in Los Angeles, California. This is the story of how Charlie Puth set out on a one-man mission to bring retro-pop back from the brink.
Listen to ‘Nine Track Mind’ here.
The ambition: “I just wanted to make this soulful sound”
Having already built himself a strong social-media following thanks to his background as a YouTube personality and a live TV show appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Charlie Puth gave fans an early taste of what to expect from his debut album when he released his first single, Marvin Gaye, in February 2015. A duet with All About That Bass singer Meghan Trainor, this well-intentioned doo-wop-inspired soul-music throwback couldn’t have got Puth’s career off to a better start, peaking at No.1 in the UK and No.21 in the US.
“I listened to a lot of Marvin Gaye and Motown records,” Puth explained of the song’s retro inspiration. “When I was making my record, I just wanted to make this soulful sound.” With playful lyrics that tipped their hat to Gaye’s steamy 1973 hit Let’s Get It On as well as Ben E King’s Stand By Me, its shiny contemporary-pop production values indicated how, with Nine Track Mind, Puth would put a fresh spin on vintage soul sounds of the past.