Some artists chase a sound their whole lives. Benzo Blue already knew hers by the time she was ten, sitting through long sermons next to her grandmother, waiting for the choir to start. She hated the church part. She loved the singing. Her new single, “Hey There,” released June 19, 2026, is what that decades-long pull finally sounds like.
The track is the clearest statement yet of what she’s building. It leans on emotional weight and a vocal performance that sits right in the pocket with the guitar work behind it. There’s nothing overcooked about it. The voice carries the song, and the song knows it. For a first single to introduce an artist, “Hey There” does the job most don’t, it tells you exactly who she is in one listen.
What she is, by her own description, is the start of something she calls R&B Country. It’s exactly what it sounds like: the emotional pull of rhythm and blues wrapped around the storytelling backbone of country music. That combination isn’t a marketing angle for her. It’s how she actually hears music, and “Hey There” is the first full proof of concept. She wants listeners to find a piece of their own story in the work, and the song is built for that kind of connection rather than for background noise.
You can hear who she’s been listening to. Brandy sits at the top, the artist she calls the “Vocal Bible” for her control, her layered background harmonies, and the emotion she packs into a delivery. Michael Jackson is there too, the performer’s performer. And Al Green, for that falsetto and the way he folded gospel into soul. Those three say a lot about where her sound comes from and why “Hey There” lands the way it does.
The road here wasn’t direct. After high school choir and band, where she picked up music theory and started training her voice, she made the practical call most people make. She enrolled in pharmacy school and earned her doctorate, telling herself music was a hobby and healthcare was the real plan. For a while that held. Then 2019 hit, and something felt off. She describes a stretch of feeling empty, trying to fill the gap with film and screenwriting before deciding by 2022 that entertainment in that form wasn’t for her. What pulled her back was a nostalgic flash of those church mornings with her grandmother, and the realization that the thing she’d been missing was the thing she’d loved since she was a kid. She started writing and singing seriously in late 2022 and relearned music theory from the ground up.

“Hey There” isn’t a one-off. A single called “Running” is set for July 17, a song about choosing self-respect over heartbreak and walking away from the version of yourself that settled for less. Another single follows in August, and by September she’s planning an EP titled Majestic Drive. The artist who introduced herself with “Hey There” clearly has more to say, and she’s not waiting around to say it.
You can hear “Hey There” across all platforms here, and follow what she’s building on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.






























