Tim Foust
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Tim Foust

Dallas, Texas, United States | INDIE

Dallas, Texas, United States | INDIE
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"Nederland Singer, Foust to Open Nationwide Tour"

Brandon Janes
The Port Arthur News

NEDERLAND — Tim Foust, a Nederland High School graduate, was writing songs for a production company in Orange County, California when his boss, Joe Bilotta, discovered the voice on the demo tapes was as good as the artists he was writing for.

“He said, ‘you know you are pretty good at this you should really be an artist,” Foust told the News during an telephone interview Friday.

On September 19 the young country star will embark on a nationwide radio tour beginning in Nashville. Also, Foust has just released his debut solo album “The Best That I Could Do,” available on iTunes.

Foust did not begin his career singing country music. His musical beginnings were in choir and vocal groups, including Ned & Company, a touring singing group based in Nederland.

One could argue that Gay DeHart, a music teacher at Highland Park Elementary School in Nederland, discovered Foust when he was just six years old.

“She spotted my talent early on,” said Foust. “I learned how to be comfortable on stage at a very young age.”

Over a period of nine years during his adolescence, an important time in the development of an artist’s talent and voice, Central Middle School music teacher Rene Klose worked with Foust extensively on singing and piano.

“Rene was the biggest direct influence on my music,” said Foust. “She taught me both sight-reading and playing by ear.”

“She taught me the proper way to breath and sing without blowing my voice out.”

Originally a tenor, n his final years of high school a deep and powerful bass voice developed in Foust, a rare and valuable tool for the choirs and a capella singing groups that he was participating in.

Foust was a member of the All-Region choir all four years of high school and was first chair at the All-Area level his senior year.

A classically trained musician and vocalist, the interest in country music did not come until he started writing for country artists in California.

“I didn’t actually start out as a country artist,” said Foust, “but in writing I have found the ability to draw off my country sensibility.”

Foust’s debut solo country album “The Best That I Could Do”, is the first album available on iTunes recorded with a new high definition audio technology called “Max Sound,” designed for digital music players.

His music can be found on his website, www.timfoustmusic.com.
- Port Arthur News


"Life In The Foust Lane"

Let’s play a game.

I’ll tell you a little about Tim Foust, the aspiring heavy-voiced country singer in the photo accompanying this piece, and let’s see if you can guess what he did.

He’s been singing longer than he can remember. His mother said he would mimic melodies of songs even when he couldn’t form the words. He’d sing every chance he got through elementary, middle and high school.


Photo provided by Tim Foust
We are talking school plays, church, talent shows, pretty much anywhere they’d hand him a microphone.

So which of the following did Foust do once he graduated from Nederland High School:

A. Move to Nashville and gig around town until he found success as a songwriter.

B. Try to get into Juilliard or some other famous school of music.

C. Go to college to earn a pre-dental major.

If you guessed A or B, on most days you’d be right. But that’s not the path Foust took. The man who devoted nearly every free moment of his childhood to music decided he wanted to be a dentist.

“At the time the music industry seemed too fickle,” Foust said. “I wanted something stable, dependable and lucrative.”

So he spent a couple years in college preparing for that career. But it wasn’t too long before he realized he had “too much of the bug” and left school to pursue his dreams.

He said that ended up being a tough thing for him to tell his parents.

“I didn’t know how the family would respond to it,” Foust said. “Everybody in my family had always gone to college. It is just what you do. But everybody was really supportive.”

Ten years later he’s touring radio stations across America promoting his newest musical venture into country music.



Now 10 years seems like a long time between leaving college and pursuing that career but Foust has had quite the ride to this genre, starting with his first move after he left college.

Now like most aspiring musicians Foust relocated. He didn’t move to Austin, Nashville or even California, where he lives now, he moved to St. Paul, Minn.

What musical opportunities could be in St. Paul?

For Foust, it was singing bass in an acappella group called Blue Jupiter. He spent the next two years there performing with the group.

“Minnesota was culture and climate shock,” he said with a laugh. “I actually packed on some pounds because I didn’t go outside.”

Next he moved to Boston and toured with a group called Ball in the House.

“Between Minnesota and Boston, I have all the winter I will ever need for the rest of my life,” Foust said.

He toured with that group a few more years and then moved back to Nederland, where he split his time between cruise ship performances and substitute teaching for a few years.

One day he got a call from Joe Bilotta, the owner of Flying Pig Productions in Orange County, Calif.

“Some friends of mine had passed along my music to him and he told me he was forming a team of songwriters,” Foust said. “I flew out there and wrote with him some and he hired me on as a song writer which was a dream-job for me. At the time I thought my touring days were over.”

He said he mostly ended up writing country music, a genre he grew to love in high school.



“I got more interested when I got older,” Foust said. “I liked a lot of Clay Walker, Clint Black and Mark Chesnutt.”

He said he was raised on oldies and believes that’s what drew him to music with a lot of Harmony.

“My parents raised me on the Beach Boys and Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons and that kind of stuff,” Foust said. “My grandmother listened to a lot of Southern Gospel it has really present bass singers.”

While writing songs with the production company he began recording demo versions of the songs.

“The owner of the production company said ‘You know. You are pretty good at that. You should just be a country artist.’” Foust recalled.

Now he’s got an album, “The Best That I Could Do,” on iTunes and is out spreading his music one station at a time.

He said he’s hoping he’ll be able to swing his music back down to the golden triangle someday.
- Beaumont Enterprise


Discography

Tim's full debut album, The Best That I Could Do, is now available on iTunes and all other digital distribution outlets. His lead single, "You're So Yesterday" is now being played on country radio.

Tim's patriotic single, "The Land of the Free" is also available on iTunes and is very popular at USO events.

Photos

Bio

“The Best That I Could Do,” the latest solo album by country singer/songwriter Tim Foust, is already getting the stamp of approval from radio. His single “You're So Yesterday” is currently being played on over 200 stations across the US.

The Tim Foust story is unique. Tim left his pre-dental studies at Lamar University to follow his lifelong dream of being a performer. His travels took him “from the sweltering, heat and humidity of Beaumont, Texas to the subzero temperatures of St. Paul, Minnesota and eventually all the way around the world.” Tim now splits his time between temperate Orange County, California and Dallas, Texas.

Foust’s talent is unique. His 5-octave range commands attention at first listen. He has performed over 250 shows per year and shared the stage with icons such as Gladys Knight, Kenny Loggins, and Pat Benatar. Tim’s voice was also featured on the popular Cool Whip jingle for Kraft’s national television and radio campaigns.

The latest chapter in Tim’s career is also “unique”…and a source of humor in the Tim Foust camp. Some friends passed his music along to Joe Bilotta, owner of Flying Pig Productions. After an impromptu audition in a karaoke bar, Bilotta, music veteran and songwriter for the legendary Charlie Rich, signed Tim to a development deal on the spot.

“Tim’s talent is unmatched,” says Bilotta. “From his piano playing to his beautifully crafted lyrics and razor-sharp wit, the audience is locked in.”

Tim recorded his album “The Best That I Could Do” at Flying Pig Productions where he collaborated with Grammy-nominated songwriter, Randy Sharp (Dixie Chicks, Linda Reba McEntire, Linda Ronstadt). Tim is also the first artist to release an album in full Max Sound HD Audio on iTunes.

Tirelessly touring radio stations across America to promote his dynamic single is paying off in a big way. “You're So Yesterday” is rapidly climbing radio charts and is gaining momentum with sales.

In between radio tours, Tim and his band perform nationwide, recently headlining a series of USO concerts to benefit the US Armed Forces. And Tim has no plans to slow down. He is already writing for his follow-up album which he will be recording in 2012.