BEN WALKER: From montrose sheds to festival stages.

Some artists grow up surrounded by studios. Ben Walker grew up surrounded by fields and grain sheds in Montrose, Scotland. With a £50 guitar from eBay, he started writing songs that felt more like survival than hobby. School was rough — the kind of place that tries to make you small — but music gave him space to be loud in his own way. What started as a quiet outlet on the farm has turned into a voice that’s cutting through far beyond his hometown.

Tiktok breakthrough.

Lockdown changed everything. Ben started posting stripped-back videos from the sheds on his family farm — just his voice, a guitar, and the space around him. The clips spread fast on TikTok, drawing in millions of views. What caught people wasn’t just the setting, but the weight in his songs — stories of heartbreak, grief, and self-doubt that felt real and unpolished.

HIS famous sound.

Ben’s music blends the grit and urgency of modern indie rock with the intimacy of acoustic songwriting. His tracks move easily between quiet, reflective moments and big, full-band energy that feels built for festival stages.

From local shows to playing festivals.

Since 2021, he’s gone from playing Glasgow clubs to selling out his own headlines, opening for The View, and hitting festivals like TRNSMT and Y Not. 2025 is already lined up with an English tour — bigger venues, bigger crowds, bigger moments.

Why he’s one of the best upcoming scottish talent.

Ben Walker has built a career from the most unlikely starting point — turning small-town struggles and grain shed sessions into songs that resonate far beyond Montrose. His music works because it’s direct, honest, and rooted in real experience. He’s not just another name on the indie scene; he’s an artist shaping his own lane, and this is only the beginning.

must hear tracks.

  • Dice (2025)

  • Just A boy (2023)

  • Sixteen (2023)

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