Holden was dropped by Warner Bros Records in late 2017 just before he was due to record his fourth album. Holden co-wrote three songs on A Great Big World's sophomore album When The Morning Comes (which was released on 13 November 2015): All I Want Is Love, The Future's Right In Front Of Me and When The Morning Comes. The album also includes "Boys in the Street", which was written after he was asked by Everyone Is Gay, an organization that supports LGBTQ youth, to contribute to their 2014 fundraiser compilation, The Gayest Compilation Ever Made II. The single was released on 27 January 2015, and its video on 18 February 2015. It was preceded by the single "Hold On Tight", which debuted in the Triple A chart April 2015. He signed a record deal with Warner Brothers, and the new album, Chase the Sun, was released on 14 April 2015. In 2014, Holden worked with Greg Wells to record a new album. In 2014, "Home" was named one of the most performed pop songs of 2013 by ASCAP, and Holden also performed "Home" at the 2014 ASCAP Award Ceremony. The song quickly topped the US iTunes singles chart and became the best-selling song by an American Idol alum with over 5 million copies sold. The song was picked by American Idol mentor Jimmy Iovine for Phillip Phillips as his coronation song for the final of the show's season 11. In 2012, Holden became known in the United States for " Home", a song he co-wrote with Drew Pearson. He has also toured with A Great Big World, BOY, The Lone Bellow, and Jukebox the Ghost. The Dutch leg of his 2012 European tour sold out months in advance. Holden has toured throughout Europe and the United States as a headliner. Holden's single "I Need An Energy", which was released on 26 October 2012, is used on the soundtrack of the film, Chasing Mavericks. 36 on the Billboard Rock Charts, selling over 20,000 copies.
The song "The Lost Boy" was featured in an episode of the TV show Sons of Anarchy in 2012, where it was used as the musical backdrop to the funeral procession of Opie Winston. In December 2013, he released an official video for "The Lost Boy" after his album I Don't Believe You was re-released in the US when he became signed by Collective Sounds. Holden recorded it and released as a charity single on 20 December 2011, and it became a hit for him in the Netherlands, topping the Dutch iTunes singles chart on Christmas Day and reaching No.
It was inspired by the book What is the What by American writer Dave Eggers about Sudanese refugees. "The Lost Boy" was written by Holden in 2011 but was not included in the original release of the album, but added in its subsequent releases. The album was released in May 2011, and an acoustic version of I Don't Believe You was also released in March 2012, including 2 bonus tracks, one of which is "The Lost Boy". In late 2010 Holden started recording his second studio album with producer Tony Berg in Los Angeles. Greg Holden's second album, I Don't Believe You, was funded by fan donations using Kickstarter in 2010 which raised $30,000. Other shows include ABC's Make It Or Break It, One Tree Hill and the CW's Life Unexpected. His songs have been featured on several TV shows, for example a track from A Word in Edgeways, "Choking on the Concrete", was featured on an episode of the TV show Private Practice. A few months later, he toured as a support act for Ingrid Michaelson in the US after she heard him live in his previous visit to New York. In 2009, Holden moved to New York soon after the release of his first album. All of Holden's albums were initially either self-released or released on his own label, Falling Art Recordings. Greg Holden's debut album, A Word in Edgeways (2009, 9 tracks) was followed by the EP Sing for the City.
One series of videos was called the "Not My Living Room Tour" where he performed for his fans in their living rooms. Greg first gained a large following by posting live videos of himself performing his songs on YouTube. He won the Lancashire Evening Post Battle of the Bands in 2005. Holden wrote his first song called "You Go Left, I'll Go Right" when he was 18. He relocated to Los Angeles in July 2016.
He then moved to London in 2007 to attempt a career, before moving to New York City in 2009. Īfter graduating in 2005, he went to Brighton with his band. Holden started learning to play the guitar when he was 18. Mary's Catholic Technology College and the University of Central Lancashire. Patrick's Primary School, Heysham near Morecambe, then attended Leyland St. The family then moved to Lancashire in England, and he was raised in Morecambe and then Leyland. Holden was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, and lived in Methlick in Aberdeenshire until he was three.