I Heart the Music: Your Online Source for Live Music Reviews and Interviews in Toronto!
Exploring what Toronto's music scene has to offer one beat at a time….-
May 27th, 2009Ambient, Experimental, instrumental

Bell Orchestre’s six members came together through various musical backgrounds – including via Arcade Fire, The Luyas and Snailhouse (to name a few) – but first and foremost through their love of music. Roughly translated to “beautiful orchestra,” Bell Orchestre are an instrumental band hailing from Montreal who are creating beautiful music. They’re known to retreat to the woods to make and write music together and to take their influences from not only different musical genres but everyday sights and sounds; these elements culminated in March with the proud release of their sophomore album, As Seen Through Windows. Their live show is both soothing and inspirational, allowing the music to speak for itself. iheartthemusic sat down and spoke with Sarah Neufeld (violin) and Mike Feuerstack (lap steel guitar) as they explained their origins, musical influences and how they are making a name for themselves without any words.
iheartthemusic: You’ve all come from such different backgrounds musically, how did this unit get together?Sarah: It sort of slowly but surely all came together. It started off a little bit smaller with Richie [bass/keyboard/percussion], Stef [drums/percussion] and I doing some stuff for dance.
Mike: Very gradually.
Sarah: Very gradually! It was just kind of object-based at first and then about five years ago we started playing shows and having a record as a band. That’s also when Mike got on board, who is a friend of Richie’s.
iheartthemusic: How do you approach composing music with six members?
Sarah: It is really collaborative.
Mike: It truly is. It’s hard for a lot of people to understand that.
Sarah: It’s very natural to us.
Mike: It’s very long though, but very natural. The biggest hurdle for us with writing is making time when we can all come together and work on stuff.
Sarah: It comes out of this organic process of living together and seeing what works and then crafting it from there.
iheartthemusic: Well you all must really get along then!

Mike: We do! We also know how to fight too. We are good that way.
iheartthemusic: I read in a previous interview that you are really inspired by your surroundings.
Sarah: Because we don’t write lyrics, the music tends to observe a little bit more from the physical space. However, it’s not like this song is really inspired by mountains so we think about mountains, it’s more like happenstance. We are drawn to writing in natural settings. Like Kav’s [trumpet/medodica] family has this beautiful place in Vermont and we spent a lot of the first album there and then we wrote a bit of this second record there as well. Friends of the family of Richie’s have this incredible house in the country as well, so we’ve spent a lot of time in the country doing “record retreats” and it’s also an effective way of getting manageable hours.
Mike: We can get together without distractions for days in a row and it’s really productive.
Sarah: And then it ends up evoking the surroundings, but maybe you wouldn’t notice if you weren’t there.
Mike: One of the fun things about it is watching the music respond differently when you listen to it in different surroundings. Even though our environment may have inspired us when we wrote the music, I think we would all hope that the environment of listening to the music would inspire the listener as well.
Sarah: Basically it is a sponge.
iheartthemusic: I love that! You guys recently released an album. Prior to that one it had been a couple of years since you released anything, do you notice any difference in sound or mood from the last album to this one?Sarah: The sound and the mood. [laughs] We recorded it mostly in one location in this studio in Chicago with John McEntire. His stuff has a trademark sound and that kind of combined with our aesthetic and also helped us push it further as well.
Mike: The combination of us doing what we wanted to do along with his common technique is what makes it fun for us. He does really clean stuff, but also really dry, precise detailed stuff.
Sarah: He just makes things sound really artful and he really did that for us. We wanted to experiment with a lot of percussion and he made all that come alive.
Mike: There is a lot of ambience in the recording, which again is not something that he usually works with.
iheartthemusic: You guys probably fed of each other.
Mike: That’s what was neat about the combination.
Sarah: We had this one time where Richie and I recorded in the hallway, not in the studio, with mics and were listening to all the traffic going by. We were able to work differently within that space.
Mike: That is a literal example of the environment affecting the music!

Sarah: Exactly.
iheartthemusic: Being an instrumental band, what is the crowd like at your shows?
Sarah: It really depends on the situation. When we are playing at a more artsy centre then it’s more of a classical crowd, but a lot of the times it is a combination of indie rock kids that have really open ears.
Mike: One of the exciting things about it is that it totally appeals to lots of different people. A wide variety of different musical backgrounds are attracted to it. Same with other languages, we can travel to other places and our lyrics aren’t an impediment because we don’t have any.
iheartthemusic: Yeah, I was watching your video blogs from your trip to the Baltics. It looked incredible!
Sarah: The response we got over there was amazing. People were really appreciative and really wanting to discuss a lot after; people really wanted to share what they had just experienced and tell their stories as well.
iheartthemusic: How did you end up there?
Sarah: This journalist, who actually does more political stuff, invited us there. She found us on the Internet through Arcade Fire. So she actually came to us for Arcade Fire and then spoke to Richie about Bell Orchestre and made some jab about us never coming to the Baltics and he was like, “well invite us, we’ll come”. She did and she made the whole thing happen on her own.
Mike: She isn’t even a promoter or booking agent.
Sarah: She works in radio so she knows a lot of people and the whole tour was set up more DIY then you can imagine. People just taking a week off work to make it happen. It was really beautiful.
iheartthemusic: From a performance perspective, what do you hope that people take away from your shows?Mike: A CD! [laughs]
Sarah: I would say getting fueled by a show. Coming away feeling energized and just inspired. I think any artist hopes for that.
Mike: Some affect beyond just aesthetically pleasing; something deeper and harder to describe.
Sarah: A lot of people don’t know what to expect when they come to our shows, so if they are new listeners, a lot of the times if they like it, they come away feeling really surprised and then inspired. They think this is not what you hear everyday and then there is a door that opens for them.
Mike: If we can open that door and they walk away and we can leave the door open for a little while, then we’ve done our job!
iheartthemusic: I have yet to see you guys play live, but am anxious to be able to see how it all comes together without vocals. Has it been tough to market yourself due to the fact that you are strictly instrumental?
Mike: We don’t really market it. You use the same tools, but it’s an art project and we are fond of it. If it finds an audience then we will be really happy. We use the tools that pop acts do, but we are also exploring the tools that the jazz and classical world implement. All styles of music have their avenues and we have some sort of legitimacy on all of them. So what we lack in one area we can make up for in another.
iheartthemusic: Was it a conscious choice to not have a vocalist?

Sarah: Yeah, I mean it just kind of organically came together that way. We got together and started to play music for theatre and dance and when we came together to chat about what kind of music we wanted to make, we spoke about how we were inspired by classical music, as much as electronic music. It definitely wasn’t supposed to be a rock band with a singer and it still isn’t!
photography provided by Kristin M.
Tags: Arcade Fire, bell orchestre, Kristin M, snailhouse, the luyas -

The members of Gentlemen Husbands are as lovely as their name suggests. Don’t be fooled by their country sound, these guys know how to rock! iheartthemusic caught up with Derrick Ballard (vocals/guitar), Ryan Hutcheson (guitar), Jed Atkinson (bass) and Dan Farrell (drums) after a wicked set at The Horseshoe Tavern, where they brought their small town flavour and big time sound to centre stage. Whatever qualms you have with country music, or the country/rock combo, set them aside and start picking up what they’re throwing down.
iheartthemusic: I understand that your favourite Toronto venue is The Horseshoe. Since we’re here, what is it about this place that you love?
Derek: The Horseshoe definitely is amazing. It’s got an awesome reputation and it’s got good turnouts and an amazing sound.
iheartthemusic: I read that when you guys first started you wanted to appeal to the CMT crowd.
Jed: I think it was a misunderstanding because I didn’t want to.
Ryan: Everyone else in the band did except for him [Jed].
iheartthemusic: So how did you find this particular sound?
Jed: It was sort of a huge learning curve for us. It took almost a year and a
half to get where we are now, mainly because it’s totally different to what we’re all used to playing.Ryan: We had a really slow, slow start. We had a bunch of back and forths until we finally got going. We’ve been playing shows for just over a year now and as of January 1st, we became a four-piece. So we had a fifth member for that whole time, his last show with us was New Year’s Eve.
iheartthemusic: That tends to happen in the music industry unfortunately. So this is your first venture as a four piece, how does it differ?
Dan: It’s substantially different. If you heard the country song, the slow one, that’s old. The last three songs we played were pretty new, so you can hear the evolution.iheartthemusic: Tell me a bit about this new three song EP you are working on.
Ryan: It’s not done yet. The songs up on our MySpace are from our six song EP that we have no more copies of. The three song are supposed to be finished now, but they’re not. Jason Martin, who did the new Cold War Kids album, is mixing it for us.
iheartthemusic: When can people expect to be able to get a copy?
Ryan: It was supposed to be mid-March, then it switched to mid-April, and now we’re saying mid-May. It’s done, but we’re just adding some finishing touches and getting it mixed.
iheartthemusic: Can I ask about your band name?
Derek: It was just two words at first; I just kinda thought “gentlemen”, “husbands”. These guys didn’t really care much about names and I didn’t really care much. They all kinda sound stupid.
Jed: I think it was the punchline to a really racy joke Derek told us and we decided to go with that. It later wound up that it kinda suited Derek’s lifestyle.
Dan: It means something too.
Derek: Yeah I Googled it one time, and I’ve never been able to find this again, but it said it meant a farm father or a family man.
Ryan: Gentleman Husbandry.
Derek: Yeah, it’s like a lifestyle.
iheartthemusic: So not only does your name tell a story, but so do your songs. What’s the writing process like?
Ryan: He [Derek] used to be the main songwriter and we would just
take what he wrote and turn it into whole band songs and structure them together. We quickly figured out that that didn’t work very well, so now we write how we used to write.Dan: It’s very collaborative.
Jed: Derek is the sole lyricist though.
iheartthemusic: Where did you get “Tapanga” from?
Jed: “Tapanga” is about a collection of things, but the title is from Boy Meets World.
iheartthemusic: I had hoped it was a shout out to the show! Now, on your blog there was a very sincere attempt, by a former member, to encourage fans to become more interactive and get in touch with you guys. What was the response like from that and do you still encourage interaction with fans?
Ryan: There was definitely a response, mostly younger people. We are always surprised by how many teenagers like us. We don’t really play pop punk or the stuff that 14-year-old girls really like. We did recently have a little onslaught of young girls come up and get free shirts and everything.Dan: Yeah, that was right next door to my house.
iheartthemusic: They found you?
Jed: They definitely found us!
Dan: Yeah, I think they lived in the neighbourhood and we were just standing outside with all our gear.
Jed: They definitely searched us out!
Dan: Well, we were waiting to go to a show and they kept yelling “Gentlemen Husbands” and running away.
iheartthemusic: For those who don’t live down the street, where can they get your stuff?
Jed: Coming to a show is the best way to get our stuff.
Ryan: We were giving out hard copies at every show and then we ran out.
You were supposed to be able to download them on MySpace but for some reason that feature doesn’t work anymore. So we’re gonna figure that out. If you want to pay, you can get them on iTunes.iheartthemusic: Is there anything you really wish I’d asked?
Jed: How many zeros do you want at the end of the cheque?
[all laugh]
interviewed by Leanne Plummer
photography by Kristin M.
Tags: cold war kids, Gentlemen Husbands, Kristin M, Leanne Plummer, the horseshoe tavern


Kimberlee McCormack: