biographical info
I first picked up a guitar when I was in grade nine. I took a few
lessons from a guy named Cowboy Slim and I started walking down a long,
twisty and infinitely interesting road. I listened constantly to my
records and tried to learn the songs. Drop the needle and you entered a
rebellious, sexually charged, funny and dangerous world. I couldn't get
enough of that world. I was growing up in Calgary in the 1970s and I
didn't really entertain the idea of a career in music because it didn't
seem like that was an option in those days. So I attended university
for a while, played in folk clubs, started a barbwire fence building
company, traveled but as time went by it became clear to me that I
didn't fancy doing anything else near as much as music. When I turned
21, I moved to Vancouver. I was following a girl I'd met and pursuing
my dreams of rock and roll. After 2 or 3 years I was married and we'd
had our first child. We were scraping by but I was still playing music.
I had a band and we put out a couple of independent records in what was
becoming an interesting scene: The Pointed Sticks, DOA, The Payolas,
54-40 and KD Lang among others. There were studios where you could
record cheaply late at night and venues where you could play original
music. One tried to avoid the hinterland in those days where you were
likely to get your ass kicked for singing your own songs decked out in
some Sally-Ann new-wave ensemble. The scene was diverse and a bit
desperate. It was also a competitive time because we were all trying to
get a record deal, and it didn't seem like there were all that many to
go around. It didn't have the same supportive feel that I sense in the
independent scene in Vancouver today. That may be naïve, but that's my
impression. Somehow, we managed to get signed to A&M records in
1980, but we were too green and got dropped from the label. We licked
our wounds and kept working hard for the next 5 or 6 years, writing
songs, playing live and taking our lumps. By this time I had four kids
and things were a little lean.
I was thinking that maybe it was time to try something else, something
more lucrative, so I could look after my family a little better. With
visions of working 9 to 5 in mind, I went to Toronto to give it one
last shot and lo and behold I got a record deal. I signed with CBS (now
Sony Music) and inked a management deal with Bernie Finkelstein. This
was in 87/ 88 and we went on a great run - lots of touring, songs on
the radio, gold records a very different experience. Our success was by
and large in Canada and although part of me was looking for worldwide
adoration I wouldn't have wanted to be away from my family anymore than
I was.
By 97, I was looking for a change. The music scene was different and I
wasn't getting what I wanted from it, so I did a one-eighty, bought a
cattle ranch and walked away. We worked it and we learned a lot. It put
a lot of things in perspective. I continued playing shows, 20 to 30 a
year, mainly in a stripped down acoustic format which had really begun
to appeal to me. I had started as a folkie in Calgary and felt the
pull, back to a simpler approach. I only wrote songs when they wouldn't
leave me alone, and I knew that when the time seemed right I would
record again.
Gift Horse was made over the course of the last two years. Nine of the
songs were recorded in Vancouver with my band-mate Johnny Ellis
producing. The rest of the CD was recorded in Toronto with Blue Rodeo,
at their studio The Woodshed, with my good friend Jim Cuddy producing.
I love what that band has done for Canadian music. I've known them for
a long time and have played with them often. It felt very comfortable.
The players in Vancouver were musicians I have known and admired over
the years with guest appearances from some of my kids (Dustin has
recently released his own CD titled Streets With No Lights), Sony
artist Jeremy Fischer and a very cool band called Mother (vocals on Too
Good To Be True). I collaborated once again with author Guy
Vanderhaeghe on Dance For Me. I know some of the material was inspired
by my life on the ranch, Back Up On The Horse and The Ballad Of Old Tom
Jones come to mind, but this wasn't about making a country record. I
think it was just a case of being able to get away from things for a
while and then write about what I saw and felt. When you're putting out
record after record and doing lots of touring, the songs are the fuel
that feeds the machine and writing is a very different process. Don't
get me wrong, there was a fantastic energy you'd get from that storm
but I needed a change. Gift Horse was probably the most enjoyable
record I've made over the course of my career, due to that lack of
pressure and deadline. Hope you enjoy it.
Barney Bentall, Vancouver, B.C.