biographical info
Bike For Three! is the well-lucked and mysterious cross-continental duo
of Canadian indie-rap legend Richard Terfry (Buck 65) and budding
Belgian electronicist Joëlle Phuong Minh Lê (Greetings From Tuskan).
Shrouded in strange magic, anchored by the heavy stuff of life, and
lifted by a mutual magnetism still uncharted, their music is a
bright/stunning combination of downtempo textures, smart pop, and
exposed lyrical bones.
Over 15 years, Richard has carved out a corner of hip-hop history by
unraveling ornate and dust-caked yarns, often over beat-addled
soundscapes, as on his seminal “Language Arts” album series (Anticon
released part three, Man Overboard, in ’01), and unadorned as well (he
recently became host of CBC’s “Radio 2 Drive” show). For his last
record, 2007’s Situation (released on Sage Francis’ Strange Famous
label), the man crafted an entire song-cycle around the narrative
minutiae of 1957—Rich’s love for a good story is famous. Considering,
he couldn’t have found a better partner for his latest work.
Joëlle was raised in Brussels by her Vietnamese mother, a painter and a
chef, and remembers fondly the piquant scents she’d chase around mom’s
restaurant. She was infatuated with the piano at her primary school,
and took lessons when she wasn’t painting or tinkering with music
boxes. She learned cello too, pursued photography (she’s now a
successful digital video artist), and studied music theory in college,
where she discovered that art-making brought back her childhood
memories in vivid detail. She has magic secrets—and perhaps a touch of
clairvoyance—that she put to work in creating 2006’s striking Greetings
From Tuskan LP debut, Lullabies For The Warriors. To this day, there
are details that even Rich doesn’t understand about Joëlle’s immaculate
productions. Naturally, that’s another detail that he loves.
Bike For Three!’s constituent parts have never met in person, and they
might not ever. She found him, and their story unfurls in real time
along with their songs. Joëlle sends Rich music; Rich writes to the
moods and movements that she’s designed; Joëlle nurtures each piece
into an animate whole. Bf3! actually finds Buck 65 eschewing
traditional narrative forms in favor of an intimate stream of
consciousness (offset by tight rhyme cadence) that mines the craggier
depths of romance both requited and out-of-reach, real and imagined
(which perfectly befits Bf3!’s working relationship). The things Rich
wouldn’t speak of in conversation thus become part of the conversation
happening on record.
More Heart Than Brains, Bf3!’s album debut, is Buck 65’s first record
to feature all electronic production. Of course, Joëlle has a few
acoustic tricks up her sleeve—those music boxes from her youth, for
instance—and an approach that seats her comfortably amongst such
mercurial beat auteurs as Boom Bip, Modeselektor, Michna, and
labelmate Alias. That Rich returns to Anticon a nearly decade later to
release his most personal album yet is both an honor and the logical
continuation of the label’s own story (Sage Francis did the same with
Personal Journals in ’02). As for Bike For Three!, consider this
Chapter One.
lineup
Richard Terfry vocals/lyrics
Joëlle P. M. Lê producer/composer