Barney Bentall & Band
www.barneybentall.com
July 2nd at 9:00pm
Born in Toronto, Barney Bentall grew up in Calgary,
moving to Vancouver in 1978 to try his hand at music. He formed the
band Brandon Wolf and released two independent discs and one for A&M
Records, all recorded at the infamous Little Mountain Sound. A
dedicated family man, he faced a struggle to keep writing and performing
music while supporting four children.
In 1988 at the point when a day job seemed
imminent, Barney formed The Legendary Hearts and signed with
Columbia/CBS Records. Their self-titled debut sold over 100,000 copies
and featured three hit singles in Canada, winning a Juno in 1989.
Between 1988 and 2000 the band toured extensively and released five
studio albums which all reached gold or platinum status in Canada.
In 2000, Bentall moved to British Columbia to
operate a cattle ranch. After this change of perspective, 2007 brought
the solo release of Gift Horse on True North Records. Bentall also
formed The Grand Cariboo Opry with a variety of musicians as a way to
help raise funds for needy residents of the Downtown Eastside of
Vancouver.
The Inside Passage is Bentall's seventh studio
album. He explains, "I knew the title of the record long
before I wrote the song. I wanted to write a collection of
songs that were loosely based on moving through life. I
grew up on the prairies but we spent our summers out at the coast.
We had a boat and we would take it on long trips from the San
Juan Islands to Desolation Sound. I've always felt the
pull of those two spaces - the prairies where they rise to meet the
Rockies, and the sea as it collides with the Coastal range."
Recorded in the spring and summer of
2008, The Inside Passage was recorded and produced by John Ellis (Ridley
Bent, Be Good Tanyas, and Barney's son Dustin Bentall) at his Nashcroft
Studios, with Daniel Lapp on fiddle, horns, and piano, Rob Becker on
bass and Geoff Hicks on drums. "For the last two albums,",
says Bentall, "I've never made a demo, and only put music to tape when
it came time to record. I had read a quote of Paul McCartney saying that
they never wrote music down or made demos. If the idea
was good they would remember it! It seemed like a leap of faith at first
but I got into it."
He currently divides his time between his ranch in
the Cariboo and Bowen Island with his wife Kath and an ever-increasing
tribe of in-laws and grandchildren.
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