| “Some
say the whale can't open his mouth, but that is a fable.”
The Arcade Fire are Win Butler, Régine
Chassagne, Richard Parry, Tim Kingsbury, and Win's little brother
Will.
The last year has been an eventful one for
The Arcade Fire. In June 2003, Régine's grandmother Nancy
died; in August, Win and Régine were married; in September,
the Arcade Fire started recording their debut album. In March
2004, Win and Will's grandfather Alvino Rey died; Richard Parry’s
Aunt Betsy passed away in April; in May 2004 the Arcade Fire were
signed to Merge Records, and completed their album. It having
been something of a heavy hitting year, the band's minds were
somewhat a-whirl. The deaths of Nancy , Alvino and Betsy brought
to mind all the people they had loved who had died: they decided
to call their newly completed album Funeral.
The Arcade Fire reside in Montreal, Quebec.
Win moved to Montreal four winters ago, as a panther moves from
jungle to jungle – silently, with rocking shoulder blades.
Looking for musicians, he found Régine, who combed his
sleek fur and removed the thorns from his paws.
Régine had secretly learned to sing,
play piano, guitar, accordion, mandolin, flute, drums, and harmonica
while her parents weren't watching. Her family fled Haiti (under
the dictatorship of Duvalier) in the 1960’s for Chicago,
New York, and then finally to Montreal, where Régine grew
up.
Win and Régine wrote song upon song;
they performed and recorded them with the help of many tiny hands:
hands such as Richard Parry's; a hulking brute who knew recording
and the finer points of instrumentology. Richard consistently
collaborated with Win and Régine, waking up one day to
find himself fairly ensconced with them musically – a sort
of red-haired lighthouse firmly planted on the Arcade Fire's frontier.
His great winking light helped draw in dozens
of moths, as well as his former band-mate Tim Kingsbury. Tim killed
the moths, joined the band, and then skillfully played whatever
instrument was open to him.
In March 2003, Will Butler slipped across the
border into Canada, with the goal of playing music with his brother.
This he did until the truant officers caught up with him and forced
him back to college in Chicago. But that was later.
With Win and Régine freshly married
in August 2003, and a summer's worth of rock and roll at their
backs, the Arcade Fire wanted to record an album. But they hadn't
a drummer. They persevered in the recording, though, only to discover
the man that was to record them at Hotel 2 Tango studios, Howard
Bilerman, was a meat-hook fisted, iron-boned drummer of a fellow.
Howard graciously agreed to perform on their new album.
Why hell, there was their band, and they recorded.
Thousands of tiny luminary hands came out and helped oance again:
Sarah Neufeld; Owen Pallett; Michael Olsen; Pietro Amato; Anita
Fust; Sophie Trudeau; Jessica Moss; Genevieve Heistek; Arlen Thompson;
Mark Lawson; Thierry Amar. Sarah Neufeld is still playing and
touring with the band doing the work of an entire string section
with her single violin.
The result of all this collaboration is Funeral,
the debut full length recording from the Arcade Fire. The CD will
be released by Merge Records on September 14th, 2004. In the tradition
of their itinerant, Depression-era family-musical performing forefathers,
the band will be touring extensively in the fall, as well.
“It takes a band like Arcade Fire to remind
you that we are all custodians of our innocence and that we let
it die at our peril.” --Robert Everett-Green, Toronto Globe
& Mail
“Now small fowls flew screaming over the
yet yawning gulf; a sullen white surf beat against its steep sides;
then all collapsed, and the great shroud of the sea rolled on
as it rolled five thousand years ago.”
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