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Photo
Credit: David Friedman (Scott and Eric),
Peter Lizano (John and Vince)
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Diamond
Days
Bento
Press
Release, September 24, 2012
These are
and this is DIAMOND DAYS, the sparkling debut album
by Bento – the new musical creation from
Ben Gillies, drummer and co-founder of Silverchair.
DIAMOND DAYS
is 12 new bristling and glistening rock & roll songs, with Ben
up front, singing his heart out, singing his own songs, and opening
up like you’ve never heard him before.
“It’s an
album of self-discovery, of finding myself,” says Ben. “I’ve
always written songs and over the years I’ve kept a log of
every idea. It’s exciting to finally see some of these ideas
fully realised.”
Adds the former APRA
Songwriter of the Year: “Being part of something as awesome
and mammoth as Silverchair required so much of myself and at times
there was very little energy left for other things. Now I feel as
if I’m freed up and can satisfy my own creative output and
get about doing what makes sense for me at this point. It’s
been a while in the making and I’m excited to finally share
it.”
Bento
is as indie as they come. While Silverchair could tap into big recording
budgets and high-level industry infrastructure to support releases,
Bento is entirely DIY – an organic veggie patch to Silverchair’s
Apple. Ben has funded the entire project himself and has personally
overseen every element, from artwork and videos through to the mechanics
of releasing the album on his own label. “It’s great
to feel like I’m really in the driver's seat on every detail
with Bento,” he says. “That’s
just not possible when you’re in a band. It’s a totally
different way of approaching things after years of adhering to a
particular formula ... So that makes Bento both
exciting and a bit scary.”
Honest, uncluttered,
open-hearted, Bento is Ben’s baby, but it
sounds like a full band that has been playing together forever.
Indeed, Ben freely credits his collaborators for helping provide
DIAMOND DAYS with such a distinctive sheen across its 12
tracks – a unique cohesiveness and melodious energy.
Ben informally began
work on the Bento debut during a break in Silverchair
duties back in 2010. He took those hundreds of ideas he’d
collected over the years and spent a week sifting through them at
Mangrove Studios on the Central Coast with the in-house engineer,
Josh Telford. During that week, he and Josh began piecing together
songs from the pot of ideas, combining up to 40 different ideas
in a single track, while a couple of entirely new songs also were
written right there on the spot.
Work proper on the record
started in mid-2011, only once Silverchair revealed what it was
doing next. “When Silverchair decided to go on our ‘indefinite
hibernation’, I decided to keep running with my thing,”
says Ben. “I went back in with Josh and that’s when
I was like, ‘I’m making a record – this is a record!’”
As soon as Ben felt enough
of these new songs were taking a solid shape, he moved into Big
Jesus Burger Studios in Surry Hills, Sydney, with Eric J Dubowsky
[Faker, Art Vs. Science] coming onboard as co-producer. “There
was a stack of work to be done,” says Ben. “I still
had to make songs out of the ideas, explore structures and lyrics
for whole songs for first time. It was a challenge but a great experience.
Whereas I always had a safety net with Silverchair, now I didn’t
have that – I just had go out there and to get it done.”
Ben enlisted the talents
of a diverse array of muso mates to help bring his vision of life,
including Papa Vs Pretty’s gifted frontman and guitarist Thomas
Rawle as a lead player on the majority of the songs, plus Scott
Aplin [Silverchair, music director of The Voice] on keyboards and
Dave Symes [Missy Higgins’ music director] on bass. “These
guys were integral to the process,” says Ben. “They
came along and made the songs mesh as a band.”
Ben’s other big
challenge with Bento involved stepping out from
behind the drum kit and becoming a frontman for the first time.
And he makes no qualms about it – it scared the crap out of
him.
“I was literally
shitting myself,” he says laughing. “It’s a fear
I’m having to confront – but it’s exciting. Scary
and exciting. From my experience, anything that’s confronting
and scary, once you overcome the fear, then you can enjoy it. So
that’s how I feel about it … but I’m still a little
bit nervous.”
One thing that’s
obvious from a first listen of DIAMOND DAYS, Ben
is a lead vocalist of impressive dexterity, adapting his style and
approach to convey a myriad of emotions across the dozen songs.
Minor anxieties aside,
now, finally, Ben Gillies is ready to reveal his Bento to the world
with this brilliant debut album, DIAMOND DAYS.
Prepare yourself –
Bento sounds nothing like Silverchair. And if you
happened to have heard Ben’s short-lived Tambalane project
from a few years back, well, Bento sounds absolutely
nothing like that either.
The immediacy of the
lead track, the title track “Diamond Days”, will give
you a fair indication of what Bento is all about.
But there are a dozen different moods and views present on the album.
How can we sum it up?
This is Bento,
and this is … these are … DIAMOND DAYS.
Enjoy.
###
www.wearebento.com
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www.soundcloud.com/wearebento
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