| Elliot Bergman and his younger sister, Natalie (Belle) Bergman, have recently put the finishing touches on Isles, the  first full-length album of music written and performed by the siblings under their collective band name Wild Belle.   Recorded with fellow electronics wizard Bill  Skibbe at Keyclub Recordings in Benton Harbor, Michigan, Isles premieres, across ten spellbinding new songs, Wild Belle's fully-realized dream-pop-dance  music, the combination, says Elliot, "of elemental things and  electricity." When making Isles, Elliot felt a  "push for a blend of organic and electronic elements and everything had to  be sort of both.  We wanted real  instruments, things made of wood and metal, and then the modern sensibility of  drum machines and synthesizers, balancing those two worlds. Rhythm comes first  on all of these songs.  Things get  written to a rhythmic backing.  Natalie  writes catchy memorable pop hooks.  My  job is to find sounds that twist people's ears a little bit."   In early 2012, Elliot and Natalie began  a little bit of ear-twisting with "Keep You" (b/w "Take Me  Away"), the 12" single which introduced Wild Belle to the world.  Released on the group's own Sandhill Sound  label,  "Keep You" projected a  steamy seductive sound, full of heartbreaking mystery both tropical and  noir.   "Our plan was to put out a  series of singles. We liked the idea of being a singles band," Elliot  recalls before revealing another inspiration.   "Sandhill Sound is named after the sandhill cranes that fly over  our house every fall.  They make this  crazy kind of sound and they fly really high, they fly these exhausting circles  upward until they catch thermal winds and coast for miles as they migrate from  Northern Canada to Mexico."   Musical tastemakers,  on both sides of the Atlantic, heard that mysterious high-flying crazy kind of sound  in "Keep You." BBC radio 1 latched on to the sound and the song became  a surprise favorite on their playlists. Vogue gave the band its vaunted  "Band of the Week" props on their site, and The Chicago Tribune claimed  "Wild Belle rules at SXSW" with Greg Kot featuring the band before a  hometown show at the Hideout Block party.   Wild Belle's aesthetic roots and  aspirations may be found in the Bergman family household, a musical place where  Elliot, Natalie and their two other siblings (one now a fashion designer, the  other a writer) would sit and "play old-timey songs, hymns and Dylan  tunes."  Both Natalie and Elliot  remember hearing their mother play Joni Mitchell songs during family  sing-a-longs.   "That was how I  became attracted to the guitar.  She  showed us open tunings and it made me excited to play," says Natalie while  Elliot recalls growing up "playing jazz standards with our mom."   Eight years older than Natalie, Elliot  was the family trailblazer when it came to Bergmans in bands, first playing in  high school outfits with names like The Creepers before heading off to Ann  Arbor, where, while attending the University of Michigan, he founded and  fronted NOMO, an Afro-beat-inspired funky instrumental party band that's built  a ten-year touring history, a four album catalog and its own loyal fanbase.   From the time she was 16, Natalie,  who'd been writing her own songs for years, would travel with NOMO, playing  percussion, twirling a tambourine, singing backup, selling merch.  One of the instrumental tracks, a kalimba  loop Elliot had created for NOMO, was so appealing to Natalie that she ran the  sounds through Garageband, added lyrics and a vocal of her own and made the  audio bed for the first Wild Belle recording.   "Natalie is a very strong presence  and she kept coming in, churning out these lyrics," Elliot recalls.  "It tilted the band's focus."  Natalie was taking spotlight turns at NOMO  shows with her solo material, which proved popular with audiences, but it soon  became apparent that the songs she was writing needed a band all their  own.  "The songs that I write are  not for NOMO," she says simply.   Natalie's songs are candid expressions  of her character and experiences.   "I started writing songs in high school," she says, "and,  in college, I realized I had a knack for that kind of thing.  Sometimes, I release emotions onto the paper  that I didn’t express directly to a person’s face. Thankfully songwriting is  good therapy. It alleviates so much tension and anything that's not feeling  good within yourself.  It's a good way to  get over somebody." According to Natalie, some of the songs  on Isles were written "three or four years ago" while others were  written during the album's recording and production process.  When writing, she simmers in the myriad of  musical influences of her upbringing--"Bill Withers, Sam Cooke, James  Brown, Paul Simon's Graceland, a wide array of musician that were played in the  house and in the car on trips to church... I got turned on to reggae at a young  age by Bob Marley, his pre-Rock Steady stuff, doo-wop from Jamaica was on a  different level."   When Elliot went off to college, he  passed along his musical tastes and collection to seventh grade Natalie, who  got an early taste for jazz, Pharaoh Sanders, Miles Davis and John Coltrane  before tapping into the African music--Fela Kuti, Ebenezer Obey, Green Arrow  Band and Hallelujah Chicken Run--that the siblings found so inspiring.  "I had access to a lot of music growing  up between my parents and Elliot and then myself exploring," says  Natalie.  "I am heavily influenced  by many different types of music."   Natalie admits that "when we  started recording the record, that's when we really started trying to write the  music together."  "Love Like  This," the last track written for the album features an organ part written  in the studio while the group was mixing "Keep You."  "I took a break an recorded that on my  phone," Elliot says.  "We wrote  down some lyrics and recorded that in a night, basically."   Elliot is an obsessive keyboard  enthusiast and "huge Harry Partch fan" who builds his own  instruments, among them the "metal tongues," all-electric variants on  the African thumb-piano constructed from "reclaimed industrial materials."  Elliot's kalimbas may be heard across Isles,  making subtle appearances in "It's Too Late," "Twisted,"  "Happy Home," and "Take Me Away," intimating chimes or  ethereal loops.  "There's a  collection of half-broken Casios that lives in our van," Elliot admits,  but finds support this preoccupation, "Natalie is always tucking another  one in before each tour." According to Natalie, "Elliot is  the master of bringing IT to life.   Beyond his phenomenal musicianship skills, his role in the studio is  being a great producer."   "Natalie and I have an interesting  collaborative," Elliot observes.   "We are so close and we grew up together working on music in all  these different ways.  It's funny we are  on the same page about almost everything, from sounds to phrasing to instruments  we're drawn to.  We don't even really  have to talk about most things.  We know  how each other would like something." "I'm just so excited to release  the record," Natalie, inviting everyone to visit Isles, an irresistible  destination album.  "It's a fun  record.  We're proud of it." |