The Story
The dream-rock band Belly blazed a bright trail in the â90s, releasing two albums full of taut, yet wondrous music that was memorable for its rumbling bass lines and insistent drumming as it was for its glittering riffs and airy vocals. Their new album Dove, which was recorded with friend of the band Paul Q. Kolderie, places Belly back on that trail, bridging the gaps between reverbed-out bliss and spaghetti-western drone and muscular, hook-forward pop.
The idea of a Belly reunion gained serious traction a few years ago. âWe had just gotten to the point where we were just missing each other, and missing the music,â says Donelly. âThe music Iâve been doing in the past several years has been very collaborative, which made me kind of homesick for Belly; I missed that sense of having a band.â
Early rehearsals showed that Belly was still very much a unit, the years falling away as the quartet went to work on older material. âWe immediately fell back into our original relationship and musical dynamics,â says Donelly. âJust a lot of laughingâit felt like a real reunion in the best and truest sense from the first practice on. We had a bit of trepidation: âIs this going to work?â But the first practice really set all our anxiety to rest.â
Eventually, though, the bandâs members got the itch to bring new songs into their set as a curveball for listenersâand for themselves, too. âYou almost want to put yourself in the deep end,â says Chris Gorman. âThat just seems to be the inclination for creative peopleâyou never just want to feel comfortable. Youâre always going, âWell, whatâs the part of the night thatâs really going to make me really, really nervous and freaked out?â And that usually is, âLetâs try a new song.â When it works, thatâs the most the rewarding moment in the night.â
Belly previewed some of their new songs, including the prowling âArmy of Clayâ and the folk-tinged âHuman Child,â at their early reunion dates to effusive audiences. âThe crowds have been amazing,â says Donelly. âWeâve never really operated on a level before where live shows feel genuinely communal. We got such great feedback on the new stuffâpeople were just as enthusiastic about it,â Donelly recalls. That handful of tracks blossomed into Dove, a dozen songs that nod to past glories while also showcasing the four membersâ growth as songwriters and musicians, adding dramatic flourishes like strings and vibed-out guitars to the groupâs already widescreen sound.
Belly recorded most of the rhythm tracks for Dove at Stable Sound Studios in Portsmouth, RI, vocals at Greenwoodâs home studio, and guitars and overdubs in Tomâs and Tanyaâs home studios. The songs spun out of a new songwriting system that was necessitated by the four membersâ far-flung hometowns. âIt required a lot of trust,â says Donelly, âbecause we were sending raw snippets to each otherâanything from 30-second pieces to full songs. Tom and Gail and I would send demos back and forth, and then Chris would add drums to whatever snippets heâd heard, and Tom would sew everything together. It would sometimes be a very circuitous route to a song, but it was really fun.â
âAll three of the songwriters were locked in and working in a way that complemented the othersâ strengths,â says Chris Gorman. âGailâs writing was in top form. Tanya is able to make anybodyâs song her ownâsheâs got that gift. And Tom has really honed his arrangement and production style.â
The shimmering, expansive âShiny One,â which pairs dreamy vocal harmonies with urgent riffing and dramatic string flourishes, is one of the best examples of Bellyâs new process. âI have a lot of affection for that one,â says Donelly. âIt was the first completely collaborative song weâve ever doneâGail wrote the riff and the chorus, Tom and I wrote the verse and bridge, Chrisâs parts shaped the direction and vibe. When I hear it, I hear all four of us equally.â
While Doveâs flight was aided by previews of some new tracks during the bandâs reunion tour, the band is excited to release the album in full, and to show it off to audiences around the world. âWeâre all looking forward to presenting these songs in a live setting, and having the opportunity to play together again,â says Chris Gorman. âWe should be in for a really exciting year.â
Description
The dream-rock band Belly blazed a bright trail in the â90s, releasing two albums full of taut, yet wondrous music that was memorable for its rumbling bass lines and insistent drumming as it was for its glittering riffs and airy vocals. Their new album Dove, which was recorded with friend of the band Paul Q. Kolderie, places Belly back on that trail, bridging the gaps between reverbed-out bliss and spaghetti-western drone and muscular, hook-forward pop.
The idea of a Belly reunion gained serious traction a few years ago. âWe had just gotten to the point where we were just missing each other, and missing the music,â says Donelly. âThe music Iâve been doing in the past several years has been very collaborative, which made me kind of homesick for Belly; I missed that sense of having a band.â
Early rehearsals showed that Belly was still very much a unit, the years falling away as the quartet went to work on older material. âWe immediately fell back into our original relationship and musical dynamics,â says Donelly. âJust a lot of laughingâit felt like a real reunion in the best and truest sense from the first practice on. We had a bit of trepidation: âIs this going to work?â But the first practice really set all our anxiety to rest.â
Eventually, though, the bandâs members got the itch to bring new songs into their set as a curveball for listenersâand for themselves, too. âYou almost want to put yourself in the deep end,â says Chris Gorman. âThat just seems to be the inclination for creative peopleâyou never just want to feel comfortable. Youâre always going, âWell, whatâs the part of the night thatâs really going to make me really, really nervous and freaked out?â And that usually is, âLetâs try a new song.â When it works, thatâs the most the rewarding moment in the night.â
Belly previewed some of their new songs, including the prowling âArmy of Clayâ and the folk-tinged âHuman Child,â at their early reunion dates to effusive audiences. âThe crowds have been amazing,â says Donelly. âWeâve never really operated on a level before where live shows feel genuinely communal. We got such great feedback on the new stuffâpeople were just as enthusiastic about it,â Donelly recalls. That handful of tracks blossomed into Dove, a dozen songs that nod to past glories while also showcasing the four membersâ growth as songwriters and musicians, adding dramatic flourishes like strings and vibed-out guitars to the groupâs already widescreen sound.
Belly recorded most of the rhythm tracks for Dove at Stable Sound Studios in Portsmouth, RI, vocals at Greenwoodâs home studio, and guitars and overdubs in Tomâs and Tanyaâs home studios. The songs spun out of a new songwriting system that was necessitated by the four membersâ far-flung hometowns. âIt required a lot of trust,â says Donelly, âbecause we were sending raw snippets to each otherâanything from 30-second pieces to full songs. Tom and Gail and I would send demos back and forth, and then Chris would add drums to whatever snippets heâd heard, and Tom would sew everything together. It would sometimes be a very circuitous route to a song, but it was really fun.â
âAll three of the songwriters were locked in and working in a way that complemented the othersâ strengths,â says Chris Gorman. âGailâs writing was in top form. Tanya is able to make anybodyâs song her ownâsheâs got that gift. And Tom has really honed his arrangement and production style.â
The shimmering, expansive âShiny One,â which pairs dreamy vocal harmonies with urgent riffing and dramatic string flourishes, is one of the best examples of Bellyâs new process. âI have a lot of affection for that one,â says Donelly. âIt was the first completely collaborative song weâve ever doneâGail wrote the riff and the chorus, Tom and I wrote the verse and bridge, Chrisâs parts shaped the direction and vibe. When I hear it, I hear all four of us equally.â
While Doveâs flight was aided by previews of some new tracks during the bandâs reunion tour, the band is excited to release the album in full, and to show it off to audiences around the world. âWeâre all looking forward to presenting these songs in a live setting, and having the opportunity to play together again,â says Chris Gorman. âWe should be in for a really exciting year.â












