Gulfer

1 min read

HOW THESE MONTREAL INDIE ROCKERS TAP INTO AN INVENTIVE APPROACH TO SONGWRITING

By Jim Beaugez

Gulfer’s Joe Therriault [left] and Vicent Ford outside Montreal’s Gibeau Orange Julep. Hey, why not?
SACHA COHEN

MONTREAL QUARTET GULFER create a swirl of indie-rock energy through liberal doses of math-rock rhythms, emo intensity, shoegaze textures and pop melodic sensibilities — plus an unexpected heaping of two-hand tapping executed by guitarists Vincent Ford and Joe Therriault.

That said, the duo’s dexterous tapping excursions aren’t window dressing, shredder showmanship or throwback irony. They’re the core of Gulfer’s entire sound and the engine for delivering their mind-bending melodies, as heard on the recent singles “Greetings” and “Barely,” released in July by Topshelf Records.

“Tapping is really easy to play [when it’s] the same notes over and over again, and I think people think of tapping as that,” Therriault says. “What we like is some kind of melodic component. If you can get a chord progression in there, then you feel like it’s moving.”

Founding guitarist Ford, whose jazz background informs the band’s use of unconventional chord shapes, began to experiment with tapping and songwriting after getting into bands like Tera Melos. “Nobody was doing that kind of thing around me,” he says, although “some were doing it in a Steve Vai-type of way, which is cool but was not my cup of tea at all,” he adds.

At early Gulfer shows, Therriault recalls watching from the crowd and being amazed by how Ford could sing while tapping with both hands. When he joined up, Ford showed him the fundamentals and the pair became the band’s driving musical force. In addition to quality guitar technique, th

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles