The multi-faceted Louisville musician plays Thursday, August 6 at Ritual Barbers downtown.
For more than a decade, Louisville musician Connor Bell has used his solo project Shedding to unreservedly explore a range of sonic impulses, apparently not worrying about the incongruity of putting everything from solo-acoustic singer-songwriter material to field recordings under one name. Sheddingās most recent release, 4 Of 5 In 6 And 7, captures Bellās excursions into wide-ranging modular-synth compositions, something heāll continue to build on when he plays this Thursday, August 6 at Ritual Barbers in downtown Madison, sharing the bill with solo sets from Madison musicians Tom Wincek and Rob Lundberg.
Other good points of entry with Shedding include the gorgeous drone-pop of 2010ās Tear In The Sun, 2013ās Who Can I Be Alone With? (which documents a short-lived but rewarding try at recasting Sheddingās material in a band setting), and Plod & Play, a collection of Bellās spontaneous electronic compositions over the years. Ahead of his Madison show, Bell talked with me about his approach to the project, the value of improvisation, and his ever-evolving live set.
Shedding: 4 of 5 in 6 and 7 CD EP (WMD009) by Shedding
Tone Madison: Whatās your live setup like now? I donāt think Iāve actually seen you play live for maybe four years and Iād imagine the setup has changed with the material.
Connor Bell: Well, if if twas four years ago I was probably using the pump organ still, and basically Iāve just sort of phased that out and use a little synthesizer instead and have a modular synthesizer and a sampler. Itās pretty much purely electronic aside from the voice. With that pump organ, there were just a lot of issues with sound that got frustrating, as much as I liked the sound of it. Itās something that Iāve been thinking about revisiting but I just figured Iād simplify. I mean, itās more complicated of a setup, but I think itās more controlled.
Tone Madison: In other interviews, youāve talked about the role of improvisation in your writing and recording. How does improvisation play into your live set, especially with a more electronic setup?
Connor Bell: I sort of enjoy exploring both structured, or relatively structured, songwriting, and improv. The modular synthesizer that Iāve been playing with, itās been kind of fun to create a system and work within it, and thatās where the improv really comes from. Itās never the same. I donāt know how into that world you are, but a lot of musicians talk about it being kind of alive in some way, and I kind of feel the sameāthereās this unpredictability. I add an element of randomness within that, which is kind of fun for me. I donāt like playing structured sets where every show is the same. My own personal enjoyment is definitely something I consider when Iām playing shows, and I think it just keeps me more invested and excited with a bit of improved. I have some stretches of structure and some structures of more kind of “see what happens,” I guess.
Tone Madison: And especially in electronic music, everyone has their own setup thatās sort of esoteric in how itās configured and how theyāre doing. So one thing Iām curious about is, how does your setup create opportunities for improvisation or spontaneity to happen?
Connor Bell: Some of the modules in my synthesizer are specifically designed to be sort of controlled chaos, so if I use that in the set, it immediately moves in a more unpredictable direction. I also use the sampler in kind of a loose wayāI mean, I try to use it more as a music concrete, like a reel-to-reel, where I kind of am just capturing snippets and playing them as sort of tape collage, and I never quite know how thatās going to turn out exactly, but it has a fun effect. It can turn into a lot of different aesthetics pretty quickly if I mess with that direction.
Tone Madison: What were some of the things you are trying to explore with 4 Of 5 In 6 And 7? Was there anything that felt different to you about making it?
Connor Bell: Largely, thatās all collage live recordings, so itās more just a document of some of my sets from the last six months. There are two songs with names, and those are the ones that Iāve put more into trying to develop and explore. The others are just sort of little ideas that I had fun playing and theyāre not anything Iām necessarily returning to again, because theyāre just improvising and playing with sound.
Shedding: 4 of 5 in 6 and 7 CD EP (WMD009) by Shedding
Tone Madison: You have releases that are cohesive albums but also a lot of things that are just little experiments or variations on previous material. Do you enjoy not being tied to a certain format or schedule?
Connor Bell: Yeah, thatās kind of been a core value Iāve tried to work from ever since this started. I guess itās been 15 years that Iāve been doing this on and off. Thatās one of the more fundamental elements, is just, no limits, and whatever zone Iām in, Iām gonna do. Itās funny, because an old bandmate is going to try to write a little bio for me, and itās hard to have an up-to-date bio when Iām constantly messing around and trying new things. We were talking, I was trying to communicate with him this idea that I hope he can capture in words because it would allow the bio to be more long-lasting possibly if he does capture it: Those are the artists I value and respect, and thatās kind of what Iām aiming for, are those people that kind of do whatever the hell they want, and thereās something compelling about it, even if you donāt like it all. The exploratory quality of the artist always kind of seeking something is something I respect about my favorite artists, and thatās why Iāve always pushed in that direction. Again, I donāt expect everyone to like everything Iām doing, obviously. Thereās definitely stuff thatās more or less listenable than other stuff for certain audiences, but I would hope that people who enjoy my stuff would appreciate that about me, that Iām not staying still.
I think a lot of artists get caught up in worrying about how stuff will be received, and that idea of making it or whatever, but I think at a certain point, I became a lot more fulfilled with just getting back to the basics and enjoying the process of making art for myself. I think with whatās happening in the music industry, itās been kind of a good reminder that if youāre hoping to make money or something, good luck, but itās increasingly challenging. I would imagine you know plenty of people who get frustrated about that, the state of the industry or whatever, but itās a good reminder to keep your eye on why you do it. Thatās really helped me regain a passion for making art.
Plod & Play, Vol. 1 by Shedding
Tone Madison: And not that itās ever been easy to be a musician, but there is kind of this upside to the Internet now where you can be really true to yourself as an artist and people are able to connect with it in a fulfilling way, even if itās just a small number of people.
Connor Bell: Yeah, and Iāve become much more self-sufficient. For a stretch, this label Hometapes was putting my stuff out and it was great and I love them and theyāre family, but itās a lot slower when youāre working with a proper label. I used to play in a band called Parlour and Iāve been listening to their rough mixes, and theyāre talking about how itāll be 10 months before the recordās out, and that 4 Of 5 In 6 And 7, it was a few weeks and it was done. Itās not a lavish gatefold LP or anything, but thereās something to be said for small, fluid, mobile and dynamic labels. Even calling them labels is sort of misleading in some ways. Itās great because you just do what you can do on a budget and enjoy the process. I have some stuff on Bandcamp that I would love to have put out on vinylāI had a brief phase where I was doing more of a pop band, and we put a lot into the songs and it fizzled before we really finished them, so I put a lot into trying to finish them and Iām pretty happy with them, and Iād love to share them as a physical release, but itās like, well, why not, just throw them up. Itās not like thereās any benefit to sitting on them. Itās definitely something Iāve grappled with and I think a lot of musicians are trying to figure out their philosophies about this whole new-media era. Itās exciting. Iām 35, almost 36, so I sort of got a taste of before, and the sort of, OK, now, itās different. I think some of the younger people who didnāt get a bit of the late ā90s when things were still booming, Iād be curious about how they feel about all this stuff.
Tone Madison: On Who Can I Be Alone With?, from 2013, you played with a couple other guys and put the Shedding material in more of a band setting. How did that come about?
Connor Bell: I mean those are just good old friends and former bandmates in other bands. One of them is kind of the mastermind of that Parlour band that I just mentioned. Weāve always been close collaborators, and to some degree he mentored me when I started playing music. At some point, I just started writing on the guitar again, in maybe ā04, and was doing more kind of solo acoustic-guitar singer-songwriterāsuddenly I had something to say lyrically againāand at a certain point, I went, why not make this a band for a while? They were just enthusiastic supporters of my songwriting and good friends, and they added a lot of ideas that I never would have considered, which was really fun. Who Can I be Alone With? is the recordings that worked out based on some demos that I tried to kind of polish. Some of those songs Iāve still played solo with the synthesizer. I donāt think Iām playing any on these [upcoming] shows. But some of them Iāve left alone ever since, because with what they added, I feel like it would have been disrespectful to try to go back to playing them alone. But yeah, it was a band for a couple of years, and it was really fun, and I love playing with others but it was also stressful and a reminder of why I like playing alone, too. Itās like youāre dating multiple people. You have to stay on the same page with, in this case, two other guys, and as adults it becomes increasingly hard to stay on the same page. At a certain point it was like, Iād rather us remain friends and itās not as fun as it had been and I donāt want to ruin our friendships over pointless stress. It just kind of fizzled and I went back to playing guitar and synthesizers. I havenāt played the guitar as much lately. I was telling Joey, the drummer, that recently, and he said, āThatās weird,ā and it is weird that I havenāt really craved it. I came up playing punk rock just like most people and itās strange not having the urge to play, but itāll come back.
Tone Madison: And on that band record, you did a different version of the song āDisconnect,ā from Tear In The Sun. Do you enjoy the challenge of kind of iterating on your own stuff, revisiting a song and figuring out a different way to make it work?
Connor Bell: Itās great and frustrating at the same time. Itās great to try to re-explore it as if it were a standard and kind of find new meaning and explore textures and tones. The frustrating part is that I canāt finish stuffāIāve got these songs that Iām pretty happy with, and some of those songs Iād like to re-record solo, and I guess I end up thinking, āIf I just spend a little more time with it, maybe itāll move in a direction thatās even better.ā Iāve kind of caught this bug of seeking perfection, which is something I know from past bands is completely toxic.

