Mitch Belot Band
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Mitch Belot Band

Calgary, Alberta, Canada | Established. Jan 01, 2012 | SELF

Calgary, Alberta, Canada | SELF
Established on Jan, 2012
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"Check Out Mitch Belot: Alberta’s New Blues/Rock Artist | By Cheryl Vandergraaf"

Up-and-coming singer/songwriter Mitch Belot sits down with me on a sunny Sunday afternoon to discuss his new studio album, The Mitch Belot EP (Extended Play). An easy-going and sociable guy, Belot is excited to talk about his first CD release, which he hopes will be one of many. “With a bluesy/rock feel, my songs are stories (true and fiction) that I have written myself and performed in multiple venues in and around Calgary and Edmonton” says Belot. Starting to play the guitar at the age of 15 and voice lessons at 16, Belot’s resume also includes many years of performing as an actor in musical theatre. He continues to expand his style and talent, as seen during his performance in Churchill Square at the Taste of Edmonton festival this past summer.

Encouraged by his cousin Connor Willumsen (who designed the cover for Belot’s CD) and supported by family friend Ben Nixon, a musician and sound engineer, Belot has been inspired to follow his heart and has learned that life experiences can enrich his music in a way he would never have imagined.

The five songs that compose Belot’s first CD carry a scruffy blues style with relatable lyrics and acoustic support. Each level was recorded in one long take, and then layered over other instruments to create an authentic feel with minimum filtering and editing. Belot hopes that the songs will show a musical artist who believes that with persistence and a passion, one can achieve whatever one aspires to do.

Looking ahead, Belot’s ultimate musical goal is to be able to play music for a living. As a personal goal, he wishes to remain genuine to himself and his music, and to always remember that everything happens for a reason. When asked if his music is made to please others or himself, Belot replies, “When creating or performing, you should weigh your own opinion as 75%, and pleasing others at 25%. You can’t completely change yourself to please others, because then you won’t be pleased with yourself.” Come September, Belot will be starting a four-year music program at elite Humber College in Toronto, where he hopes to eventually form a group that collaborates together creating music with a fuller taste and wider instrumental range. Belot is excited to attend college and learn from experienced artists in the field, and as of now, it looks like Belot has propelled himself into a promising musical career.

The Mitch Belot EP will be released on August 15th, and his music can be found on iTunes. Check out his music and upcoming gigs at www.facebook.com/mitchbelotmusic, follow him on twitter at www.twitter.com/mitchbelot, or see his website: www.mitchbelot.com. He appreciates your support, and I know you’ll appreciate his talent! - The Wanderer-Cheryl Vandergraaf


"Mitch Belot plays cool blues and folk music"

Young Calgary based acoustic bluesman Mitch Belot played an excellent set of blues, country and folk at the Owl Acoustic Lounge, Feb. 22.
Belot chatted with them, standing, picking an acoustic guitar while playing a drum with his foot as he played a number of blues standards and originals.

He plugged in a Gretsch foa couple highlights including “Too Old To Die young” a hot, Hendrix style verison of “Catfish Blues,” then went acoustic again for a solid version of “Ain’t No Sunshine.”
His original song “There’s This Girl,” was a highlight. He ended his set with a hot cover of a Black Keys song. - By Richard Amery, L.A. Beat Editor


"Steve Says"

I arrived at The Paddock just after 1 a.m. to see young Calgary blues artist Mitch Belot's solo set. He alternated between electric and acoustic guitars while also playing a kick drum and showed off a rough-hewn voice that belied his age and fit his songs well. Almost half of the 20 people in the audience seemed to know him personally, as he attends Humber College, but he deserves wider exposure. He can play, has some real songs and a lot of promise. - Steve McLean


"Young Calgarian Mitch Belot puts a modern spin on blues"

From performing solo at local venues to a sold-out JunoFest show with his band, the up-and-coming artist has a promising future ahead

Belot Playing thumbChatting over a coffee in the performing arts area of Mount Royal University, Calgary blues singer Mitch Belot reminisces about the first gig he ever played with his band, just a year prior.

It was the CD release party for the Mitch Belot Band, a local group that describe their sound as ‘swampy blues rock’ with a few alternative and country elements. Held in a tiny tasting room in the upstairs of Village Brewery in March 2015, lead singer Belot says this first gig with the band was his greatest performance to date.

“It was packed; we had double the amount of people we were supposed to have in that room.” Incredibly modest, the suave performer admits he doesn't much like talking about himself.

“The police showed up and there was people crowd surfing,” he laughs. They had been doing a routine drive-by through the usually quiet industrial area of Calgary, and went in to check what was going on, he adds.

“It was kind of scary for a second because we hadn’t even played yet. The second band was still playing. There were people jumping at one point during the show and you could feel the floor moving.”

Fortunately, the party wasn’t shut down and the band was able to perform as planned. “It was really fun. It was nice to see how many people came out to support us,” says Belot.

Dyllan Goodman, Belot’s drummer, says the band has had amazing chemistry ever since they first played together that night. “Our first show was the perfect example of what was to come of the band. We had the whole floor dancing and partying without anyone in the crowd knowing the lyrics, just hearing the music.”

Born and raised in Calgary, 23-year-old musician Mitch Belot has only been playing guitar since he was fifteen, but his swampy blues rock sounds like he stepped right out of 1930s Mississippi. His band is currently in the process of raising funds to produce a third album, and is planning a number of gigs this summer to help achieve this goal.

Belot has not always performed in a band, however. His musical beginnings were very much solo. “I’ve always liked music. I used to put on singing and dancing shows for my parents when I was really little,” he says. It’s not difficult to imagine the baby-faced blond entertaining at a young age, as it comes so naturally to him today.

At the age of fifteen, Belot was given his first guitar for Christmas. Most people start off with an acoustic, but not Belot. “I wanted to be ‘cool’ right away,” he laughs. “I got an electric.”

Eight years later, the instruments in Belot’s repertoire are impressive. In addition to both electric and acoustic guitar, he plays the ukulele, drums, and a medieval-looking instrument called a merlin. “It looks like a canoe paddle. The frets are oddly spaced so that no matter where you put your finger, it sounds good.”Band edited
From left to right, drummer Dyllan Goodman, lead singer and guitarist Mitch Belot, bass guitarist Nick Goodman and lead guitarist Vincent Bundick. Photo by Natalie Westerbeek

Belot says he owes his musical talent to his grandfather, who was a skilled pianist. “He was one of the few people in my family who is really musical,” he says of his late grandfather. “My mom says I look like him. It’s kind of cool, I feel a little bit of a connection with him.”

Towards the end of high school, Belot decided he wanted to play music seriously. His friends were all choosing career paths in business or medicine, but as a performing arts student, Belot says he wanted to follow this route. “When I realized how much I love performing for people, [I thought] maybe I can actually pull this stuff off!”

Once he turned eighteen, the Calgarian native began performing solo at local bars across the city. “It’s the only thing I felt happiest doing,” he says.

Two years after graduating high school and having spent some time in Australia, Belot auditioned and was accepted into the music program at Humber College in Toronto. He says he had escaped to Toronto to explore and start afresh after a nasty break-up. “There’s so many talented musicians there that it’s impossible not to improve. It helped me phenomenally.”

Soon, however, Belot began to have second thoughts. “I had a really fun time, but that summer I came home and was playing back here in Calgary and didn’t know if I wanted to go back.” It was a great program, he adds, “but it just wasn’t for me.”

Now finishing his first year of Mount Royal University’s broadcasting program, Belot says he meets a lot of people who could help him promote his music. “Broadcasting is cool because it’s similar to the music industry... It’s another kind of performance.”

Belot says he stumbled upon his current band members by accident. “I met the guitar player at an open mic. He introduced me to the drummer and now the drummer’s brother plays bass for us.”

Lead guitarist Vincent Bundick says the band is great to perform with. “Mitch is a fantastic songwriter, vocalist and guitarist. He’s always killing it, in rehearsal and on stage. The rest of us have to be at the top of our game to keep up with him.”

Both contestants in 2014, Belot and Bundick met during the first round of Stampede Talent Search, an annual competition during the Calgary Stampede for amateur performing artists between the ages of six and twenty-one.

A few months later, Bundick says he received a message from Belot asking if he played slide guitar. “At the time I’d dabbled a bit, but really had no idea what I was doing. I told him I could.”

An hour before playing with Belot for the first time, Bundick says he learned as many slide licks as he possibly could. “The jam went well enough [that] we’ve been playing together ever since,” he says.

“They’re totally different feelings, solo and band,” says Belot, who still performs both. “I like the band because I get to move around and interact with the [members]. Solo is cool because you only have to rely on yourself to put on a good show.”

Belot writes all the lyrics to his songs, and says he draws inspiration from a variety of sources.

“I take that old blues stuff and that’s kind of the base, the old 30s and 40s. But then I modernize it a lot, make it kind of electric sounding. It’s very Black Keys.” Formed in 2001, this American rock duo has taken the world by storm. American guitarist Gary Clark Jr. is yet another inspiration to Belot.

His sound is not typical of most musicians his age, which Belot says helps him out a lot because people remember him more easily for that reason. “It’s not like I’m trying to be an old guy... there’s modern twists to it and I’m reimagining old genres.” Belot says the way he looks doesn’t parallel his style of music. “This tall, blonde kid comes on and plays blues music and sings the way I do... I think it surprises people a bit!”

Belot says it is important for him to write about personal experience because it has more weight. “I think when people listen to music, they can tell when something is real and when something isn’t.” The song Belot is proudest of is Jumping Ship, which also happens to be the one people enjoy most, he adds. He always closes his set with this song because it’s so high energy and it gets the crowd up on their feet, dancing and singing.

“I wrote it in a really personal place. I actually wasn’t going to put it out into the world because I was nervous about what people would think about it,” he says. “I wrote it as a really sad song. It’s more upbeat now, which is how it should be.”

Jumping Ship is currently Belot’s second most popular song on iTunes after Rock Me Slow, a hit from his first EP released in August 2013. His most recent album, Down the Rabbit Hole, is also available on iTunes and was released in March 2015.


“Mitch is very creative with the way he forms the songs,” says Goodman. “He is always wanting to try something new but keeping with his blues roots. He also has trust in us to make his songs come to life with the rest of the instruments and doesn't try to micro-manage. We all respect each other and our suggestions and opinions.”

Belot Playing edited
Belot says he only started playing guitar at the age of fifteen, but owes his musical talent to his late grandfather, a skilled pianist. Photo by Brooke Cupelli
Belot says he has the songs ready and the band would love to release a third album in the near future, it’s just a small problem of finding the money to fund production. “We want to do a ten-song record. We’re just going to try and put on some shows that will help us raise some money, and also try to get a musical grant,” he says. Such grants are offered by the Canada Council for the Arts, which provides successful applicants between $12,000 to $24,000 a year to pursue their artistic and creative developments.

The Mitch Belot Band has come a long way since their first performance together last March, and are already making a name for themselves in Calgary and across the country.

Their most recent gig was JunoFest on April 1, 2016, where they performed to a packed house at The Blues Can in Inglewood. The band’s summer plans include Dog Patch Music Festival in Saskatchewan and the Canada Day Festival in downtown Calgary. “[It’s] super cool because tons of people go to that, and we’re the headlining band,” says Belot.

When asked where he’d like to see himself in five years, Belot answers instantly. “I would love to be touring around with a band and playing all over. I like travelling, but I always like coming home. I’ll be twenty-eight-years-old, so that’s getting closer to really becoming an adult if you’re not a successful musician by that time. Let’s hope I’m doing that!” he laughs. - The Calgary Journal


Discography

Mitch Belot - EP - 2013
Down The Rabbit Hole - 2015

Photos

Bio

Mitch Belot entertains with his swampy story telling style and modern rock flare. He hooks audiences with his powerful, smoky voice, and gets them on their feet by incorporating fast tempos and heavy grooves. While he is first and foremost a humble student of the blues, Mitch adds a taste of rock to the naturally ear pleasing sound that permeates his repertoire.

Mitch, along with the rest of the band including, Vincent Bundick (Guitar), Nick Goodman (Bass) and Dyllan Goodman (Drums), consistently aim to create a memorable and fun atmosphere every time they hit the stage. Now in their 3rd year together, they easily come together to put forth a very cool and interesting new sound that grabs the audience’s attention right away.

Mitch Belot and his band have performed throughout Canada showcasing their talents and entertaining the masses. They have taken part in the NXNE festival in Toronto where they on the list of top 100 acts to see during the festival and played festivals like Canadian Music Week and Juno Fest. They have also supported other successful bands including Trooper, Michael Bernard Fitzgerald, and The Harpoonist and the Axe Murderer.

Mitch is an artist filled with excitement and potential. He will always be connected to music, whether that means playing in front of crowds of thousands the world over, or staying close to home and opening his own guitar shop. For now, Mitch just wants to be heard so that he can bring bluesy happiness to all who listen.

Band Members