Set Fire to Flames
Set Fire to Flames is a Canadian instrumental post-rock and experimental music collective formed in Montreal in 1999, comprising thirteen musicians drawn from the city's vibrant experimental scene.[1][2] Many of its members, including founder David Bryant, also participate in prominent groups such as Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Hanged Up, Esmerine, Hiss Tracts, HRSTA, Fly Pan Am, and others, making it a key side project within the Constellation Records ecosystem.[3][4] The ensemble's sound emphasizes improvisation, layered instrumentation, and incorporation of found audio elements, often recorded in unconventional conditions like states of sleep deprivation or intoxication to capture raw, atmospheric textures.[2][3] The group released two full-length albums during its active period in the early 2000s. Their debut, Sings Reign Rebuilder, came out in 2001 on Alien8 Recordings and features extended, narrative-driven compositions blending strings, percussion, and ambient noise.[3][5] This was followed by Telegraphs in Negative / Mouths Trapped in Static in 2003 via FatCat Records, which further explored themes of loss and disorientation through dense, cinematic soundscapes.[3][5] While the collective has been largely inactive since, their music appeared on the 2009 FatCat compilation Floored Memory... Fading Location, including previously released tracks like "Steal Compass/Drive North/Disappear" and "When Sorrow Shoots Her Darts."[6] As of August 2025, their catalog was removed from most streaming platforms except Bandcamp, prompting discussions among fans about preservation and accessibility in the digital era.[7]History
Formation
Set Fire to Flames emerged in 1999 from Montreal's vibrant experimental music scene, initiated by David Bryant, a guitarist and co-founder of Godspeed You! Black Emperor. Bryant assembled a collective of 13 musicians—many drawn from the Godspeed orbit and affiliated projects—to perform an initial one-off show, marking the project's spontaneous inception as an improvisational ensemble rather than a traditional band. This gathering embodied the collaborative ethos of the city's post-rock community, where musicians frequently crossed between groups like A Silver Mt. Zion, Fly Pan Am, and Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra.[8][3] Key participants in the formation included Sophie Trudeau on violin and glockenspiel, Mike Moya on guitar, and Bruce Cawdron on drums and percussion, alongside others such as Rebecca Foon (cello), Efrim Menuck (guitar, under the pseudonym "William Bottin"), and contributions from figures like Aidan Girt and Roger Tellier-Craig. The collective's lineup was fluid, reflecting Bryant's vision of a revolving group focused on musique concrète elements, field recordings, and deconstructed instrumentation rather than fixed roles. This ad hoc assembly quickly evolved into a recording project, leading to sessions that captured the raw, site-specific energy of abandoned buildings and urban spaces in Ontario. The group also performed live at the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville on May 17, 2002.[8][9][10][11] The project's roots in 1999's improvisational performance laid the groundwork for its experimental output, distinguishing it from Godspeed's more structured epics by emphasizing fragmented, lo-fi textures and political undertones drawn from personal and communal experiences. While active primarily between 2001 and 2003 for its two main releases, the formation underscored Montreal's role as a hub for such interdisciplinary collectives in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[8][12]Recording and releases
Set Fire to Flames' debut album, Sings Reign Rebuilder, was recorded over five days in July 2000 in a house in Montreal, involving a collective of thirteen musicians in an intensive improvisation-based experiment. The sessions utilized DA-88 machines to capture two-hour uncensored takes, resulting in twelve hours of raw material that blended approximately 60% improvisation with 40% composed elements, incorporating additional field recordings from locations such as Coney Island, East Hastings, and Vancouver Island. Ambient house sounds, including creaking stairs and passing traffic, were intentionally integrated into the recordings to enhance the intimate, lived-in atmosphere. The material was then mixed over two weeks during the winter of 2001 on Vancouver Island, emphasizing a musique concrète approach that prioritized raw, politicized soundscapes.[13] Released in October 2001, Sings Reign Rebuilder was issued by Alien8 Recordings in North America, FatCat Records in Europe, and P-Vine Records in Japan, available on CD and vinyl formats with gatefold packaging and a 24-page color booklet. The album's release marked the collective's emergence from the Montreal experimental scene, showcasing their communal ethos through sprawling, narrative-driven compositions that evoked themes of loss and urban decay.[13][3] The collective's second album, Telegraphs in Negative / Mouths Trapped in Static, was recorded in July 2002 in a cathedral-like barn on an abandoned farm in rural Ontario, where the thirteen members isolated themselves with a 24-track machine and extensive gear transported in a cube truck. The process involved sleepless nights, varying levels of intoxication, and physical confinement, yielding group improvisations, composed pieces guided by rough charts, and ambient captures of the environment such as creaking doors, birdsong, and rattling chains; supplementary recordings occurred at a creaking 19th-century house at 15 Ontario. Mixing followed over the subsequent month, with final computer editing in a Vancouver Island shack, resulting in a double album that expanded on the debut's intensity with more diverse, haunted textures.[14] Issued on April 8, 2003, by Alien8 Recordings as a double vinyl, double CD, and later digital formats, the album featured artwork by Jeff Ladouceur and Michael Ackerman, further solidifying the group's reputation for immersive, site-specific experimental rock. In subsequent years, reissues included a 20th anniversary edition of Sings Reign Rebuilder in 2022 via 130701 and FatCat Records, restoring vinyl availability after two decades out of print and including remastered audio to highlight the original's raw fidelity. No further original studio recordings have been released as of 2025, though the collective's output remains influential in post-rock circles.[14][15]Musical style
Sound characteristics
Set Fire to Flames' music is characterized by dense, experimental soundscapes that blend post-rock elements with ambient noise and musique concrète techniques, often creating a sense of unease and introspection through layered, improvisational compositions.[16] The ensemble's work features prominent analog-derived hiss, static, and industrial noises, such as cavernous roars and atonal guitar drones, which contribute to a raw, unpolished aesthetic reminiscent of chance-based aleatoric music.[16][17] These elements are juxtaposed with minimalist, dirge-like melodies played on guitars, violins, cellos, and percussion, fostering a dark, gothic atmosphere that evokes isolation and foreboding.[18] A hallmark of their sound is the extensive incorporation of field recordings, capturing everyday and environmental noises to enhance the immersive, documentary-like quality of their tracks. Examples include creaks and groans from dilapidated buildings, rustling pages, rattling keys, and distant traffic sounds, which are woven into the instrumentation to blur the lines between music and ambient reality.[18][16][17] Vocal samples, described as "voices from the edge," add a haunting, disembodied layer, often processed to sound ominous and fragmented, as heard in pieces like "Lyingdyingwonderbody."[18][16] The recording process, involving continuous tape rolling in unconventional spaces like barns and houses, amplifies these organic imperfections, resulting in abrupt shifts and cinematic tension that prioritize process over polished structure.[17] Instrumentally, the band's large ensemble—up to 13 members—employs extended techniques and overlapping layers to build slow, evolving crescendos, with sparse percussion and bowed strings providing rhythmic and textural anchors amid the chaos.[18] Tracks like "Déja, Comme des Trous de Vent, Comme Reproduit" exemplify this through rolling guitar riffs, staccato basslines, and uniform hums, while "Rites of Spring Reverb" introduces more melodic contours with complex counterpoint between guitar and violin.[16] Overall, the sound evokes a nocturnal, apocalyptic mood, emphasizing space, nuance, and imbalance to convey emotional depth without relying on traditional song forms.[16][17]Recording approach
Set Fire to Flames employed an improvisational and location-specific recording methodology that emphasized raw, unpolished soundscapes, integrating environmental noises as integral elements rather than isolating the music from its surroundings. This approach drew from post-rock and experimental traditions, prioritizing spontaneity, endurance, and the capture of ambient details to create immersive, narrative-driven compositions. The process typically involved extended group sessions in unconventional spaces, using analog and digital multitrack equipment to document both composed sketches and free-form explorations.[13] For their debut album, Sings Reign Rebuilder (2001), the recording unfolded over five intense days in July 2000 in an old Montreal house, yielding approximately 12 hours of material on two DA-88 digital multitrack recorders. About 60% of the content stemmed from group improvisations focused on drones, textures, and repetition, while 40% incorporated pre-composed elements; environmental sounds like creaking floors and street traffic were deliberately retained to evoke a sense of lived immediacy. The sessions were marked by sleep deprivation and communal experimentation, with mixing completed over two weeks in winter 2001 on Vancouver Island, supplemented by field recordings from locations including Coney Island and East Hastings. This method transformed the house itself into a sonic collaborator, fostering a chaotic yet cohesive aesthetic of urgency and confinement.[13][19] The follow-up, Telegraphs in Negative / Mouths Trapped in Static (2003), adopted a similar ethos but shifted to even more remote isolation, with primary sessions held in July 2002 over five days in a cathedral-like barn on an abandoned farm in rural Ontario, utilizing a 24-track machine and portable gear transported in a cube truck. Improvisations dominated, blending with rough compositional charts and modified electronics, while ambient elements—such as birdsong, creaking doors, and chains—were embraced without suppression, reflecting the project's commitment to site-specific authenticity. Mixing occurred in August 2002 from 12 hours of captured audio, followed by computer-based editing in a Vancouver Island shack; the original plan for a cross-country mobile studio tour was abandoned due to logistics, underscoring the ad-hoc nature of their production. Varying levels of intoxication and minimal sleep further intensified the process, yielding a sound that mirrored themes of escape and reconstruction.[14] Across both works, this recording paradigm avoided polished studio sterility in favor of lo-fi verisimilitude, often resulting in lengthy, evolving pieces that blurred the lines between music, noise, and narrative. Instruments ranged from guitars and strings to horns and custom electronics, but the true "instruments" included the recording environments themselves, which imbued the music with organic, unpredictable textures.[13][14]Members
Core members
Set Fire to Flames was conceived in 1999 by David Bryant, a guitarist, organist, and recording engineer associated with Godspeed You! Black Emperor, who initiated the project and directed its recording sessions.[3][15] The ensemble functioned as a loose collective rather than a traditional band with a fixed lineup, drawing primarily from Montreal's post-rock and experimental music community, with approximately half its participants overlapping with Godspeed You! Black Emperor members.[20] Key contributors included Mike Moya and Roger Tellier-Craig, both guitarists from Godspeed You! Black Emperor, who brought their signature atmospheric and textural playing to the group's improvisational recordings.[20][21] Bruce Cawdron, also from Godspeed You! Black Emperor, handled drums, percussion, and marimba, providing rhythmic foundations amid the chaotic soundscapes.[1] Aidan Girt contributed additional drums, enhancing the layered percussion elements.[22] The core also featured Rebecca Foon on cello, known for her work with Esmerine and Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra, adding emotive string layers.[23][24] Sophie Trudeau provided violin, contributing to the orchestral textures alongside Foon.[23] Fluffy Erskine played saw, percussion, and music box, introducing unconventional, lo-fi sounds that defined the project's raw aesthetic.[1]Affiliations with other projects
Set Fire to Flames was formed as a collective drawing heavily from the Montreal post-rock and experimental music scene, with many of its thirteen members actively involved in overlapping projects that emphasized improvisation, chamber elements, and avant-garde soundscapes.[9] The ensemble's core participants shared strong ties to Godspeed You! Black Emperor, a seminal post-rock group on Constellation Records, which influenced the atmospheric and textural qualities of Set Fire to Flames' recordings.[4] Key members such as David Bryant (guitar and tapes), Efrim Menuck (guitar, organ, and harmonium), Bruce Cawdron (drums and percussion), and Mike Moya (guitar) were founding or long-term contributors to Godspeed You! Black Emperor, contributing to albums like Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven (2000) and Yanqui U.X.O. (2002).[25][26] Several members also participated in Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra (later A Silver Mt. Zion), an offshoot project led by Efrim Menuck that explored more vocal and politically charged compositions. Beckie Foon (cello), Jessica Moss (violin), and Sophie Trudeau (violin) all performed with this group, appearing on releases such as He Has Left Us Alone but Shafts of Light Sometimes Grace the Corner of Our Rooms (2000) and Burning from the Inside Out (2013).[27] Foon, in particular, extended her chamber music interests into Esmerine, a duo she co-founded with Cawdron in 2001, focusing on marimba, cello, and percussion-driven instrumentals; their debut If Only a Sweet Surrender to the Nights to Come Be True (2003) featured contributions from other Set Fire to Flames affiliates like Gen Heistek (violin and viola).[28][29] The collective's experimental ethos connected to noisier and more abrasive outfits, including Hiss Tracts, a duo of Menuck and Bryant that debuted with Workin' for the Music Man (2011), emphasizing tape loops and feedback.[25] Heistek brought her viola expertise from Hangedup, a percussion-viola duo with Eric Craven that released Kicker in Tow (2002) on Constellation, blending punk energy with classical influences.[30] She also contributed to HRSTA (pronounced "Hear-sta"), a project involving Foon and Fluffy Erskine (saw and percussion), known for its brooding, orchestral rock on albums like The Horseshoe (2003). Erskine further linked to Molasses, a folk-noise ensemble, and collaborated with Hrsta on early recordings.[31] Additional affiliations included Fly Pan Am, with contributions from Moya and Menuck on math-rock explorations like Fly Pan Am Plays the Towers of Vietnam (2004), and smaller ventures such as Undo (involving Cawdron) and Le Révélateur (tied to Heistek's scene work).[9] These interconnections underscored Set Fire to Flames' role as a hub within Montreal's Constellation Records ecosystem, fostering cross-pollination among experimental acts without rigid band boundaries.Discography
Studio albums
Set Fire to Flames, a Montreal-based collective founded by David Bryant, has released two studio albums, both characterized by experimental post-rock elements, unconventional recording techniques, and thematic depth exploring loss, tension, and introspection.[10][24] Their debut album, Sings Reign Rebuilder, was released in October 2001 on FatCat Records (with co-release on Alien8 Recordings).[10][32] Recorded in a cluttered basement apartment at 15 Ontario Street in Montreal, the album captures raw, chaotic energy through layered instrumentation including guitars, percussion, field recordings, and spoken-word elements, evoking a sense of political urgency and emotional intensity amid themes of love, loss, and world-weariness.[10] Running over 73 minutes across 15 tracks, it establishes the collective's signature approach of immersive, narrative-driven soundscapes that blend adventure with desolation. A 20th anniversary edition was released in October 2021 by 130701.[15] The follow-up, Telegraphs in Negative / Mouths Trapped in Static, arrived in April 2003, also on FatCat Records (co-released with Alien8 Recordings).[10][33] Recorded during an intense two-week session in July-August 2002 inside a cavernous, cathedral-like barn in rural Ontario, the sessions involved minimal sleep, substance use, and physical confinement, resulting in a more restrained yet intricate production featuring tape manipulation, drone textures, and abrasive contrasts between radiant ambiance and grounded noise.[10] Spanning 17 tracks and approximately 88 minutes, the double album delves deeper into hypnotic, static-laden compositions that convey isolation and subtle menace, marking a evolution toward greater studio experimentation while retaining the debut's emotional core.| Album Title | Release Date | Label(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Sings Reign Rebuilder | October 9, 2001 | FatCat Records / Alien8 Recordings[32] |
| Telegraphs in Negative / Mouths Trapped in Static | April 8, 2003 | FatCat Records / Alien8 Recordings[33] |