About

Hamel’s songs are achingly catchy, or sometimes just aching. They often juxtapose deeply sad and even scathing lyrics with happy melodies that sweep you in. Imagine the musical landscape of a lush big band who would play with Frank Sinatra or Peggy Lee set against the emotional palette of Jeff Buckley...

Hamel is complex, seductive, clever. His songs reflect subtlety, anxiety, euphoria.

"But at the same time I would like to listen to PJ Harvey, Jeff Buckley, Peggy Lee, who is very sexy and strict and melancholic, but I also like Prince and Carmen McRae"

“By the time I was 17 and finished school I moved immediately out from my parents, not because I didn’t like them, but because I didn’t like the place they lived. I moved to the city of Utrecht.” He applied for a course in literature and journalism but left after the first year. “I was just interested in working for magazines like Vanity Fair and this course was very technical - how to write a news story.” He toyed with the idea of music school. He had guitar lessons and he was compulsively listening to Smashing Pumpkins. He wondered if music school would try to change the style before he had even developed it, but he was unhappy with journalism and decided to apply. “I wanted to make my voice bigger and learn theory so I could write songs. 120 people applied to music school and only four could be accepted, and I was, so that was quite an honour.”

Hamel did five years of music school from 1995-2001. “They did try to change me. Everyone who warned me was correct. But at the same time, what a blessing to do music every day. I came to the institute with this light airy voice. They tried to make me a crooner. I sang everything from old jazz to bossa nova. The drew out a voice that I had in me that perhaps I would never have known. It took me a while to learn what I should drop and what I should keep. It took me a while to redevelop my own style.” What he gained in knowledge he seemed to have lost in confidence. That feeling of knowing who he is in his own skin. When he left music school he began working as a singing teacher. It would be four years before his friends would even hear him sing. “My singing technique was really good. Because of all the singing lessons I gave people I learnt a lot, but I was really insecure. The new people I met never heard me play or sing. I didn’t go to jam sessions any more. One day I saw an advert in a newspaper for a Dutch jazz vocalist competition. I jokingly said I could win. I didn’t really believe I could...” But of course he did and he began to realise the conservatory had given him an amazing background. He didn’t have to sing jazz standards. “Gradually I got rid of my inhibitions and I began to write songs.”

By 2006 he had a record deal with the Dutch label Dox Records. “I was exhilarated, especially at the thought of me working and collaborating to write songs.” He began to collaborate with Benny Sings, a producer and member of the 'Dox Family' with whom he still works. “I knew about chords and melody, but I didn’t know how to make a beat and how to make something work and how to make a sound, but Benny did.” Hamel’s sound is unusual, a complex mixture of inspirations. One of his mentors was Jon Hendricks, American jazz legends, and he did workshops with him. “But at the same time I would like to listen to PJ Harvey, Jeff Buckley, Peggy Lee, who is very sexy and strict and melancholic, but I also like Prince and Carmen McRae.” From his own influences he learnt how contradiction and paradox forms the most powerfully crafted songs. The tunes are uplifting and the words are sad. Curiously that makes the tunes seem even happier and the words sadder. “I have discovered that music is my therapy. Through my writing I have discovered more about my light and my dark sides. Musically it might be called melancholic, a kind of nostalgia for a beautiful place you once had. If I went through my playlist of my favourite songs, lots of them would be melancholic. Sometimes the greatest songs are never the happiest, they are ones that affect you, that make you embrace life with all of its happiness and sadness. “Sometimes the things that make me happy also make me sad. Playing live - it’s exciting and terrifying. Music makes me happy.” But often musically he’s expressing sadness.

How is Hamel in love, happy or heartbroken? “Both. I don’t believe that love makes you happy. I believe in relationships and being in love, but I think you always keep longing for something you can’t explain and perhaps romanticise past relationships. I don’t analyse the lyrics when I’m writing them... only after. From my songs you can tell that in love I’m usually the one who is dumped rather than the one who dumps. And although that’s true and I might embrace that moment, I’m also very lucky in that now I’m very happy. It seems that I put all my melancholy in my songs.”

The Band

Pieter de Graaf

Pieter is my man on keys but not just your average man on keys. Simply watch his feet shaking and his entire body language behind the piano and you will know what I mean. He's a groovy musician but Pieter also has a very sensitive and lyrical side to his playing, which is just as wonderful as his high energy romping. He's recently delivered a fantastic debut album with his own compositions. Pieter is addicted to coffee and simply won't play until he's found some.

Jasper van Hulten

For me (and many others) Jasper is one of Holland's best and most talented jazz-drummers. He started playing professionally at quite a young age. He's played with a couple of amazing bands and luckily he's still touring with me. Jasper's voice is quite high-pitched and very clear, which is wonderful for our backing vocals. A comedian lurks somewhere deep inside of him, one day he will simply have to do a stand up-show..

Sven Happel

Sven plays double bass in our band. He also plays a mean electric bass but I'm so fond of acoustic double bass that he rarely gets the chance to play electric. Sven and Jasper have known each other since they were tiny jazz teenagers, so that's why they sound so tight together. Sven has a very deep voice and can sing most of his bass parts. He's extremely quick-witted and has a multitude of puns, some good, some bad and some just utterly tasteless.

Rory Ronde

Our superstar on guitar! His solos will give you goose bumps, he's a natural talent and comes from a very musical family (his father Henry played steel drums on one of our songs). Rory is a true connoisseur of everything funky, groovy & jazzy and he rarely leaves home without his music and headphones. When we're travelling, Rory is always the one who falls asleep first, anywhere, anytime.

Gijs Anders van Straalen

A.k.a. the 'Percussion Professor'. Gijs is probably the most educated man in my band, he's anethnomusicologist and knows all there is to know about percussion instruments from around the world. He has found instruments in the strangest places and combined all his treasures to make the awesome set-up he has on stage. His name is nearly impossible to pronounce if you're not Dutch, because it begins with our famous guttural G-sound, so have a go at it: GGGGijs!