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#先锋前卫摇滚 #前卫摇滚 #实验摇滚
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欧美

艺人介绍

by Dave LynchAs of 2005 and the release of Parade + Live at NEARfest, Montreal avant-prog group Miriodor are still carrying the flag they first hoisted a quarter of a century earlier as one of the first groups on the rock side of the Quebec-based musique actuelle equation. At their inception, Miriodor could also be viewed as North American practitioners of the Rock in Opposition (RIO) style pioneered by such European groups as Henry Cow, Etron Fou Leloublan, Débile Menthol — instrumental prog rock with the requisite technical skill and virtuosity but none of the pomposity that dragged down better-known prog outfits. Thanks to nearly two decades of continued support from the Cuneiform label, Miriodor have documented their steady artistic growth on one CD after another, without the need to compromise their music according to popular tastes in the rock music marketplace.The band was founded in Quebec City by keyboardist Pascal Globensky and multi-instrumentalist François Émond (violin, flute, clarinet, keyboards) in 1980 and went through a number of personnel changes before stabilizing as a sextet in 1983. This lineup, which included drummer Rémi Leclerc, saxophonist Sabin Hudon, keyboardist/bassist Marc Petitclerc, and bassist/guitarist Denis Robitaille, recorded the first Miriodor vinyl LP, Rencontres, as well as a cassette-only release, Tôt ou Tard, which featured the quartet of Globensky, Émond, Leclerc, and Hudon joined by original sextet members Petitclerc and Robitaille on three tracks. By the fall of 1984 Petitclerc and Robitaille had dropped out of the band and the remaining foursome moved to Montreal to continue the Miriodor saga.However, by 1987 the Miriodor story was beginning to look like the Incredible Shrinking Band, as group co-founder Émond departed and Globensky was now the only Miriodor member who had been with the group since its 1980 inception. Nevertheless, with the trio members of Globensky, Leclerc, and Hudon all playing synthesizers and embracing the possibilities of MIDI technology, the band conjured up a wide range of instrumental voicings and textures, and was able to maintain a sound that often suggested a larger — but far from heavy-handed — ensemble.In 1988 Miriodor began their relationship with Cuneiform, which released the trios eponymously named label debut that year. After the dawn of the CD era, Miriodor was re-released with the addition of the quartet tracks from Tôt ou Tard featuring Émond; still later (1998), Cuneiform reissued the earlier sextet album Rencontres on CD, and included on this disc the Tôt ou Tard tracks that also featured Petitclerc and Robitaille.As the 1990s began, Miriodor appeared to have comfortably settled into its trio lineup of Globensky, Hudon, and Leclerc with the 1991 Cuneiform CD 3è Avertissement (3rd Warning), which featured packaging nearly as intriguing as the music; in the place of the usual jewel box front-cover tray card was a square plastic bag with six little cardboard cutouts — each of the three bandmembers and a hammer, paintbrush, and saw — floating around inside. In fact, Miriodor would remain a trio for a while longer, but just not this trio. In 1993-1994, Hudon amicably eased himself out of the world of Miriodor to pursue a career in television production, and in came a new member, Bernard Falaise, who would soon prove to be one of the most diverse and acclaimed guitarists associated with musique actuelle in all its forms: rock-based, jazz-based, experimental, free improvisation — he would be all over the map with Miriodor and many other groupings (sometimes paired with Leclerc) for the next decade and beyond.On Miriodors next Cuneiform CD, Jongleries Élastiques (Elastic Juggling), released in 1996, the core trio was now Globensky, Leclerc, and Falaise, with Hudon in a sort of quasi-bandmember status before his final departure. But the idea of a trio relying completely on electronic technology to replicate the sounds of a large ensemble were left behind, and the Incredible Shrinking Band now drew on a slew of guest artists (notably a number of members of Claude St-Jeans LOrkestre des Pas Perdus, including St-Jean himself on trombone, Jean-Denis Levasseur on flute, and Ivanhoe Jolicoeur on trumpet) to add new colors and textures to Miriodors sound palette on selected tracks.And Miriodor was not merely a studio construct in 1996, making concert and festival appearances that year in Baltimore, Montreal, and St-Malo (France). With the groups music as difficult to pigeonhole as ever, it is interesting to note that Miriodors Baltimore set was performed at ProgScape 96, a progressive rock showcase, and the very next week they played at the Montreal Jazz Festival (earlier festival appearances had included the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville in 1988). Clearly, festival programmers and audiences with differing musical backgrounds and sensibilities were attracted to the music of Miriodor, regardless of how their ears might have been preconditioned. The enthusiasm of jazz fans is particularly noteworthy, as Miriodors music is often thoroughly (and intricately) composed, with little to no emphasis on improvisation. Yet the allure is easy to grasp, given the musics forward momentum, melodic accessibility, contrasting moods, and surprising juxtapositions, not to mention the technical skills and nimble playing of the players themselves.The trio of Globensky, Leclerc, and Falaise became a quartet in 1998 with the addition of bassist/keyboardist Nicolas Masino, and this group recorded Mekano, released (again on Cuneiform) in 1991. Saxophonist Marie-Chantal Leclair was also featured prominently on this CD, which included violinist Marie-Soleil Bélanger as one of the guest musicians as well. The core quartet (whose members are collectively responsible for all of the composing and arranging) along with Leclair and Bélanger then appeared at the 2002 NEARfest in Trenton, NJ — a clear artistic highlight amidst a sea of otherwise routine and sometimes bombastic prog rock, Miriodor were rapturously received by a clear majority of those in attendance and invited back by the organizers for a NEARfest pre-festival show in 2003.The bandmembers remained active in 2004, writing and recording music for yet another Cuneiform release with guest participation by Swedish composer/accordionist/keyboardist Lars Hollmer on several tracks, as well as classical bassoonist Lise Millet. The studio CD was issued as part of a two-disc package in 2005; Parade + Live at NEARfest includes on its second disc the bands entire set (mixed by Bob Drake) that had garnered such justifiable enthusiasm at NEARfest 2002. And in 2005 — 25 years after Pascal Globensky and François Émond formed the first incarnation of Miriodor — the group was back in front of audiences at the Gouveia Art Rock Festival in Portugal, club shows in Montreal, and the Guelph Jazz Festival in Guelph, Ontario. These concerts featured Ipso Facto violinist Chantal Bergeron as a replacement for the departing Marie-Soleil Bélanger, and the bands Gouveia set included guest appearances by Lars Hollmer and Belgian bassoonist Michel Berckmans. With great fire, wit, drive, and spirit, Miriodor continue their unconventional musical adventure.


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