Richard Desjardins
Richard Desjardins | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Rouyn, Quebec, Canada | March 16, 1948
Genres | Folk |
Occupation(s) | Singer, film director |
Years active | 1981–present |
Website | www |
Richard Desjardins (born March 16, 1948) is a Québécois folk singer and film director.[1]
Career
[edit]Desjardins and his friends formed the country rock ensemble Abbitibbi in the 1970s; Desjardins played piano, guitar, and sang. When the group disbanded in 1982, Desjardins pursued a solo career. He released a number of solo albums, including Tu m'aimes-tu in 1990[2] and Boom Boom,[3] which appeared on the RPM 100 Top Albums list in 1998.[4]
Desjardins also found work scoring films, especially documentaries. This involvement in the Quebec film industry even led him to co-direct a number of feature-length documentaries. He was known for his environmental activism, especially with regards to protecting forests from over-exploitation, and to promote this he and Robert Monderie created the documentary film Forest Alert (L'erreur boréale) in 1999.[5] In 2007 Desjardins, again with Monderie, created The Invisible Nation (Le Peuple invisible), a documentary about the Algonquin nation in Quebec.[6]
Desjardins went on tour in 2013, promoting his album L'existoire; after that he made occasional live appearances, including the 2018 Festival guitares du monde in Abitibi.[7]
In 2017 a group of singers came together at Steve Jolin's Rouyn-Noranda record company to record Chanter Richard Desjardins, a tribute album of Desjardins' songs.[8][9]
He was profiled in Lisette Marcotte's 2019 documentary film The Last Nataq (Le dernier Nataq).[10]
Discography
[edit]Albums
- 1981-Boom Town Café (with Abbittibbi)
- 1988-Les derniers humains
- 1989-Le trésor de la langue (with René Lussier)
- 1990-Tu m'aimes-tu
- 1992-Les derniers humains (new recording)
- 1994-Chaude était la nuit (with Abbittibbi)[11]
- 1998-Boom Boom
- 2003-Kanasuta[12]
- 2011-L'existoire
Live albums
- 1993-Richard Desjardins au Club Soda
- 1996-Desjardins Abbittibbi Live (with Abbittibbi)
Soundtrack
- 1990-Le Party
DVD
- Kanasuta - Là où les diables vont danser (2005)
Filmography
[edit]- 1977 - A Raging Disaster (Comme des chiens en pacage) by Desjardins and Robert Monderie
- 1978 - Firefly (Mouche à feu), by Desjardins and Robert Monderie
- 1999 - Forest Alert (L'erreur boréale) by Desjardins and Robert Monderie
- 2007 - The Invisible Nation (Le peuple invisible) by Desjardins and Robert Monderie
- 2011 - The Hole Story (Trou story) by Desjardins and Robert Monderie
Music for films and theater
[edit]- À double tour (English title: Twice Convicted), by Marie Cadieux, 1994
- The Party (Le Party) by Pierre Falardeau, 1990
- La Nuit avec Hortense (The night with Hortense), by Jean Chabot, 1988
- Noranda, by Robert Monderie and Daniel Corvec, 1984
- Le doux partage (Soft Sharing) by Sylvie van Brabant, 1983
- Depuis que le monde est monde (Since the world is world) by Sylvie van Brabant, 1981
- Blue Winter (L'hiver bleu) by André Blanchard, 1978
- Beat by André Blanchard, 1976 (Desjardins and Abbittibbi as well as other musicians)
- Composed music for and was musical director of ”Têtes rondes et têtes pointues“ ("The Roundheads and the Peakheads") by Bertold Brecht, at the 1986 Brecht International Festival in Toronto.
- Malartic, 2024
Bibliography
[edit]- Carole Couture, "la parole est mine d’or", Éditions Tryptique, Montréal, 1999.
References
[edit]- ^ Larry LeBlanc (27 January 1996). "The Fix on 96". Billboard. pp. 75, 80. ISSN 0006-2510.
- ^ Colin Larkin. The encyclopedia of popular music. Oxford Univ.; 2000.ISBN 978-0-19-531373-4. p. 865.
- ^ Le nouvel observateur. 1998. p. 65.
- ^ "Top Albums/CDs". RPM, Volume 68, No. 5. Oct 26, 1998
- ^ The Canadian forum. Canadian Forum, Limited; March 1999. p. 37.
- ^ "Cousins d’Amérique : encore deux jours". la Nouvelle Republique, 19/10/2019
- ^ "Retrouver Richard Desjardins". La Presse, 29 August 2019 Josée Lapointe
- ^ "Richard Desjardins, tu nous aimes-tu?". Le Devoir, Sylvain Cormier, 22 avril 2017
- ^ "Le défi Richard Desjardins". La Presse, Alain de Repentigny, 1 May 2017
- ^ Manon Dumais, "«Le dernier Nataq»: Richard Desjardins, un homme et son territoire". Le Devoir, April 23, 2021.
- ^ Landscapes and Landmarks of Canada: Real, Imagined, (Re)Viewed. Wilfrid Laurier University Press; 28 March 2017. ISBN 978-1-77112-203-0. p. 173.
- ^ Cormier, Sylvain (2011-04-20). "Desjardins, le nouvel album - Pour ne pas désespérer tout seul". Le Devoir (in French). Retrieved 2023-03-01.
External links
[edit]- Desjardins' web site.
- Words to 59 of Desjardins' songs. (site down)
- Radio Canada (Documentary about Richard Desjardins) (in French)
- Radio France, France Blue (Interviews with Desjardins) (in French)
- Summary of Desjardins Life’s work (in French)
- 1948 births
- Living people
- Canadian male singer-songwriters
- Canadian folk singer-songwriters
- French-language singers of Canada
- People from Rouyn-Noranda
- Film directors from Quebec
- Canadian documentary film directors
- Canadian environmentalists
- Singers from Quebec
- Songwriters from Quebec
- Canadian film score composers
- Félix Award winners
- 20th-century Canadian songwriters
- 21st-century Canadian songwriters