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Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville

Courtesy Martin Morissette
Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville
Victoriaville, Quebec
May 21-23, 2021
It seems appropriate that a festival of forward-looking music should be the first organization to present live indoor concerts in Quebec in more than a year. After having to cancel the 2020 edition of the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville (aka Victo, or FIMAV) and facing the unpalatable prospect of a second year without a 37th edition, festival director Michel Levasseur made the bold gamble that he could get Quebec's public health authorities to go along with presenting indoor concerts with an in-person audience.
Somehow, Mr. Levasseur managed to get permission to hold a festival, but under strict pandemic regulations, especially regarding the movement of people inside venues. By necessity, the festival was limited to (with a couple of exceptions) artists living in Quebec, and it was held over three days with twelve concerts, rather than the usual four days and twenty performances.
Even though the few who were able to attend missed their friendsmusicians and music loversfrom outside Quebec, Michel Levasseur and his team must be commended for managing to put on a festival at all under such trying conditions. Indeed, it was an emotional moment when in his introduction to the opening concert Levasseur dedicated the festival to his father, who for health considerations had to miss his first FIMAV since the festival's inception.
Attending Victo after almost fifteen months of social and physical isolation was something of a surreal experience, and in fact, it was difficult to overcome the sensation of doing something illicit by attending indoor concerts, even if the size of the audience was severely restricted by the spacing regulations inside the rooms. The feeling gradually dissipated over the three days.
In his introduction of the quartet of Erick d'Orion,

Rene Lussier
guitarRobbie Kuster
drumsGiven Qubec's gradual emergence from the pandemic experience after months of lockdownQuebec was especially hard-hit by the first wave of the pandemic"emerging music" seemed appropriate. At least, music by people emerging from social isolation. One noteworthy aspect of the program was the number of world premieres, which was probably a product of the long isolation period experienced in Quebec.
The first performance of the festival was, somewhat unusually, a more or less conventional set of songs sung by Israeli-Canadian singer

Ayelet Rose Gottlieb
vocalsb.1979

Hamin Honari
percussionThe second set on Friday was by the afore-mentioned quartet of d'Orion, Lussier, Kuster, and Tétreault. Totally improvised, the performance was the high point of the festival. As the group was about to start, Lussier was heard to muse (in French), "A concert? What are we supposed to do?" Of course Lussier and the rest knew what to do. Washes of computer-generated sound by D'Orion established a base for the other musicians to build on and around, Kuster pushing rhythm, Lussier and Tétreault making forays into the musical space remaining, Lussier prodding with single-note lines, Tetreault exploring texture and rhythm. There were patches in the hour-long set that were exploratory and inchoate, but the quartet always managed to find their way into a musically interesting groove.
Time has seemed elastic over the past fifteen months. Days felt like weeks, weeks felt like days, months felt like years, and the before time felt very far away. Many people spent weeks on end alone at home, which may be why much of the music presented at the festival felt somewhat languid, featuring long, held notes and slowly-developing themes.
Such was the case for

GGRIL
band / ensemble / orchestrab.2002

Eric Normand
bass, electricb.1977
The 5:30 bill at the Carre 150 was a double bill opening with Tamayugé, the Montreal-based duo of Maya Kuroka (voice) and Tamara Filyavich (electronics) whose jump-cut cutesy playfulness and twisted pop attitude contrasted with the lava-like doom metal of Thisquietarmy X Away who followed. It was unclear what Kuroka was singing, it may have been Japanese, English, or nonsense syllables. Filyavich's quicksilver playing covered a lot of ground, from pops and crackles, washes of sound, poppy rhythms, as she played the foil to Kuroka's quirky unpredictability.
There is a robust heavy metal audience in Quebec, and so the first-ever performance between guitarist Eric Quach and drummer Michel Langevin of Voivod, under the names Thisquietarmy and Away, was highly anticipated. Langevin laid down heavy grooves for Quach's heavily processed guitar, which for the most part was based on held chords which Quach manipulated with an impressive array of pedals. Once again, the music was textural and slow-moving, content to lock on a groove and a guitar riff or motif and explore their possibilities before moving on the do the same with a different groove and motif.
The Growlers are a Montreal-based heavy metal choir led by Pierre-Luc Senécal, who has assembled a choir of fourteen voice artists, each of whom specializes in certain growling sounds. Senécal composes pieces for the voices, who sing, or growl, over a pre-recorded electronic and percussive track. The festival program billed The Growlers as the world's only growler choir. In the first half of the concert on Saturday at 7:30 in the Colisée des Bois-Francs, the choir was joined by Montreal poet Fortner Anderson, who recited two of his poems. The second part of the concert featured compositions by Senécal. The two Anderson pieces were powerful expressions of existential dread, and the choir established an appropriately dark, apocalyptic mood. The Senécal pieces were less emotionally powerful but perhaps flashier musically, as Senécal stretched the capabilities of his choir's voices.
In recent years, the concert day at Victoriaville has begun at 1 pm in the St. Christophe d'Arthabaska Church with an acoustic concert, usually a solo. On Saturday, pianist Eve Egoyan performed from "Asking," a work written by composer Maria de Alvear for Egoyan, as well as a second piece, title unannounced. Egoyan tried to produce every possible variation on the melody of "Asking," while the second piece made use of the acoustic possibilities of the church to present a gorgeous display of overtones.
Sunday started with a solo trombone performance by Scott Thomson, who has made appearances at Victo over the years as member of the
Ratchet Orchestra
bass, acousticThe Sunday concert at 3 pm in the Colisée (the big room, but reduced to about 150 capacity) was supposed to be a double bill with Alberta-based artist Kathleen Yearwood followed by the trio of " data-original-title="" title="">Bernard Falaise,
Pierre-Yves Martel
synthesizer
Jean Martin
drumsIn the penultimate concert of the festival, at 5:30 in the Carré 150, Montreal's Quattour Bozzini presented a program of works by Quebec composers. The first was by
Nicolas Caloia
bassRatchet Orchestra
bass, acousticThe final concert of the cutdown FIMAV was another production of " data-original-title="" title="">Ensemble Supermusique under the direction of Joane Hétu and Danielle Palardy Roger, celebrating 40 years of Productions Supermusique, an existence nearly parallel to the festival itself, with whose history it is strongly connected. Michel Levasseur alluded to the shared history in his introduction, hoping for a few more good years for both Supermusique and the festival. The concert, titled "Le Fleuve" (for the Saint Lawrence River, which is the backbone of Quebec), featured compositions by Jean Derome, Hétu, Palardy-Roger, and Clio Palacio-Quintin. It seemed appropriate that a festival of Quebec musicians that began with a program of songs by

Ayelet Rose Gottlieb
vocalsb.1979
Thus ended the 37th edition of FIMAV. The festival was missing a lot of elements, and in some ways was a bit of a sad affair, with limited opportunities to socialize and share ideas, which is a great thing about the festival. But there were plenty of posiitves, and that was the music and what it said about the health of the new music scene in Quebec. It seems that a year of enforced isolation has not been a completely bad thing, and as we emerge from the pandemic, beautiful new music is emerging too.
Next year, with luck, the world will be more-or-less normal in terms of travel and health restrictions and the rest of the world can meet us in Victoriaville. But this meeting of Quebecers was right in terms of the music. Michel Levasseur and his crew made the best of a bad situation, and somehow managed to put on a festival. The rest was up to the musicians, and they were more than worthy.
Tags
Live Review
Mike Chamberlain
Canada
Montreal
Erick d'Orion
René Lussier
Robbie Kuster
Martin Tétreault
Ayelet Rose Gottlieb
13 Lunar Meditations
Jennifer Thiessen
Stéphane Diamantakiou
Bernard Falaise
Ivan Bamford
Hamin Honari
GGRIL
Eric Normand
Tamayugé
Maya Kuroka
Tamara Filyavich
Thisquietarmy
Away
Eric Quach
Michel Langevin
Voivod
The Growlers
Pierre-Luc Senécal
Fortner Anderson
Eve Egoyan
evan parker
Scott Thomson
Ratchet Orchestra
Ensemble Supermusique
Friendly Rich and the Lollipop People
MF Doom
Kathleen Yearwood
Pierre-Yves Martel
Jean Martin
Quattour Bozzini
Nicolas Caloia
Jeff Chippewa
Yves Charuest
Clemens Merkel
Isabelle Bozzini
Stéphanie Bozzini
Alissa Cheung
Joane Hetu
Danielle Palardy Roger
Jean Derome
Clio Palacio-Quintin
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