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Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville 2017
ByVictoriaville, Quebec, Canada
May 18-21, 2017
In Canada, the Monday closest to May 24, the birthday of Queen Victoria, is a public holiday (in Quebec it has two names: Journée des Patriotes or Fête du Dollardit's complicated), and the Victoria Day long weekend is the unofficial start of Canada's summer. The Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville (FIMAV), held from the Thursday to Sunday of the Victoria Day weekend, can similarly be seen as an unofficial kickoff to the summer festival season. The 2017 Victo was the 33rd, and as the years move along, the festival has developed traditions (both formal and informal) of its own, among which is the ability to continue to evolve and surprise.
As usual the weather was changeable and frequently quite cool at night. The opening evening started at a humid +30C and ended a good 20 degrees celsius colder just a few hours later at 1:00 a.m. The pertinent information for this review is that, in those few hours, the collision of the cold and warm fronts caused a windstorm that resulted in a brief power outage during Colin Stetson's set. Apart from that, the weather was spring jacket friendly, ending in a gloriously sunny final day on Sunday. In a way, the weather matched the levels of the performances as the weekend went along, culminating in the shining brilliance of

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945
This edition of the festival, more than any before it, featured performances that employed visual images as an integral part of the presentation. In the regular program were Karl Lemieux and BJ Nilsen, Novi_Sad, and Michaela Gril with Maia Osijnik and

Terry Riley
composer / conductorb.1935
A most successful series was the 1 p.m. acoustic concerts on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, thanks to the concordance between performers and space, ?glise Sainte-Christophe d'Arthabaska, a historic greystone structure from the 1870s, with a beautifully decorated interior and impeccable acoustics. It is the church where Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Canada's prime minister from 1896 to 1911, attended services during his holidays from government duties in Ottawa, and it was from Laurier's pew that I took in the performance of

Tristan Honsinger
cellob.1949
Josh Zubot
violinNicolas Caloia
bassI have to admit that the idea of a tenor saxophone quartet is not so appealing to me on the face of it, but Battle Trance, who played Sainte-Christophe on Saturday, showed that such a configuration need not be monochromatic. The compositions of " data-original-title="" title="">Travis Laplante are full of surprising twists and turns, and the playing was totally on top of the challenge. Again, the acoustics of the church allowed the quartet to fill the room with sound. Finally, on Sunday, " data-original-title="" title="">Jean-Luc Guionnet, better-known as an alto saxophonist, totally demolished all standard preconceptions of what a church organ can do. Guionnet used a range of extended techniques to make the organ do things its makers or current caretakers certainly never envisioned and might not have been happy with, but which was totally enthralling in its power and joyful play of musician, instrument, and space.
The theater space in the Carré 150 was chosen deliberately for its seating arrangement to allow the audience to view dancer

Bill Coleman
trumpet1904 - 1981
In fact, the first two days of the festival produced only a couple of highlightsthe Honsinger/Zubot/Caloia trio and Senyawa, an electrifying duo from Indonesia. Wukir Suryadi plays homemade three-stringed instruments in a heavy rock style while vocalist Rully Shabara does a kind of high speed rap in a number of Indonesian dialects. Brilliant and inventive, and totally enthralling, Shabara and Suryadi owned the house for their set in front of the very proggish Ex Eye. This was one of several times that FIMAV seemed like a world music festival. On Saturday evening at 8:00, violinist Gunda Gottschalk and accordionist " data-original-title="" title="">Ute V?lker and the three Samdanamba sisters from Mongolia presented a thoroughly charming set of Mongolian folk songs that they call Sky and Grassland. The accompaniment was simple and direct, and the vocals were heartfelt and soulful, a testament to the way that music can touch the the heart despite language barriers and cultural differences.
The program for Saturday and Sunday looked promising, and a healthy number of concerts lived up to hopes. After Battle Trance opened Saturday's program,

Nate Wooley
trumpetb.1974
Following the performance of Sky and Grassland at 8 o'clock came a duo of

Terry Riley
composer / conductorb.1935

Gyan Riley
guitarIn recent years, the midnight shows have featured highly inventive rock-based groups whose performances grab the audience by the throat and never let go. Such was not the case this year. The two short film presentations by Karl Lemieux and BJ Nilsen were much more interesting visually than sonically, and " data-original-title="" title="">Bent Knee, Friday night's offering was an anomaly for FIMAV, considering their apparent commercial pop aspirations. According to people I trust, I missed a very interesting set by Maia Osojnik and All.The.Terms.We.Are. on Saturday, but lack of patience on my part at the end of a long day of music and a slow beginning to the set induced me to leave early. My loss, apparently.
As mentioned earlier, Sunday was a lovely late spring day. Following Jean-Luc Guionnet's restructuring of the concept of organ music, we took advantage of the fine weather to visit the outdoor sound installations that have become a fixture of the festival. The evening program concluded with three performances: the

Nels Cline
guitar, electricb.1956
The final evening will go down as one of the best ever. Cline and his musicians, guitarist

Julian Lage
guitar, electric
Scott Colley
bassb.1963

Tom Rainey
drumsb.1957

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Rene Lussier
guitarAnd that was it for another edition of FIMAV, save for the goodbyes to the festival going friends that we only see once a year. Michel Levasseur declared at the final press conference that the festival team was very pleased with the festival, considering the rise in attendance from 2016 and the quality and variety of the musical performances. With great flexibility in venue options and the prospect of an ongoing film component in the program, Levasseur has the tools he needs to keep FIMAV as vital to the global avant/experimental music community as it has been since its inception over thirty years ago.
Tags
Live Reviews
Mike Chamberlain
Canada
Montreal
anthony braxton
Matija Schellander
Terry Riley
Tristan Honsinger
Josh Zubot
Nicolas Caloia
Travis Laplante
Jean-Luc Guionnet
Bill Coleman
Ute V?lker
nate wooley
Gyan Riley
Bent Knee
Nels Cline
Julian Lage
Scott Colley
Tom Rainey
René Lussier
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