Paul Piché

Paul Piché

September 5, 1953 (71 years old) in Montréal, Québec, Canada

Paul PichĂ© (born September 5, 1953, in La Minerve, Quebec) is a singer-songwriter, environmentalist, political activist and Quebec sovereigntist. He mostly composes on acoustic guitar, although some of his recent work has had some electronica sound input. Many of his songs have become classics of the QuĂ©bĂ©cois repertoire at cabaret nights, parties, camp fires, and especially at Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day celebrations. PichĂ© studied archaeology at the UniversitĂ© de MontrĂ©al, and in the early 1970s sang in Quebec colleges. In 1977 the keyboardist Robert LĂ©ger of Beau Dommage encouraged him to record his first LP, À qui appartient le beau temps, which sold more than 100,000 copies. In 1980, PichĂ© releases his second album, L’escalier, which was inspired by his trip down the staircase in RenĂ© LĂ©vesque Boulevard. From then on, PichĂ© began working with the keyboardist Michel Hinton (also from Beau Dommage). His single "Tous les vents", reached second place on the Radio-activitĂ© chart in August 1984 and his album Nouvelles d'Europe won the FĂ©lix Award for best rock album of 1985. In 1986 he performed with Michel Rivard and released a double album, IntĂ©gral, which is a collection of all his works. He then travelled throughout Quebec and performed at the festivals of MillĂ©naire in Brussels, in La Rochelle, and in Nyon, Switzerland. Sur le chemin des incendies, which sold more than 100,000 copies, revealed a more personal facet of the songwriter. Many pieces were written in collaboration with the guitarist Rick Haworth. "J'appelle", reached first place on the Radio activitĂ© chart in December 1988. PichĂ© participated in the St-Jean Baptiste nationalist gatherings in 1990 on the Plains of Abraham of Quebec City, and on St. Helen's Island in Montreal. Often associated with the great names of the Quebec chanson, PichĂ© participated in La FĂȘte Ă  Vigneault at the Francofolies of Montreal in 1990, which celebrated the 30-year-career of the national poet. Montreal's La Presse proclaimed PichĂ© 'Personality of the Year' in the song category. An artist committed to the causes of workers, of the state, and of ecology, PichĂ© is the songster of the common man. Such songs as "À qui appartient le beau temps", and "Les Pleins" have become classics of the genre. Journalist Laurent Saulnier stated that PichĂ© was the missing link between Bruce Springsteen and Jacques Brel, "an original mixture of French song, American rock, and Quebec folklore". (Voir, February 23, 1989). In 2016, during the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day, he performed after Triple Rock, a group that is made out of ThĂ©o, Yoopa and BenoĂźt Archambault. From June 17 to 19, 2018, Paul had performed at the City Center in Saint-Constant, Quebec after Alexis Arbour. Source: Article "Paul PichĂ©" de WikipĂ©dia en français, soumis Ă  la licence CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Credits