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Raôul Duguay
Canadian musician and politician

Raôul Duguay

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian musician and politician
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Val-d'Or
Age
85 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Raôul Duguay (born February 13, 1939) is an artist, poet, musician, and political activist in the Canadian province of Quebec. He been an active performer since 1966. Duguay is a longtime supporter of the Quebec sovereignty movement and has run for public office on at least two occasions.

Artist

Duguay was born in Val-d'Or in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region of Quebec, an event that he later chronicled on the semi-autobiographical track "La bittt à Tibi" on his first album. He began writing poetry in the 1950s, and his first two anthologies were published in 1966 and 1967.

He met Walter Boudreau in 1967, and the two artists formed L'Infonie shortly thereafter. This project was intended both as a music group and a new approach to collective improvisation; Duguay published its manifesto in 1970. The group released a number of albums on the avant-garde side of Quebec's progressive rock and jazz-rock scenes before dissolving in 1973. Boudreau and Duguay have re-united on occasion since then, including in 2007 for an Orgues et Couleurs festival.

Duguay released his first solo album in 1975, entitled Alllô tôulmônd; this album features "Tôuttt etô bôuttt," one of his best known tracks. The following year, he performed in front of 400,000 people at the province's Fête nationale, an annual Quebec nationalist cultural event. Duguay released several more solo albums in the seventies, eighties, and nineties; after a gap of eleven years, he returned with J'ai soif in 2010. His song "La bittt à Tibi" was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2008.

Duguay also provided the music for the film Les Fleurs Sauvages (1982), for which he received a Genie nomination. In 1984, he took part in a musical collaboration with Parti Québécois legislator Gilles Baril. In 1996, he provided the text for a revised version of Terry Riley's In C.

Duguay has continued to publish works of poetry. His sixteenth volume, entre la lettre et l'esprit, was issued in 2001. He has also worked in the visual arts as a painter and sculptor.

Politics

Duguay is a longtime supporter of Quebec sovereigntism. In his poem Trente Lettres (1995), he described Canada as a father who "never gave mother [Quebec] an orgasm." In 2010, he signed a public letter criticizing the organizers of Quebec City's Festival d'été for booking mostly anglophone acts to perform.

Duguay ran for the House of Commons of Canada in the 1972 federal election as a non-affiliated candidate in Longueuil, under the name "Raôul Wéziwézô Duguay." He finished well behind Liberal candidate Jacques Olivier. In the 1998 provincial election, he ran as a candidate of the governing Parti Québécois in Brome-Missisquoi. He finished second to Liberal incumbent Pierre Paradis.

Discography

  • Alllô tôulmônd, 1975
  • L'Envol, 1976
  • M, 1977
  • Vivant avec tôulllmônd, 1978
  • On s'm ô Kébek, 1979
  • Le Chanteur de pomme, 1982
  • Tout ce qui compte, 1983
  • Douceur, 1985
  • Nova, 1989
  • Monter en amour, 1993
  • La Santé par la Rire (with Jean Drouin), 1995
  • Caser, 1999
  • J'ai soif, 2010

Anthologies

  • ruts, 1966
  • or le cycle du sang dure donc, 1967
  • Manifeste de l'Infonie, le ToutArtBel, 1970
  • Musiques du KébèK, 1971
  • Lapokalipsô, 1971
  • D'amour, 1976
  • Mainmise, 1976
  • Quand j'étions p'tit, 1977
  • Le poète à la voix d'Ô, 1979
  • Les Saisons, 1981
  • Chansons d'Ô, 1981
  • KébèK à la porte, 1993
  • réveiller le rêve suivi de ruts et or le cycle du sang dure donc, 1996
  • nu tout nu, le rêveur réveillé, 1997
  • L'Infonie, le bouttt de touttt, 2000
  • entre la lettre et l'esprit, 2001

Electoral record

Quebec general election, 1998: Brome-Missisquoi
PartyCandidateVotes%∆%
LiberalPierre Paradis18,12757.17−3.95
Parti QuébécoisRaôul Duguay9,78930.87+1.07
Action démocratiqueEric Larivière3,59911.35+4.58
Natural LawJean-Charles Rouleau1940.61−0.30
Total valid votes31,70999.19
Rejected and declined votes2580.82
Turnout31,96780.56−3.51
Electors on the lists39,680
Source: Official Results, Le Directeur général des élections du Québec.


Canadian federal election, 1972: Longueuil
PartyCandidateVotes%∆%
LiberalJacques Olivier22,12944.62
Social CreditEmile-A. Vadeboncoeur12,09124.38
    Progressive ConservativeMarcel Robidas7,01514.14
New DemocraticRobert Mansour4,5489.17
    IndependentJacques Gendron2,0204.07
    Non-AffiliatedRaôul Wéziwézô Duguay1,6253.28
    N/A (Marxist-Leninist)André Pesant1700.34
Total valid votes49,598100.00
Total rejected ballots2,977
Turnout52,57572.56
Electors on the lists72,458
Source: Official Voting Results, Office of the Chief Electoral Officer (Canada), 1972.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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