North Shore News February 22 2013

Page 20

A20 - North Shore News - Friday, February 22, 2013

MUSIC

Ariane Moffatt escapes into another world Electronic pop musician adds new dimension to soundscape

■ Ariane Moffatt at The Media Club, Tuesday, Feb. 26. Doors at 8 p.m., Tickets $13 available in advance online at amoffatt.bpt.me.

John Goodman jgoodman@nsnews.com

A relative unknown in English-speaking Canada, Montreal’s Ariane Moffatt is a big deal in the province of Quebec.

The Québécoise singersongwriter’s 2002 debut album, Aquanaute, went platinum in her home province, earning 11 nominations at the 2003 ADISQ Awards and winning three Félix awards (for Discovery of the Year, Album of the Year and Album Producer of the Year). In 2008 she collaborated with Franco-Israeli singersongwriter Yael Naim on Tous les sens (All the Senses), which was awarded Francophone Album of the Year at the 2009 Juno Awards and the Charles Cros Academy Award in Europe. Moffatt was born in Quebec City, the heart of francophone Canada and before she went on a long vacation at the age of nine she’d had little contact with the country’s other official language. “I started speaking English and listening to rap music,” Moffatt says. “I liked to be in the English world also. “I was always curious about anything that could produce a sound or a beat. It was natural for me. I started taking piano lessons early and began writing songs and decided to study music in college and university.” She studied jazz singing at Cégep de Saint-Laurent and then continued on to the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). “There was a program

photo Maude Arsenault

QUÉBÉCOISE singer-songwriter Ariane Moffatt mixes French and English material on her new album MA — a reflection of Mile End, the multicultural Montreal neighbourhood where she lives and works. called Pop Music,” she says. “I thought I could bring some of my own songs into the program and keep my work going on at the same time I was learning. I did two years but I didn’t finish as I was hired by Daniel Bélanger and he took me on tour with him as a keyboard player and backup singer.” Moffatt was forced to

make a quick transition from student to professional musician opening for Bélanger on guitar with her own material and then switching to keyboards to finish gigs as a member of his band. “I didn’t expect to be hired,” she says. “I knew I could play but he gave me so much confidence and a lot of

responsibility so that was a great way to start a career. It was a big learning process.” Over the past decade Moffatt has continued to grow as a musician, regularly releasing albums that extend her conceptual reach. In 2010, she recorded 12 tracks (all covers of Englishlanguage pop songs) for the Radio-Canada medical show

Trauma and released the collection as a soundtrack album. The disc, featuring mainly piano and voice reworkings of songs such as R.E.M.’s “Everybody Hurts,” Leonard Cohen’s “In My Secret Life,” and Cat Power’s “The Greatest,” gave Moffatt the opportunity to exercise her English chops. Her treatment

of Ellie Greenwich/Jeff Barry’s “Be My Baby” (made famous by Phil Spector and The Ronettes) is a soulful demo making a seamless connection between the art of French chanson and contemporary pop music. “The producer of the show contacted me and asked me to make little acoustic versions of some classic pop songs,” she says. “It was her idea and I was so happy I dove into the idea. It was my first chance to show the public that I was interested in singing in English and it inspired me to try and write songs in English. I knew I would do it someday but I wanted to be sure I was ready. I didn’t not want to translate songs from French to English but to think in English and that’s what happened when I created MA my latest album. I was going to the studio and some songs were coming out in English and others were in French and that’s when I knew I was ready to go on.” With MA Moffatt is moving outside of her comfort zone into new sonic territory with a 50/50 split between English and French songs. “It was natural for me,” she says. “My influences are bilingual and it seemed like a natural progression. It was something that I wanted to experience. If I wanted to break into the English market it might have been easier to go entirely in English but I thought it was a nice picture of the reality of Montreal and of my neighbourhood, Mile End, to go both ways. Mile End is multicultural and pretty much bilingual.” MA is not only a hybrid lyrically but musically as well. Moffatt, who early on played with the trip hop band Tenzen, mixes electronica in with her pop material. The two go hand in hand, in fact, she enlisted DJ Ghislain Poirier to create remixes of all the tracks and released those versions as a separate project. Usually Moffatt begins working on songs with lyrics but on MA it is all about the music building tracks with a hypnotic electronic feel. See Moffatt page 22

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