User:Christineargue/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Poirier
OriginMontreal, Quebec, Canada
Genreselectronic music
Canadian hip hop
Occupation(s)DJ, record producer
Years active2001–present
LabelsNinja Tune
Websitehttp://www.poiriersound.com/

Poirier is the abbreviated stage name of Ghislain Poirier, who is a DJ/producer from Montreal. He is signed to the Ninja Tune record label, but has, however, also worked with other labels such as Chocolate Industries, Rebondir, Shockout, Musique Large, Intr_version and 12k. His work mainly consists of original instrumental mixes and mixes featuring Montreal hip hop MCs including Omnikrom, Face-T and Séba. He also has collaborated with Beans, TTC, Lotek HiFi and Nik Myo. He is noted for popular remixes of tracks of rock and hip hop artists such as Les Georges Leningrad, Clipse, Editors, Bonde Do Role, Kid Sister, Pierre Lapointe, Champion and Lady Sovereign. Though he has worked in many different genres of electronic music, he is known for his eclectic taste in music and appreciation of tropical bass sounds.

Career[edit]

Early work[edit]

From 1995-2000, Poirier was involved in campus community radio at CISM (Université de Montréal). During this time he had a radio show entitled "Branché: Monde"[1] He began his career performing and recording under his full name with his debut album, Il N'y A Pas de Sud being released in 2001. It has been described as "an uncompromising minimal electronics record that fit part and parcel with the laptop zeitgeist".[2] Along with Deadbeat, Tim Hecker and Mitchell Akiyama, Poirier was part of "what became known as the Montreal minimal techno movement".[3] Sous le manguier, features cover art by Poirier himself.

The middle few albums were more hip hop in genre. Conflits and Beats As Politics were all mostly instrumental, though Conflits features two songs with Poirier doing spoken word (he also was responsible for the cover art). Other hip hop vocalists who collaborated on these records are Quebecois rappers Séba and Diverse. Poirier's fifth album,Breakupdown, was more a combination of hip hop and techno sounds, described as "big synth sounds ripped from angrily forgotten techno, gooey basslines, and choice samples"[4] Soon after the album's release, Porier was remixing Buck 65, Lady Sovereign, Pole, Bassnectar, Cadence Weapon, and others. He then founded Rebondir, his own imprint and released an EP.[5]

As well, during this time, Poirier was also involved in collaborations with contemporary choreographer and dancer Dana Michel.[6]

Ninja Tune[edit]

Poirier's first Ninja Tune full length release was 2007's No Ground Under. Though rappers Omnikrom appear on the album, the record deviated from his previous work, focusing instead on dancehall, including vocalists Face-T and MC Zulu. In 2008, he was invited to perform at the New Yorker Festival[7]

In 2009 Poirier began the release of three EPs to be completed over the course of a full year, the first of which was Soca Sound System (April 2009) which included guest appearances by MC Zulu as well as Soca performer Mr. Slaughter.[8] Where Soca Sound System experimented with soca, the second Run The Riddim experimented with dancehall and the third, Low Ceiling, which came out in early 2010, focused on dance music with no vocals, "said to be inspired in part by his early years in the underground rave scene"[9] Run The Riddim was the first release under the shortened name Poirier.[10] All of the three EPs featured cover art by Montreal-based photographer Guillaume Simoneau.[11]

Also in 2009 he was featured on a Truckback Records remix project for dancehall artist Erup's hit "Click My Finger" alongside Grahmzilla of Thunderheist, Nick Catchdubs and Lunice.

In January 2010, Poirier's music was used alongside Flying Lotus and Roberto Carlos Lange, among others, as the soundtrack to New York artist Brian Alfred's It’s Already the End of the World, "a solo exhibition of new work by Brooklyn artist Brian Alfred...featur[ing] 14 new paintings, collage works, and a major new video work".[12] In March, Poirier released Running High, an album that brought together tracks from the previous three EPs as well as additional new material and remixes by "Wildlife!, Mungo, Uproot, Marflix, Maga Bo, Stereotyp, and Poirier himself".[13]

Bounce Le Gros[edit]

Poirier is well-known in Montreal for a series of successful club nights entitled Bounce Le Gros (loosely translated as "bounce large"). At these events Poirier experimented with "grime, crunk, hip-hop, ragga, reggae, booty house, Baltimore breaks...original urban music from all over the world”.[14] Bounce Le Gros began in 2005 at small local club Zoobizarre[15] and then moved to larger venues as Poirier experienced increasing success. The last edition was held in the summer of 2007. In October 2009, he introduced a new event called Karnival. Paul Devro (Mad Decent), Dub Boy (Ruffneck Diskotek, Bristol) and Face-T were featured. The second edition was held in February 2010 and included performances by Bonjay, Ghostbeard, Boogat and Face-T as performers and was filmed for a video for the new single "Arena" by Crookers featuring Poirier and Face-T.

Discography[edit]

Albums[edit]

  • 2001 Il n'y a pas de sud
  • 2002 Sous le manguier
  • 2003 Conflits
  • 2003 Beats As Politics
  • 2005 Breakupdown
  • 2007 No Ground Under
  • 2010 Running High

EPs[edit]

  • 2006 Rebondir
  • 2007 La Ronde
  • 2009 Soca Sound System
  • 2009 Run the Riddim
  • 2010 Low Ceiling
  • 2010 Las Americas

Singles[edit]

  • 2004 Tribute To Tiger
  • 2004 Be Strong
  • 2004 Cold as Hell
  • 2006 Mic Diplomat feat. DJ Collage
  • 2006 Dem Nah Like Me feat. Mr Lee G
  • 2007 Blazin' feat. Face-T

External links[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Katigbak, R: "More Bounce to the Ounce"Montreal Mirror, 21(7): 2005.
  2. ^ Nasrallah, D: "Poirier: Brave New World", Exclaim!, April 2010.
  3. ^ Ibid.
  4. ^ Ranta, A: "Ghislain Poirier: No Ground Under", Pop Matters, January 2008.
  5. ^ Ibid.
  6. ^ Jaeger, S: "The Spirit of Dance Weaves a Tale: Dance Immersion Showcase Presentation", The Dance Current, Summer 2006.
  7. ^ Del Signore, J: "Sasha Frere-Jones: New Yorker Pop Critic", Gothamist, 29 September 2008.
  8. ^ S, Jack: "Introducing...Ghislain Poirier", Altsounds, 8 April 2009.
  9. ^ Fallon, P: "Poirier: 'Marathon'", XLR8R, 20 Jan 2010.
  10. ^ Ninja Tune Release
  11. ^ Guillaume Simoneau
  12. ^ "New Work by Brooklyn Artist Brian Alfred at Haunch of Venizon", Artdaily.org.
  13. ^ Gompers, S: "Poirier, Running High", Impose, 29 March 2010.
  14. ^ Barclay, M: "Ghislain Poirier's Bounce le gros", Exclaim!, February 2006.
  15. ^ Bottenberg, R: "Gizzy keeping busy", Montreal Mirror, 22(32):2007.

{{DEFAULTSORT:Poirier, Ghislain}} [[Category:Hip hop DJs]] [[Category:Canadian DJs]] [[Category:Remixers]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Ninja Tune artists]] [[Category:People from Montreal]] [[Category:Musicians from Quebec]] [[Category:1976 births]] [[Category:Canadian hip hop record producers]] [[fr:Ghislain Poirier]]