Find my videos on Bitchute, writing on JazzRockSoul, and support me on Patreon: Patreon: www.patreon.com/ZaragonTrimax Bitchute: www.bitchute.com/channel/N9F0NJp9DlTt/ JazzRockSoul: jazzrocksoul.com/ TriMax database: rateyourmusic.com/~Zaragon ZaraMax (music discussion channel): th-cam.com/channels/X1jVQJ3gKecxWnR-2pueSA.html Odysee: odysee.com/@ZaragonTrimaximalist:6
Im from Quebec in my mid 30 and trough all these years this song painted canvas with only good memories. With my families or on the radio in a car with friends in the summer. All the time on the last part of the lyrics i cant help myself and just cry. When he says , where did goes all the people,who had something to say? Birth and Newborn in this world, maybe we should listen to It make me always think about family when u have children’s and opening up to listen at their own opinions while growing up and becoming adult Anyway nice review man thank you
Me too, it reminds me of my mother driving my brother and me to school in Boucherville looking out of the car seeing the snow wishing we didn’t have to go to school.
Damn... like your "da Vinci" look and I love your reaction and analysis of that song. Please continue digging in that "Harmonium" rabbit hole. No one is doing it. Keep up the good work.
Harmonium sprung from a songwriting partnership between singing guitarists Serge Fiori and Michel Normandeau, who met during a music theater meeting in late 1972. Fiori hailed from the garage-psych combo Les Comtes Harbourg, which issued the 1968 single “Jeune Fille de Couvent” (b.w “L’Humanite”). As a member of Morphus, he played on a 1971 album credited to Guy Trépanier.
You absolutely definitely have to do "Histoires Sans Paroles" and perhaps their whole 2nd album, which is generally considered a masterpiece of folk prog.
I suspended this channel 2.5 years ago due to video-blocking and YT shadow-banning, but I'll definitely cover their discography in full (once I do Quebec sweeps, sometime in the next two years) on JazzRockSoul.com.
The thing is.. in it's context, that last sing along, was also about " young french canadians, have things to say. We should listen to them." But I completely understand that it's less interesting harmonically... but there is a context.. it's in the tail end of the Quiet Revolution and all that... there is a feel in that song about learning from you elders, but about how you should listen to the youth. It's complicated. But I loved your reaction!
Find my videos on Bitchute, writing on JazzRockSoul, and support me on Patreon:
Patreon: www.patreon.com/ZaragonTrimax
Bitchute: www.bitchute.com/channel/N9F0NJp9DlTt/
JazzRockSoul: jazzrocksoul.com/
TriMax database: rateyourmusic.com/~Zaragon
ZaraMax (music discussion channel): th-cam.com/channels/X1jVQJ3gKecxWnR-2pueSA.html
Odysee: odysee.com/@ZaragonTrimaximalist:6
Im from Quebec in my mid 30 and trough all these years this song painted canvas with only good memories. With my families or on the radio in a car with friends in the summer. All the time on the last part of the lyrics i cant help myself and just cry.
When he says , where did goes all the people,who had something to say? Birth and Newborn in this world, maybe we should listen to
It make me always think about family when u have children’s and opening up to listen at their own opinions while growing up and becoming adult
Anyway nice review man thank you
Me too, it reminds me of my mother driving my brother and me to school in Boucherville looking out of the car seeing the snow wishing we didn’t have to go to school.
The Orchestre Symphonique de Montreal (OSM) just released version of Harmonium's complete catalog.
.
Their songs would probably sound wonderful in that setting.
@@ZaragonTrimaximalist I'm typically not a fan of these but what I eared so far sounds really good :)
Loving your direction and reaction of the 70’s songs!👍🏻
Damn... like your "da Vinci" look and I love your reaction and analysis of that song. Please continue digging in that "Harmonium" rabbit hole. No one is doing it. Keep up the good work.
Very nice that you reacted to Harmonium! Cheers!
Harmonium sprung from a songwriting partnership between singing guitarists Serge Fiori and Michel Normandeau, who met during a music theater meeting in late 1972. Fiori hailed from the garage-psych combo Les Comtes Harbourg, which issued the 1968 single “Jeune Fille de Couvent” (b.w “L’Humanite”). As a member of Morphus, he played on a 1971 album credited to Guy Trépanier.
You absolutely definitely have to do "Histoires Sans Paroles" and perhaps their whole 2nd album, which is generally considered a masterpiece of folk prog.
I suspended this channel 2.5 years ago due to video-blocking and YT shadow-banning, but I'll definitely cover their discography in full (once I do Quebec sweeps, sometime in the next two years) on JazzRockSoul.com.
Imo "Comme un sage" is the best song they made.
The thing is.. in it's context, that last sing along, was also about " young french canadians, have things to say. We should listen to them." But I completely understand that it's less interesting harmonically... but there is a context.. it's in the tail end of the Quiet Revolution and all that... there is a feel in that song about learning from you elders, but about how you should listen to the youth. It's complicated. But I loved your reaction!
Had they sung in English they would have been as big as ELP
jazzrocksoul.com/artists/harmonium/
This is completely acoustic. Not electric base.
For fuchs sakes... Stop pausing every 4 seconds!