Between the best and the worst | The best and the worst of RBO

In Between the best and the worstan artist revisits, one song or one moment at a time, the peaks and valleys of his work. On the occasion of the vinyl reissue of two of their albums (The Disc And Why sing?), as well as the presentation by Cirque du Soleil of the show The CircusBruno E. Landry, Yves P. Pelletier and André G. Ducharme recall the least bad of their musical career.




Patrick Bourgeois’ best contribution

Yves: Stop drinkingthat line was the rallying cry of his band, The Kids. The guys were playing in bad places, there were loud people, and Pat was yelling at them: “Stop drinking!” It was also the rallying cry of the bar Le Belmont. When we decided to make a song about bars [composée par Jocelyn Therrien et Denis Toupin]it was clear that it was going to be called Stop drinking.

Bruno: The first songs we did were with Patrick Bourgeois. We recorded a medley of TV show themes called the Medley KidsIt was really with him that we learned to create songs.

PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

Rock et Belles Oreilles, proud representatives of Gammick International

Yves: The song of Rock and Belles Oreilles was born because we needed another song for the album and Patrick had just made me play in his car a country rock song like Wall of Voodoo [groupe rock américain des années 1980]with lots of sound effects. I said to the guys: “Why don’t we ask him to come up with something similar?” In three days, it was done.

And the lyrics were written quickly, on the couches of Studio Victor, wondering what rhymes with big. Handsome? OK, big, handsome, it works. That Guy was the handsome one was a joke, but people believed it.

Extract of The song of Rock and Belles Oreilles

Your oldest song

André: The wild fire of loveI co-wrote it with Jacques Chevalier and one of our friends, Luc Blanchette, when we were teenagers. We had a sketch group and when we saw Paul and Paul ending their show with a musical number, we started making songs, and it was a good thing, because Jacques has a background in classical violin.

The version we hear at the beginning of the video clip is that of this old group, The Yellow Frogs, whose existence overlapped that of RBO. For an assignment in a sound course at UQAM, we had recorded a kind of album, with 17 songs [André sort son téléphone de sa poche et en fait jouer des extraits].

PHOTO MICHEL GRAVEL, LA PRSSE ARCHIVES

In September 1985

We also did a radio show in front of an audience. And one evening, a week before the first Rock et Belles Oreilles show at CIBL, Guy and Richard were in the room. That’s when they asked me to join them.


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