From backstage to stage | Damien’s big heart

Damien Robitaille presents almost everywhere, for the third year, a Christmas show in his image, good-natured, ingenious and generous. The singer-songwriter unifier kindly welcomed us backstage at the performance he gave at the Théâtre de la Ville in Longueuil last Friday.




Back

We have a meeting with Damien Robitaille at the beginning of the afternoon. He knows the Théâtre de la Ville well – he now lives in Beloeil, but he lived in Longueuil for 10 years. “This is where we put on the show, we had a small residency. » The Franco-Ontarian singer returned to the road at the end of November with his Christmas show for around twenty performances, which takes him from Lac-Saint-Jean to Beauce, and will take him through the Montreal Casino and the Grand Théâtre de Québec next week.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Damien Robitaille

While we chat around the table, in the common room of the dressing rooms, his tour director and sound engineer Mathieu Sévigny, who has followed him for six years, serves him an espresso directly from the machine they bring with them on tour.

“Mathieu is like a brother. I’m so lucky to have him. I have never traveled so much with someone! »

Since the release of his album Soon it will be Christmas in 2019, Damien Robitaille became a symbol of the holiday season. He also released two new original songs this year, My Christmas star And Christmas, Once Again, which he integrated into the show. But what makes a good Christmas song?

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Damien Robitaille goes to do his sound test.

“Joyful nostalgia. » Create something new by drawing inspiration from the past – the sound references and the lexical field to respect, the arrangements.

That’s always what Christmas is, it’s a return to traditions.

Damien Robitaille

But above all, you have to “be true”. That’s what he did, sincerely composing a bouquet of songs, putting heart and effort into it, and all his love for Christmas music.

Facility

  • Around 3 p.m., Damien Robitaille goes into the room to join his technicians and those from the theater.  He likes the routine of touring, which he had missed: he has not given a show since December 28, 2022. “It feels good to go on the road.  I was nervous at first, I asked myself: what have I lost?  But it comes back quickly!  »

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    Around 3 p.m., Damien Robitaille goes into the room to join his technicians and those from the theater. He likes the routine of touring, which he had missed: he has not given a show since December 28, 2022. “It feels good to go on the road. I was nervous at first, I asked myself: what have I lost? But it comes back quickly! »

  • The show is essentially the same one that was staged three years ago by Laurent Paquin.  A big difference: the budget, which decreased, which forced the singer to reduce his team.  There are now only three musicians on stage rather than five, and two technicians instead of three.  “Last year I had a technician who took care of the instruments.  There, we install our things.  I get my hands dirty, it gives me a little extra work.  »

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    The show is essentially the same one that was staged three years ago by Laurent Paquin. A big difference: the budget, which decreased, which forced the singer to reduce his team. There are now only three musicians on stage rather than five, and two technicians instead of three. “Last year I had a technician who took care of the instruments. There, we install our things. I get my hands dirty, it gives me a little extra work. »

  • Damien Robitaille sets up his equipment on his mat in the center of the stage, whistling.  He sets up his drum kit, adjusts his stool, makes sure his piano is well placed under the lights.  While everyone is busy, he spends several minutes sticking a sticker on his cash register.

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    Damien Robitaille sets up his equipment on his mat in the center of the stage, whistling. He sets up his drum kit, adjusts his stool, makes sure his piano is well placed under the lights. While everyone is busy, he spends several minutes sticking a sticker on his cash register.

  • The singer sits down at the piano and the transition to the sound check happens slowly.  You have to check everything, because many instruments will be used – he plays several himself.  “Before, we had a drummer and a backing vocalist, but we couldn’t afford it this year.  So it's me playing the drums the whole time.  It’s the most physical show I’ve given in my career!  »

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    The singer sits down at the piano and the transition to the sound check happens slowly. You have to check everything, because many instruments will be used – he plays several himself. “Before, we had a drummer and a backing vocalist, but we couldn’t afford it this year. So it’s me playing the drums the whole time. It’s the most physical show I’ve given in my career! »

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Resourcefulness

During the sound check, it’s already impressive to see him keeping the rhythm while playing the piano and singing. Seriously, we wonder how his brain works. He doesn’t really know what to say other than that it’s a question of repetition. “These are muscles that always repeat the same thing. By doing it, you get used to your fingers doing one thing by tapping your foot. »

There is something ingenious in his work plan, which he has improved over the years. It’s a question of necessity: as financial conditions become more and more difficult, artists of his generation have become more creative in the way they do things, he believes.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Damien Robitaille and his paraphernalia

It was gradually, through lots of tours where I had to be resourceful, that it led me to be a one-man band.

Damien Robitaille

It is of course by creating songs of the day on the web during the pandemic that Damien Robitaille refined his technique – the maraca that is held with a brace around the knee is still brilliant! If he does less now, we can say that in 327 times he has acquired some expertise. And he continues to love the challenge it represents, both in playing the songs and in editing them.

That’s what being an artist is about continually reinventing yourself, learning new things. This is how we grow up.

Damien Robitaille

With family

  • Important moment: choose your shirt carefully!

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    Important moment: choose your shirt carefully!

  • It's time to get ready.

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    It’s time to get ready.

  • Relaxing

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    Relaxing

  • The atmosphere is relaxed before the show.

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    The atmosphere is relaxed before the show.

  • A little gesture of encouragement before going on stage

    PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

    A little gesture of encouragement before going on stage

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After the sound test, the small team meets to eat: Damien, Mathieu Sévigny, lighting designer Marc-André Alie, bassist Marie-Anne Arsenault and multi-instrumentalist David Simard. ” I love that. We just see each other at Christmas, like family! », says the singer. After dinner, there is joyful complicity in the dressing rooms while we prepare for the show. The three musicians listen to a Cameroonian song that they have just discovered, Damien chooses his outfit for the evening and irons his shirt. Does he still feel stressed before a show? “A little while, yes, but not like before!” And since it’s a more staged show, it’s more routine. » We confirm in any case that five minutes before going on stage, he was still sitting on the sofa chatting…

The show

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

The scenography is warm.

The 900-seat hall is full, like the rest of the tour. And we understand why Damien Robitaille attracts the public: his show is joyful and light, and it does a lot of good. For a good two hours, he performs on stage, well supported by the musicians – David Simard is a talented multi-instrumentalist who brings a very festive element with the violin, mandolin and podorythmy, while the gifted bassist Marie-Anne Arsenault also provides backing vocals with enthusiasm.

Surrounded by fir trees, with windows that suggest he is welcoming us into his living room, Damien Robitaille alternates between his Christmas songs (and non-Christmas songs too, adapted with a wink) and holiday classics that he puts on his hand, interacts a lot with the audience and is clearly having as much fun as we are.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

A full house for Damien Robitaille

The Damien Robitaille way is to not take yourself seriously while offering a generous spectacle in every sense of the word. The segment devoted to an anthology of songs of the day is spectacular. Alone at the piano with all his paraphernalia, he performs a phenomenal quantity of songs for at least 40 minutes – he would have done half as much and we would already have been impressed. He finishes this part literally swimming, but even if it is physically demanding, we never see him slacking.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

A frankly generous show

If there are more tender moments or ones that lead to contemplation, it is first and foremost a festive and funny show. And generous, we can never repeat it enough: Damien Robitaille plays and sings with all his heart, with all his heart, all the time. We can only admire him for that, and love him even more.

Damien Robitaille’s tour continues Thursday in Thetford Mines. The singer will also be in Montreal for two evenings, December 19 and 20.


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