No Suicide Act | The combative pessimism of an eternal Black Bérurier

The legendary François Guillemot, the vindictive and mocking voice of Bérurier Noir, presents in Montreal the first show of his new project, No Suicide Act. An invitation to shout Yes Future in the gloomy face of a world that badly needs the vital energy of punk.




No Suicide Act, François Guillemot’s new project, contains the word suicide, but it is the no that precedes it that is important, essential. When he discovered punk in the late 1970s, attending shows in Paris by the Ramones, Blondie, The Clash, and Siouxsie and the Banshees, the young man was seized by a powerful discharge of life.

His most memorable show? That of the New York synth-punk duo Suicide, to which the name No Suicide Act is obviously a nod, on July 12, 1979 at the Bains Douches, a legendary nightclub on the 3e arrondissement. “Suicide played three nights, but I only had money to go once,” says Guillemot, aka François Béru, aka Fanxoa, reached at his home in Lyon. “It was a completely unpredictable concert, Alan Vega [le chanteur] was dangerous as a character, in the sense that you never knew where it was going to go.”

“All these bands taught me that the body had an important place in the way you lead a concert,” he continues, recalling an Iggy Pop show at the Palace in 1979, then another by Joy Division in England in 1980, seen not long before its singer Ian Curtis killed himself.

It’s something I integrated unconsciously, a kind of vital energy that punk imposes. It was both a great freedom and a way of asserting oneself in society.

François Béru

Punk, the soundtrack of a nihilistic youth? For Bérurier Noir, the group he founded in 1983, the English No Future would quickly be subverted into Yes Future. Funny to say, but nevertheless true: there was hope in several of the Bérus anthems, starting in this Hello to you prophesying the advent of a human brotherhood transcending borders.

A hope embraced by No Suicide Act, the new duo that Fanxoa, 61, forms with saxophonist Madsaxx. “We are the mistakes of globalization,” he shouts in I am a mistakeconvulsive extract of‘Interbelluma first minimalist and noisy album to be released on September 6, which calls for solidarity with all the oppressed.


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