DOMINIQUE A - DOMINIQUE A  1E PARTIE

DOMINIQUE A - DOMINIQUE A 1E PARTIE

LA LUCIOLE, 171 ROUTE DE BRETAGNE, 61000 Alencon Kort

fös. 05.03.2027 20:30

LA LUCIOLE/EUREKA PRÉSENTE : DOMINIQUE A 1E PARTIEDominique A ( 1e partie)Chanson rock indé / Poésie organique / Trajectoire introspectiveVingt-cinq ans de carrière et quinze albums n’ont en rien émoussé sa capacité à nous surprendre. Figure de proue et artisan incontournable d’une chanson française exigeante et intègre, Dominique A fait son grand retour à La Luciole. Avec son nouvel opus « Spirales » (2026), l’artiste opère un virage captivant, délaissant un temps la fiction pour revenir au centre du jeu à travers un répertoire autobiographique d’une sincérité totale, porté par un son plus brut, plus physique et résolument rock.Quelle est son histoire ?Tout a commencé en juin 2024 lors d’une déambulation nostalgique à Provins, sa ville natale. En traversant le jardin public de son enfance, un déclic se produit : le besoin viscéral de revisiter les lieux de sa jeunesse (Provins, Nantes) et de célébrer les amitiés retrouvées après des décennies de silence. Pour matérialiser ce retour aux sources, le choix du studio s’est imposé comme une évidence : le Garage Hermétique, près de Nantes, là même où Dominique A mixait trente-cinq ans plus tôt son séminal premier album, « La Fossette ».Conçu en osmose avec ses musiciens de scène, ce 15e album studio s’est nourri de l’intensité du live et d’une saine volonté de ne pas tout raboter par ordinateur. En s’éloignant des modes, Dominique A trace une courbe parfaite – une spirale – autour de ses propres souvenirs pour mieux les faire résonner avec notre époque.À quelle ambiance s’attendre sur scène ?Le concert de Dominique A s’annonce comme une expérience terrienne, incarnée et vibrante. Entouré d’un quartet de haut vol (claviers, contrebasse, batterie), l’artiste remet la guitare électrique au premier plan pour insuffler de l’aspérité, du relief et une saine rugosité à ses compositions.Le live navigue avec fluidité entre intimité et puissance collective, au croisement de :Des sonorités rock indé et new-wave héritées de la fin des années 80,Une rythmique hypnotique et organique inspirée du son motorik allemand,Des textes poétiques et profonds qui font se rejoindre le particulier et l’universel, évoquant les souvenirs d’enfance tout comme nos addictions numériques actuelles,Le plaisir brut du jeu non formaté, où l’émotion naît des imperfections et de la tension des instruments.Le mot de la salle : Accueillir Dominique A est toujours un immense honneur, mais le découvrir dans cette configuration plus brute et électrique est une promesse exaltante. En refusant la nostalgie passive pour lui préférer une énergie rock salvatrice, il prouve qu’il reste un artiste en mouvement perpétuel. Que vous soyez un fidèle de la première heure ou un curieux de poésie sonore, ce concert en quartet promet une magnifique claque d’humanisme et de complicité musicale.

Flytjendur

  • Dominique A.
    Dominique A.

    Early life Born on the 6 October 1968 in Provins, France, Dominique Ané is the only child of a teacher and a homemaker. A loner throughout his teenage years, he was passionate about literature and music from a young age. He was interested in the punk music of the time, but at the age of 14, at the beginning of the 1980s, he started to appreciate the dark romanticism of the New Wave movement. After his baccalaureate, he studied humanities for a year, and, at the same time, did a range of odd jobs, including his spell as a utility man for an FM radio station in Nantes, where his family lived. At around the age of 16, he started up a band, John Merrick, named after the hero of the film The Elephant Man, a cult film from David Lynch. The foursome recorded around 45 sombre, tormented songs and gave a number of concerts in the area around Nantes. Later, with the singer Katerine, he recorded a number of songs, in a different, more upbeat and livelier style. Beginning of a career He began, at the beginning of the 1990s, to record more songs, which were both minimalist and rock in style. He wanted to break with the traditional chanson, which he considered to be more literary than musical[1]. His first CD, released by the Nantes label, Lithium, met with critical acclaim, appreciated by the eminent alternative magazine, Les Inrockuptibles, and by Bernard Lenoir, the 'John Peel' of France. Furthermore, his song, Le Courage des oiseaux, (the Courage of the Birds), was an underground hit. From 1992 onwards, he started to produce more and more live shows, either with a backing band, or solo. His commercial success grew in 1995, with Le twenty-two bar, a single off the album, La Mémoire Neuve, but this success left a bitter taste in Dominique's mouth, as he considered the song to be particularly badly written[1]. In 2000, he composed the score for Antoine Desrosières' black comedy film Banqueroute. Le Détour and beyond (2002-) Dominique's discovery of Alain Bashung's dark 2002 album, L'Imprudence shocked him to the point that it put his music into question and he decided to explore differents ways of working. He decided to compile what he considered to be the first part of a musical time capsule, a longbox entitled Le Détour. He asked his fans to write about their relationship with his music, and some of their letters were published in the booklet accompanying Le Détour. For his subsequent album, he wanted to experiment and consequently, for the first time, he gave control over the album to a third party, the team who produced L'Imprudence. The end result would be Tout sera comme avant (Everything will be like it was before), which was released in 2004. Unfortunately, many fans had difficulty trying to buy it. At the same time, Dominique did a lot of live shows, with diverse arrangements: with a big band, with minimalistic backing, or all alone (where he would experiment with oversampling). In March 2006, L'Horizon came out, a new work that he produced alongside Dominique Brusson, with whom he had made the early album, Remué. It was the first time that Dominique A returned to work with a producer. He was backed by his old collaborators, Sacha Toorop and Olivier Mellano, as well as the musicians with whom he produced Tout sera comme avant. Dominique A had recently quit his record label, Labels, due to his desire for more creative freedom; consequently, it is no surprise that he describes L'Horizon as his most experimental work to date. Collaboration and influence Dominique A collaborates regularly with other artists and on other projects. He has been one of the shaping forces of Françoiz Breut's career, writing many of her songs since her début in 1997. He has also composed several songs for Jeanne Balibar's second album, Slalom Dale and wrote Où est la ville ? for Jane Birkin's 2006 album, Fictions. He has also sang the song Veruca Salt et Frank Black in trio with Keren Ann and Vincent Delerm on the latter's second album, Kensington Square. Dominique A has inspired and influenced many artists. He has influenced many instrumentalist artists, such as Yann Tiersen and the Norwegian electro band, Oslo Telescopic, who named one of their albums The Dominique O Project. Lyrically, his movement away from the constraints of chanson moved many others- including Miossec, Holden and Arman Méliès - by showing them that it was possible to make music that reflected their tastes and feelings using French.