Ian Ferrier | |
---|---|
Born | 1954
Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Died | (aged 68) [1] |
Occupation(s) | Poet Musician |
Ian Ferrier (1954 – 3 November 2023) was a Canadian poet, musician, and cultural arts organizer. As co-founder of the Wired on Words record label, longtime organizer of The Words and Music Show, author of four chapbooks, and member of the voice/music fusion collective Pharmakon MTL, he was a central figure in the Montreal music, poetry, and spoken word scene from the 1990s until his death in 2023.
Ilay Ian Charles Ferrier [2] was born in Montreal in 1954. He studied literature and creative writing at Concordia University, [3] where as an undergraduate he co-founded the literary journal Los in 1975. [4]
Montreal environments feature in his first book of poetry, From yr lover like an orchestra, published by Davinci press in 1974. [5] David Lawson of The Gazette wrote, "most of his collection consists not of observable poems but of paragraphs, sometimes indented, and occasional spare lines, all of which add up to a frankly experimental effect." [6] Louis Dudek, reviewing the book in Anthol, a Montreal literary magazine, acknowledged it as the work of a poet in a "preliminary" stage and called it "a documentary of chaos" whose "poetry ... is not aiming at a higher aesthetic but is drawn down to the messiness of the surrounding environment." [7]
Ferrier was the author of an early interactive online novel, The Heart of the Machine, started in 1986 with Fortner Anderson and illustrator Philip Mackenzie. [8] [9] The novel was published serially on CompuServe, The WELL, and other early internet services, and the publishers invited readers to influence the story with their comments, suggestions, and character sketches. [9]
In the mid-1990s, live poetry was gaining popularity in Montreal due to the rise of poetry slams in the United States, the increasing impact of rap and hip-hop, and the crossover of poetry to pop music. Lollapalooza's first visit to Montreal, in 1994, included a spoken word stage featuring local performers. [10] Ferrier became an important figure in the scene. With Fortner Anderson, he co-founded the record label Wired on Words in 1993. [11] The label recorded performances by Montreal spoken word artists for broadcast on CKUT-FM, the campus radio station of McGill University. [10] Several poets made the top ten on the station's charts, [10] and the program won a Standard Broadcasting Award. [11] Ferrier used the award money to record Millennium Cabaret, a 1998 CD release featuring poetry by Anderson, Heather O'Neill, Todd Swift and others. [12] [13]
Ferrier grew interested in combining his poetry with music. [14] In 2000, he released a book/CD titled Exploding Head Man on Planète Rebelle . The work features instrumentation from area musicians, and was a critical success. Ilana Kronick of The Gazette praised the "sonic power" of its "heady, impassioned, sometimes hallucinogenic" poetry and the "smart guitar, bass, percussion and tablas". [14] Hal Niedzviecki reviewed the release for Broken Pencil and the National Post, writing that the "poems/songs merge into each other, become a musical score lament for an absent world" and calling it one of the year's best spoken word releases. [13] [15]
On Ralph Alfonso's Bongo Beat label, Ferrier released two more projects combining music and spoken word: 2007's What Is This Place? and 2010's To Call Out in the Night. [1] On What Is This Place?, Ferrier began a collaboration with Pharmakon MTL, a "voice music improv project" [16] with Kris Mah on guitar and Dave Stein on drums. [17] What Is This Place? was reviewed positively by UK Vibe. [18] In Arc Poetry Magazine, Kai Cheng Thom gave To Call Out in the Night a mostly positive review, calling it "[j]azzy and sensuous... a landmark in the fledgling tradition that is Canadian spoken word", though noting that Ferrier could widen his range of intonation. [19]
Ferrier continued to be an active organizer in the Montreal cultural arts scene throughout the 2000s. He helped launch the inaugural Festival Voix d'Amériques in February 2002, [10] and organized The Words and Music Show, which presented live music, literature, and art at Casa del Popolo, a venue on Montreal's Saint Laurent Boulevard. [1] [20] The series was founded in the early 2000s and produced monthly shows until 2021; Ferrier's organizing included grant writing, artist invitations, and advertising. [21] The show's performances were recorded, and eventually digitally archived as part of Concordia University's SpokenWeb project. [22]
From 2002 to 2005 Ferrier was president of the Quebec Writers' Federation. [23] In 2010, he became the editor of LitLive.ca – The Canadian Review of Literature in Performance, an online journal of literature performance, and started the Mile End Poets' Festival. [23] In 2011, Ferrier won the Calgary International Spoken Word Festival's Sheri-D Wilson Golden Beret for his work in the spoken word community. [24] [25] In 2017, a translation of his poems was published by Éditions du Noroît under the title Quel est ce lieu. [26] For his contributions to Montreal literary arts, he was awarded the 2022 Judy Mappin Community Award by the Quebec Writers' Federation. [23]
Ian Ferrier died on 3 November 2023 of brain cancer. [1] Following his death, the Quebec Writers' Federation renamed their prize for spoken word to the Ian Ferrier Spoken Word Prize in his honor. [27]
Ian Ferrier | |
---|---|
Born | 1954
Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Died | (aged 68) [1] |
Occupation(s) | Poet Musician |
Ian Ferrier (1954 – 3 November 2023) was a Canadian poet, musician, and cultural arts organizer. As co-founder of the Wired on Words record label, longtime organizer of The Words and Music Show, author of four chapbooks, and member of the voice/music fusion collective Pharmakon MTL, he was a central figure in the Montreal music, poetry, and spoken word scene from the 1990s until his death in 2023.
Ilay Ian Charles Ferrier [2] was born in Montreal in 1954. He studied literature and creative writing at Concordia University, [3] where as an undergraduate he co-founded the literary journal Los in 1975. [4]
Montreal environments feature in his first book of poetry, From yr lover like an orchestra, published by Davinci press in 1974. [5] David Lawson of The Gazette wrote, "most of his collection consists not of observable poems but of paragraphs, sometimes indented, and occasional spare lines, all of which add up to a frankly experimental effect." [6] Louis Dudek, reviewing the book in Anthol, a Montreal literary magazine, acknowledged it as the work of a poet in a "preliminary" stage and called it "a documentary of chaos" whose "poetry ... is not aiming at a higher aesthetic but is drawn down to the messiness of the surrounding environment." [7]
Ferrier was the author of an early interactive online novel, The Heart of the Machine, started in 1986 with Fortner Anderson and illustrator Philip Mackenzie. [8] [9] The novel was published serially on CompuServe, The WELL, and other early internet services, and the publishers invited readers to influence the story with their comments, suggestions, and character sketches. [9]
In the mid-1990s, live poetry was gaining popularity in Montreal due to the rise of poetry slams in the United States, the increasing impact of rap and hip-hop, and the crossover of poetry to pop music. Lollapalooza's first visit to Montreal, in 1994, included a spoken word stage featuring local performers. [10] Ferrier became an important figure in the scene. With Fortner Anderson, he co-founded the record label Wired on Words in 1993. [11] The label recorded performances by Montreal spoken word artists for broadcast on CKUT-FM, the campus radio station of McGill University. [10] Several poets made the top ten on the station's charts, [10] and the program won a Standard Broadcasting Award. [11] Ferrier used the award money to record Millennium Cabaret, a 1998 CD release featuring poetry by Anderson, Heather O'Neill, Todd Swift and others. [12] [13]
Ferrier grew interested in combining his poetry with music. [14] In 2000, he released a book/CD titled Exploding Head Man on Planète Rebelle . The work features instrumentation from area musicians, and was a critical success. Ilana Kronick of The Gazette praised the "sonic power" of its "heady, impassioned, sometimes hallucinogenic" poetry and the "smart guitar, bass, percussion and tablas". [14] Hal Niedzviecki reviewed the release for Broken Pencil and the National Post, writing that the "poems/songs merge into each other, become a musical score lament for an absent world" and calling it one of the year's best spoken word releases. [13] [15]
On Ralph Alfonso's Bongo Beat label, Ferrier released two more projects combining music and spoken word: 2007's What Is This Place? and 2010's To Call Out in the Night. [1] On What Is This Place?, Ferrier began a collaboration with Pharmakon MTL, a "voice music improv project" [16] with Kris Mah on guitar and Dave Stein on drums. [17] What Is This Place? was reviewed positively by UK Vibe. [18] In Arc Poetry Magazine, Kai Cheng Thom gave To Call Out in the Night a mostly positive review, calling it "[j]azzy and sensuous... a landmark in the fledgling tradition that is Canadian spoken word", though noting that Ferrier could widen his range of intonation. [19]
Ferrier continued to be an active organizer in the Montreal cultural arts scene throughout the 2000s. He helped launch the inaugural Festival Voix d'Amériques in February 2002, [10] and organized The Words and Music Show, which presented live music, literature, and art at Casa del Popolo, a venue on Montreal's Saint Laurent Boulevard. [1] [20] The series was founded in the early 2000s and produced monthly shows until 2021; Ferrier's organizing included grant writing, artist invitations, and advertising. [21] The show's performances were recorded, and eventually digitally archived as part of Concordia University's SpokenWeb project. [22]
From 2002 to 2005 Ferrier was president of the Quebec Writers' Federation. [23] In 2010, he became the editor of LitLive.ca – The Canadian Review of Literature in Performance, an online journal of literature performance, and started the Mile End Poets' Festival. [23] In 2011, Ferrier won the Calgary International Spoken Word Festival's Sheri-D Wilson Golden Beret for his work in the spoken word community. [24] [25] In 2017, a translation of his poems was published by Éditions du Noroît under the title Quel est ce lieu. [26] For his contributions to Montreal literary arts, he was awarded the 2022 Judy Mappin Community Award by the Quebec Writers' Federation. [23]
Ian Ferrier died on 3 November 2023 of brain cancer. [1] Following his death, the Quebec Writers' Federation renamed their prize for spoken word to the Ian Ferrier Spoken Word Prize in his honor. [27]