The National Parcs, veterans of Montreal’s
celebrated Freeworm, have gone into the wild – and come back with
a look and sound that’s as big as the world.
The three young men were born in the
backwoods of Quebec, Malawi and B.C., but bred on Montreal streets buzzing
with the noise of every nation on earth. For this groundbreaking CD/DVD
album, they strip back down to basics, returning to their roots in the
bush. The great outdoors becomes their studio, and their songs come
alive with all-natural samples of wood splitting, sand slipping, paddles
slapping, water dripping. Their cameras and microphones are trained
on the trackless woods around them, but their ears have been trained
on Grime and Hip Hop, Afrobeat and Baile Funk, American Spirituals and
Malian Blues. The resulting Timbervision tracks are an invitation
for the world to dance, starting with the half-remembered hum of our
own backyards and smuggling in the best that the world has to offer.
The band first joined forces for Freeworm’s
2001 live shows, which pioneered their fascination with grafting
exotic and broken beats onto the rhythms of maple forests and canoeing.
This was the year the city first got out of its seats for the trio’s
infectious found-sound and found-image stage experience: their Club
Soda performance at the Montreal Electronic Groove Festival won them
the MIMI “Show of the Year” award. Two Freeworm albums later, they’re
making the partnership official as The National Parcs.
The French–English mash-up of the band’s new name suggests the range
of their influences, while the parkland theme is a nod to preserving
what matters.
Summer, fall and winter, the band went off the grid to collect the raw
materials for the Timbervision
album. Miles away from a studio or even a drum, they discovered echoes
and ambience unlike anything heard in the city. The footage records
the three-man crew in their natural environment, banging sticks, jumping
on four-wheelers. The National Parcs’ new album is a reminder that
freedom makes the kind of art you can move to. This is the message of
Timbervision, shot and recorded in the wild: let everyone join the
party, and let the party never stop.
According to Vincent Letellier (AKA Freeworm):
“We wanted to throw a party that would get five continents bouncin’
– and you need more than just an album for that. You need music and
video that rise up together, shot and recorded as one.” Says Chimwemwe
Miller, who joins Vincent on the music and lyrics: “If you want bring
the world together, you need summer hits that ignore borders and boundaries,
but you can’t close the door on the shadier stuff: Death in a bone
suit, African snow like a sky full of ashes.” Ian Cameron, the visual
director responsible for the videos’ nature documentary esthetic,
agrees: “Most of all, you don’t just ring up six billion neighbours
without knowing where you came from yourself.”
Vincent Letellier (AKA Freeworm),
Music and Lyrics
Vincent hails from Luskville, a tiny
community in western Quebec. In 1992, as a young multi-instrumentalist
intent on stretching the potential of his electric guitar, he left his
first band to seek cross-cultural inspiration in Montreal. Vincent’s
debut record as Freeworm, 2000’s Vegetation = Fuel (Hydrophonik/Indica),
spun organic samples into an urban playlist of breakbeats, drum and
bass, liquid jazz and hip hop. The Quebec music scene paid notice. He
was soon doing remixes for Bran Van 3000 and Adam Chaki, and collaborated
with Daniel Bélanger on Rêver Mieux. He is also sought after
for his soundtrack work. He has traveled in Europe, Brazil, Vietnam
and West Africa, and the talent that has accumulated around him shone
through on the critically acclaimed Solar Power
(2003), which featured no fewer than 27 collaborators. Timbervision
marks an ambitious multimedia return to an ongoing concern: integrating
the sound of the back woods with cutting-edge pop exploration.
Chimwemwe Miller, Music and Lyrics
Arriving in Montreal from Malawi at the
age of seven, Chimwemwe stepped directly onto the local stage – where
he continues to this day. Since his
teens, a variety of bands and ensembles have benefited from his drum,
trumpet, piano and vocal training. In the nineties he joined the People's
Gospel Choir of Montreal, where he went on to be tapped as baritone/bass
soloist.Chimwemwe has pursued also
storytelling for many years, and in theatre has acted, written, directed
and taught, most notably with the Black Theatre Workshop. He first lent
his stage presence to Freeworm’s live show in 2001, stunning audiences
with his charismatic percussion and beatboxing skills, and now joins
the rechristened National Parcs for their trip into the woods. He holds
a BFA in Interdisciplinary Studies from Concordia University.
Ian Cameron, Director
Ian also lived in Africa as a child,
but left Côte d’Ivoire to grow up mostly in Aylmer, Quebec, just
downriver from Vincent’s hometown. On his way to a BFA in film production
from Concordia University, he built strong credentials in music video
production, and in 2000 broke into the domain of live video mixing (VJing).
He has since performed alongside most of the world’s highest-paid
DJs, worked the main event at large festivals. Although he enjoys the
spontaneous collaborations that live video mixing may offer, his work
with The National Parcs lets him take the fusion of image and music
image into unexplored territory. Timbervision
is his first opportunity to create an album-length visual experience.
He also works as the Video Production and Post-Production Coordinator
for Concordia University’s Intermedia/Cyberarts Major.