R 3875485 1647782716 5529

$60.00

Latraverse, Plume (Michel Proulx) - Pommes de Route

Format: LP
Label: Deram XDEF 121, Columbia PFC 90635
Year: 1975
Origin: Montréal, Québec, 🇨🇦
Genre: rock, folk, blues
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: $60.00
Make Inquiry/purchase: email ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Websites:  https://music.apple.com/ca/album/pommes-de-route/266629380?ign-mpt=uo%3D4
Playlist: 1970's, Francophone, MOCM TOP 100 CDN ALBUMS, Quebec, MOCM Top 1000 Canadian Albums

Tracks

Side 1

Track Name
Pommes de route
La 20
Les bobettes À bedê
Jonquiere
La bienséance
Y a rien la
Ma porte de shed
Anecdote

Side 2

Track Name
U.F.O.
Sapolin #148
Hold-Up
Pleine lune
J'veux m'en r'tourner Chez nous (Alcohol...)
Rappel

Photos

R 3875485 1647782717 1595

Latraverse, Plume (Michel Proulx) - Pommes de Route

R 3875485 1647782715 5364

Latraverse, Plume (Michel Proulx) - Pommes de Route

R 3875485 1647782714 4159

Latraverse, Plume (Michel Proulx) - Pommes de Route

R 3875485 1647782716 5529

Pommes de Route

Videos

No Video

Information/Write-up

Born May 11, 1946, Plume Latraverse is one of Quebec’s most original and enduring voices—a fiercely independent singer, writer, and performer whose career has spanned music, literature, visual art, and radical expression. Known for his irreverent wit, biting poetry, and genre-defying style, he remains a counterculture icon whose work continues to challenge convention and celebrate the absurd beauty of everyday life.

Originally trained in visual arts, Latraverse first turned heads in the late 1960s as a founding member of La Sainte Trinité, a psychedelic folk-rock collective born in the bohemian enclaves of Percé. Alongside poet Pierre Léger and multi-instrumentalist Pierre Landry, the group captured its anarchic spirit on the now-cult 1971 LP Triniterre. After the trio disbanded, Latraverse teamed up with guitarist Steve Faulkner (aka "Cassonade") to form a legendary duo that crisscrossed Quebec until 1975, culminating in the raw and humorous Pommes de route.

Striking out solo in 1976, Plume quickly established himself as a singular force in the Québécois music scene. Blending blues, folk, Latin, rock ’n’ roll, chanson, and spoken word, his early albums like Plume Pou Digne (1974) and Le Vieux Show Son Sale (1975) became underground landmarks. Songs like “Bobépine,” “Le Mal du pays,” and “Jonquière” struck a nerve with a generation disillusioned by mainstream media and politics. With his tangled beard, raspy delivery, and knack for vivid characters and street poetry, Plume became the voice of the anti-hero: the hitchhiker, the bum, the loner in the tavern who sees through the bullshit.

Throughout the 1970s and ’80s, he released album after album—nearly one per year—with astonishing stylistic range and lyrical force. Whether riffing on social hypocrisy (“Le Blues de la stupidité humaine”), channeling heartbreak through surreal metaphors, or playfully subverting traditional forms, he refused to conform to radio formats or commercial expectations. In 1979–80, he toured France and won the prestigious Prix International de la Jeune Chanson, while back home he continued to deepen his reputation as Quebec’s most fearless chansonnier.

Live, Plume’s shows became theatrical events—wild, unpredictable, often hilarious, and anchored in emotional truth. His 1983 tour with Offenbach (À fond d’train) brought him into arenas, while later years saw him scale back into intimate solo and duo sets, especially with longtime bassist Denis Masson and guitarist Jean-Claude Marsan.

By the mid-1980s, he turned more fully to literature and visual art. His first book, Contes-gouttes (1987), was followed by Pas d’admission sans histoire (1993) and Striboule (1995), adding new dimensions to his creative output. But the music never stopped. Albums like Mixed Grill (1998), Chants d’épuration (2003), and Hors-saisons (2007) proved that age had only sharpened his pen. Songs like “El Niño,” “Le Bleu de la plinthe,” and “Le Migration” showed a more reflective, melancholic Plume—but the sharp tongue and deadpan wit remained fully intact.

Over the decades, Plume has earned near-mythic status in Quebec. He’s received numerous honors, including the Médaille Jacques-Blanchet (1994), the Prix Miroir de la chanson francophone (1994, 2002), the Médaille de l’Assemblée nationale (2018), and the Prix Excellence from SOCAN (2023). But true to form, he’s always remained somewhat apart from the cultural institutions now eager to canonize him.

His songs, once shunned by commercial radio, are now beloved standards. Covered by artists like Éric Lapointe, Manon Brunet, Dan Bigras, and Les Colocs, they live on in pubs, college radio, and road trips through the Laurentians. His influence can be felt in generations of francophone songwriters who embrace language play, poetic resistance, and everyday grit.

As of 2025, Plume continues to write, perform, and record. His latest cabaret-style tour, Rémissionnaire, reflects his enduring commitment to craft over spectacle. Whether wielding a guitar, a paintbrush, or a pen, Plume Latraverse remains—as ever—an unclassifiable force. Fiercely Quebecois. Fiercely himself.
-Robert Williston

Michel Latraverse: acoustic guitar, harmonica, vibraslap
Steve Faulkner: guitar, piano, organ, bottleneck, bass
Serge Vaillancourt: battery
Jacques Laurin: electric bass, double bass
Maurice Richard: bass
Michel Rivard: slide guitar
Sylvie Choquette: bombs
Pierre Landry: recorder
Voice: Michel Latraverse
Steve Faulkner, Sylvie Choquette

Sound Engineer: Harvey Robitaille, Claude Demers, Guy Rheaume, Claude Allard
Mixing: Harvey Robitaille, Guy Rheaume, Claude Allard
Studio: Studio Paul Baillargeon, RCA studio
Production: Plume Latraverse and Steve Faulkner, executive producer Luc Phaneuf

Comments

No Comments