Jean-Marc Pisapia | |
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Born | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | 13 November 1957
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Years active | 1981–present |
Member of | The Box |
Jean-Marc Pisapia (born 13 November 1957), [1] is a Canadian singer-songwriter and director. He is best known as the frontman of the new wave band The Box. As a director, he was nominated for Best Video at the 1989 Juno Awards.
Born in Montreal, Pisapia learned piano from the age of four and grew up listening to progressive rock. [2] [3] He went to high school with musicians Ivan Doroschuk of Men Without Hats and Pascal Languirand of Trans-X and went on to study architecture at University of Montreal. [1] [4] [5]
Pisapia's father immigrated to Canada from Naples, Italy in 1952. [2] Pisapia has two brothers, Guy and Serge, and a sister, Christine. [2] [6] His older brother, Guy, was the keyboardist for the first iteration of The Box. [7]
In 1981, Men Without Hats frontman Ivan Doroschuk invited Pisapia to be a keyboardist on their summer tour. [7] [8] That same year, Pisapia formed a band, originally called Checkpoint Charlie, which was renamed The Box. [9]
Pisapia serves as The Box's lead vocalist and principal lyricist. [3] He also directed several of The Box's videos. [10] In 1990, while directing the video for their single Temptation in New Orleans, he fell off a moving truck and broke his collarbone in two places. [10] Concerned about the money that the band would lose by being unable to complete the video shoot, he returned to work on it that same night. [10] His work on the video for the band's single, "Ordinary People", earned him a nomination for Best Video at the 1989 Juno Awards. [11]
After The Box's dissolution in 1992, Pisapia collaborated with bandmates Jean-Pierre Brie and Claude Thibault in writing and producing music for TV and radio commercials. [8] [12] Pisapia later formed his own music production company, which he named L'Affaire Dumoutier, after The Box's first hit single. [12] Pisapia wrote and performed music for ad campaigns for such clients as Bell Canada, McDonald's, and General Motors. [12]
While Pisapia's first language is French, he prefers performing in English. He told the Toronto Star in 1986: "A lot of people sing rock in French and it seems to work very well for them. I wouldn't say it's written in the stars that you can't (sing pop in French), but that's my personal belief." [13] He also told the paper in 1987 that he was a proponent of "international pop culture," and pointed out that popular artists of the time, such as the Norwegian band A-ha and the Austrian musician Falco, also produced music in English. [14]
Pisapia reformed The Box with an entirely new roster of musicians that he met in the film industry and they released their first album in 2005. [15] The new iteration performs songs in a progressive rock style. [3]
Pisapia started painting in 2009 after moving from Montreal to a rural area of Quebec known as the Laurentides. [2] [5] He joined a collective of artists and opened two art galleries in Mont-Tremblant. [5]
Pisapia has two daughters. [12]
Jamiroquai are an English acid jazz and funk band from London. Formed in 1992, they are fronted by vocalist Jay Kay, and were prominent in the London-based funk and acid jazz movement of the 1990s. They built on their acid jazz sound in their early releases and later drew from rock, disco, electronic and Latin music genres. Lyrically, the group has addressed social and environmental justice. Kay has remained as the only original member through several line-up changes.
Dream Theater is an American progressive metal band formed in 1985 in Boston, Massachusetts. The band comprises John Petrucci (guitar), John Myung (bass), Mike Portnoy (drums), James LaBrie (vocals) and Jordan Rudess (keyboards).
Men Without Hats are a Canadian new wave and synth-pop band, originally from Montreal, Quebec. Their music is characterized by the baritone voice of their lead singer Ivan Doroschuk, as well as their elaborate use of synthesizers and electronic processing. They achieved their greatest popularity in the 1980s with "The Safety Dance", a worldwide top ten hit, and "Pop Goes the World". After a hiatus for most of the 1990s and 2000s, Doroschuk reformed the band in 2010, and released Love in the Age of War (2012). The group, based in Vancouver, has continued to perform, including tour dates announced in support of the release of two studio albums, Men Without Hats Again , in 2021 and 2022 respectively.
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Ivan Eugene Doroschuk is an American-born Canadian musician. He is the lead vocalist and founding member of Men Without Hats, best known for the hit song "The Safety Dance".
Rhythm of Youth is the debut studio album by Canadian new wave and synth-pop band Men Without Hats, released in April 1982 by Statik Records in Europe and Canada and in 1983 by Backstreet Records in the US. It propelled them to fame with its second single, "The Safety Dance". It was released under the Statik Records label in Canada, distributed by Warner Music Canada where it achieved Platinum status for sales of 100,000 units.
Folk of the 80's (Part III) is the second studio album by Canadian synthpop group Men Without Hats, released in early 1984. The album reached #127 on the U.S. Billboard 200 albums chart. It was the band's final album with the lineup consisting of Ivan Doroschuk (vocals), Stefan Doroschuk (guitar), Colin Doroschuk (keyboards) and Allan McCarthy (keyboards).
Rational Youth was a Canadian new wave synth-pop band that was originally active between 1981 and 1986, and at various points up until the end of 2021.
The Box is a Canadian pop rock band from Montreal, Quebec, whose style evolved from synth-based new wave pop on their early albums toward prog-influenced guitar rock later in their careers. Founded in 1981, they achieved commercial success in Canada, recording four charting albums and 10 charting singles between 1984 and 1990.
Pop Goes the World is the third studio album by Canadian new wave and synth-pop band Men Without Hats, released on June 29, 1987, by Mercury Records. It features the single "Pop Goes the World", which reached the Top 20 in Canada and the United States. The album went platinum in Canada.
The Adventures of Women & Men Without Hate in the 21st Century, often shortened to In the 21st Century, is the fourth studio album by Canadian synth-pop group Men Without Hats, released in 1989. It was the second and last album to be released with the lineup of Ivan Doroschuk (vocals), Stefan Doroschuk (guitar), Marika Tjelios (bass), Heidi Garcia, Richard Samson (drums) and Bruce Murphy (keyboards), which was also the lineup that toured to promote the previous album Pop Goes the World.
Sideways is the fifth studio album by Canadian synthpop group Men Without Hats. Released on 30 April 1991, it featured a new sound based around electric guitars instead of the group's normal use of synthesizers. It was the second album to be recorded at Hudson Studios in New York and produced by bassist Stefan Doroschuk, with Mike Scott as co-producer.
Platinum Blonde, known briefly as The Blondes, is a Canadian rock band that formed in Toronto, Ontario in 1979. Vocalist Mark Holmes has been the only consistent member of the band since its inception.
"The Safety Dance" is a song by Canadian new wave/synth-pop band Men Without Hats, released in Canada in 1982 as the second single from Rhythm of Youth. The song was written by lead singer Ivan Doroschuk after he had been ejected from a club for pogo dancing.
Folk of the 80's is an EP released by Canadian synth-pop group Men Without Hats. Recorded in the summer of 1980 at Studio A in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and released later that year, it was their first release.
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"Pop Goes the World" is a song by Canadian new wave and synthpop band Men Without Hats. It was released in October 1987 as the lead single from their third studio album Pop Goes the World. The song reached No. 1 in Austria, No. 2 in Canada, and No. 3 in South Africa. It was originally written as an electronic instrumental. The song has been inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Jean-Guy "John" Kastner is a Canadian musician and composer born in Beaconsfield, Quebec. He was the singer for Montreal hardcore punk band the Asexuals as well as singer-guitarist for Montreal alternative band Doughboys and alternative band All Systems Go!. He is also the manager and former rhythm guitarist for the band Men Without Hats.
A rock band or pop band is a small musical ensemble that performs rock music, pop music, or a related genre. A four-piece band is the most common configuration in rock and pop music. In the early years, the configuration was typically two guitarists, a bassist, and a drummer. Another common formation is a vocalist who does not play an instrument, electric guitarist, bass guitarist, and a drummer. Sometimes, in addition to electric guitars, electric bass, and drums, also a keyboardist plays.
"Ordinary People" is a song written by Jean-Marc Pisapia, and recorded by Canadian new wave group The Box. It was released in July 1987 as the second single from their album Closer Together.
Then, last year, a friend told him he should do it with new players, given that he had written and sang the vast majority of the material the first time around. . . Black Dog There is indeed a blast from the past, but it's an acid flashback to the `70s and the sort of progressive rock that was all the rage in the days of Gentle Giant, Genesis, Yes, and Pink Floyd. This is the music Pisapia grew up with and still loves. . . The album Pisapia wanted to do is full-on progressive rock, just the thing for fans raised on Genesis's The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway and Pink Floyd's Atom Heart Mother. Just how progressive is Black Dog There? Not only does it pay musical tribute to Bowie, Genesis, Floyd and Gentle Giant, but it also revives a form seldom seen since the `70s. It's an old-fashioned concept album, complete with a spacey narrative.
[Pascal] Languirand - who was a high-school classmate of Men Without Hats' Ivan Doroschuk and The Box's Jean-Marc Pisapia - fronted an electro-pop band called Trans-X, which had an international hit single in the mid-'80s with a song called Living on Video.
Prior to joining Men Without Hats, I was studying architecture at University of Montreal and I just knew I wasn't in the right place. . . I started painting eight years ago when I moved from Montreal to the country, my daughters being grown-ups having stayed behind in town. . . I soon joined a collective of artists, mostly expats from Montreal like me, and we opened two galleries which I help run in Mont Tremblant.
In 1981, Pisapia was hired by his school-friend Ivan Doroschuk to do a summer tour with Men Without Hats, but he wasn't invited to join the band permanently so decided to pursue his original plans. . . Over the years the Box has had various personnel changes and now includes bassist Jean-Pierre Brie, drummer Philippe Bernard, guitarist Claude Thibault and keyboardist Guy Pisapia, Jean-Marc's older brother.
Pisapia was keyboardist for Men Without Hats for a year before joining the band The Box. "We started in 1982 and released the first record in 1983," said Pisapia...
Box leader Jean-Marc Pisapia has directed several of their videos, which can sometimes be a dangerous task. While directing Temptation in New Orleans this spring, Pisapia fell off a moving truck and broke his collarbone in two places less than two hours into the shoot. "The scariest part was the idea of not being able to finish the video and losing all that money," said Pisapia. "I freaked out. I couldn't believe it was all going down the drain because of such a stupid thing."He took some painkillers and was back on the set the same night.
Best video : Ron Berti-The Northern Pikes, Wait For Me; Michael Buckley- Blue Rodeo, Try; James O-'Mara and Kate Ryan-Art Bergmann, Our Little Secret; Donald Robertson-Jane Siberry, Ingrid and the Footman; Jean Marc Pisapia-The Box, Ordinary People.
When The Box called it quits at the beginning of the 1990s, Pisapia and two of his bandmates, guitarist Claude Thibault and bassist Jean-Pierre Brie, formed a company to write and produce music for TV and radio commercials. Pisapia later formed his own TV-jingles company and he has never looked back. . . His company is called L'Affaire Dumoutier, in honour of the band's first big hit.
Pisapia's commitment to English lyrics, oddly, is the result of a long-held belief that French phrasing isn't appropriate to the language of pop music. "A lot of people sing rock in French and it seems to work very well for them," he allows. "I wouldn't say it's written in the stars that you can't (sing pop in French), but that's my personal belief."
Still on that kick, eh? Jean-Marc has long been a proponent of "international pop culture." He's been harassed, from time to time, by Quebec nationalists who smell a sell-out in his band's use of English lyrics."The public doesn't give a damn about language," he says. "The public wants quality products, period. "A-ha is a group from Norway but they don't sing in Norwegian. Same thing goes for (Austrian pop singer) Falco."