Paul Demers | |
---|---|
Paul Demers performing at La Nuit sur l'étang in 2013.
|
|
Background information | |
Born |
Gatineau, Quebec |
March 9, 1956
Died | October 29, 2016 Ottawa, Ontario |
(aged 60)
Genres | folk rock |
Occupation(s) | singer-songwriter |
Years active | 1979–2016 |
Paul Demers (March 9, 1956 – October 29, 2016) was a Canadian singer-songwriter. He was best known for writing the song "Notre place", which came to be recognized as an anthem of the Franco-Ontarian community.
Born in Gatineau, Quebec, his family moved to Ottawa, Ontario when he was 16. He began performing as a musician in adulthood, touring music festivals across Ontario and forming the band Purlaine in 1979. Following a diagnosis with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in the early 1980s, however, he took several years off from music to undergo cancer treatment.
He came out of retirement in 1986 to write "Notre place", which was originally commissioned for a gala to celebrate the passage of Ontario's 1986 French Language Services Act. The song came to be adopted as the Franco-Ontarian community's unofficial anthem, and was formally designated as the community's official anthem by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in 2017.
Following "Notre place", Demers returned to touring, both as a solo artist and with musicians Robert Paquette and Marcel Aymar in the group Paquette-Aymar-Demers, released three albums, and worked as a theatre producer and director. A biography of him, by writer Pierre Albert, was published by Éditions Interligne in 1992.
Demers was diagnosed with mesothelioma in January 2016. He gave a retrospective interview from his hospital bed to the Ici Radio-Canada Première program Grands Lacs Café in the fall, prior to his death on October 29.