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Mourners pack Montreal cathedral for funeral of Quebec music star Jean-Pierre Ferland

MONTREAL — Artists, politicians and devotees of the Québécois music scene flocked to a Montreal cathedral on Saturday to pay their final respects to Jean-Pierre Ferland, a folk music luminary whose French-language compositions made him a beloved figu
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Julie-Anne Saumur, right, flanked by her family watch as the urn containing the ashes of her husband, Quebec singer Jean-Pierre Ferland arrives for his national funeral at Mary Queen of the World Cathedral in Montreal, Saturday, June 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

MONTREAL — Artists, politicians and devotees of the Québécois music scene flocked to a Montreal cathedral on Saturday to pay their final respects to Jean-Pierre Ferland, a folk music luminary whose French-language compositions made him a beloved figure across the province.

The artist died of natural causes on April 27 at the age of 89 after several months in hospital.

While the provincial flag flew at half-mast at the legislature in Quebec city, a formal funeral service at the downtown Mary Queen of the World Cathedral drew hundreds of mourners clad in yellow in tribute to Ferland's classic album "Jaune."

The ceremony began with an urn containing the singer's remains being carried into the church to the accompaniment of a violin and cello arrangement of his 1968 classic song "Je reviens chez nous."

Quebec Premier François Legault was the first to pay his respects.

"Jean-Pierre Ferland was a genius with words and music, a genius that touched the lives of Quebecers," he said.

"I remember it like it was yesterday," said Legault, describing the impact of "Jaune." "I was thirteen at the time, and for us it was a revolution. It was just as good as the Beatles, but it was in French and it was a Quebecer."

Mourners also heard from Julie Anne Saumur, Ferland's wife of sixteen years.

"Jean-Pierre loved his fans, and I was his biggest one," she said.

Fighting back tears and wearing a yellow flower on her lapel, Julie Ferland, the late singer’s daughter, described her father as a “firework,” someone who in her eyes shone “tall, big and bright.”

“I consider myself privileged to have experienced the most beautiful moments by his side,” she said.

Film director Pierre Séguin thanked Ferland for his kindness and attentiveness to his fellow creators and crew, from technicians to producers, during his years working in television.

Fellow Francophone music legend Ginette Reno joined the ceremony via video conference and capped off the musical performances with a rendition of Ferland's "Un peu plus haut, un peu plus loin," her voice ringing through the speakers before the mass concluded.

Pianist and composer François Cousineau, a frequent Ferland collaborator who produced his 1992 album "Bleu, Blanc, Blues," was another one of the musicians who performed at the funeral.

In an interview held ahead of the service, Cousineau described Ferland as a charming friend with a great sense of humour.

“He's among the greatest,” said Cousineau. “He was a poet of love and a poet of life, that’s how I’d put it, because the thing he wanted most in life was to be loved.”

Danick Trottier, a music professor at the Université du Québec à Montréal, said Ferland was Quebec’s Joni Mitchell or Neil Young, fellow singer-songwriters known for both their music and their words.

While the first decades of his career were focused strictly on making music, Ferland became known more as a performer in later years through appearances on various TV programs, including Quebec’s version of the reality show "The Voice."

It was during this phase that Ferland became endeared to Quebecers, Trottier said.

“In the '80s and '90s, he began to be a kind of a major figure in Quebec show business, and then people began to love him and to say, ‘That's our love singer,’” said Trottier.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 1, 2024.

Joe Bongiorno, The Canadian Press

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