David Giguère

David Giguère
Birth name David Giguère
Genres Pop
Years active 2012-present
Labels Audiogram
Associated acts Ariane Moffatt

David Giguère is a Canadian singer-songwriter, and film, television and stage actor. He is from Quebec.[1] He is signed to the Audiogram record label.

Beginnings

After studying theatre at the CEGEP Collège Lionel-Groulx, Montreal, Quebec, he worked with Emmanuel Schwartz, and eventually Marc Beaupré with whom he had two roles in Caligula (remix) and Dom Juan... Uncensored

In 2011, he took part in Starbuck, a Quebec comedy film directed by Ken Scott and sang "L'atelier" on the soundtrack.

Music career

In 2012 he released his debut album produced by Pierre-Philippe Côté (aka Pilou) and artistic collaboration and co-production by singer songwriter Ariane Moffatt and Mo'fat Productions. In August 2012, he engaged on a Quebec tour Tournée Sirius XM that also included Loco Locass and Pierre Lapointe and in 2013, he performed at Les FrancoFolies de Montréal. In 2014 he released his second album Casablanca on Audiogram.

Discography

Albums

2012: Hisser haut [Mo'fat Productions / Audiogram]

Track list

  1. "Dépanneur" (1:03)
  2. "Désirs" (2:53)
  3. "L'Atelier" (3:22)
  4. "1-2" (3:16)
  5. "Encore" (3:19)
  6. "Viens que je te griffe" (3:18)
  7. "La chose" (3:11)
  8. "C'est pas elle" (3:26)
  9. "Madame M" (3:34)
  10. "Hisser haut" (3:40)
  11. "Carambolage" (2:54)
  12. "Comme toi" (2:29)
  13. "Permettez-moi (1:22)
  14. Plus: Digital Booklet

2014: Casablanca [Audiogram]

Track list

  1. "Tuons nos enfants (4:29)
  2. "La noyade (Mami Wata)" (3:51)
  3. "L'Échec de l'Odéon" (3:23)
  4. "La pornographie" (5:45)
  5. "La honte" (4:40)
  6. "Océanic 815 ** *****" (3:10)
  7. "Gun" (3:20)
  8. "Aimer aimer" (3:39)
  9. "Albert Prévost" (2:34)
  10. "La durée" (4:49)
  11. "Casablanca" (5:39)
  12. Plus: Digital Booklet

Singles / videography

Filmography

Soundtrack

Theatre

References

  1. Émilie Côté (14 January 2012). "David Giguère: d'acteur à chanteur" (in French). La Presse. Retrieved 14 July 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.