Kenneth Saulnier Pierre Robichaud Roland Gauvin Donald Boudreau Ronald Dupuis
1755 (pronounced seventeen fifty-five) is an Acadian band formed in 1975 by Kenneth Saulnier, Pierre Robichaud, Roland Gauvin, Donald Boudreau and Ronald Dupuis.
History
The band was named after the Great Deportation of 1755, during which Acadians were deported from Acadia (present day Maritimes), and it is associated with Acadie's passage into modernity and for generating a new consciousness of Acadian pride and identity.[1] The Acadian poet Herménégilde Chiasson wrote that 1755 was "much more than a band" but rather "the chant of a generation" and that their songs and lyrics remain the "testimony of a period of tension and affirmation".[2] The group is considered an icon of modern Acadian culture, and is credited for launching the modern Acadian musical scene at the international level and for influencing several Acadian artists and bands that came after them, such as Fayo or Dominique Dupuis.
The band officially broke up in 1984, but began to reunite to play shows and summer tours, especially during Acadian-related festivities such as National Acadian Day.[3] A particularly notable show was at the Moncton Coliseum, during the first Acadian World Congress in 1994, which was filmed and turned into a live album Les retrouvailles de la famille and a video release on VHS and DVD. The band toured through New Brunswick in 2009.[4]
After the band broke up, its members went on with their musical careers. Gauvin joined the band Les Méchants Maquereaux and released a solo album in 2005. He also co-wrote the music for the 1995 documentary about the Acadian deportation.[5][6] In 2001, Saulnier released the solo album Heritage.[7] Robichaud released two solo albums, in 1998 and 2004.[8] Dupuis formed the Glamour Puss Blues Band.[9]
As of 2019, 1755 was still touring and performing.[10][11]
Musical style
1755 combines folk, country and rock, with traditional folk song lyrics, or original compositions from the band members, or from Acadian poet Gérald Leblanc.[12] Most of the band's songs are performed in the Frenchdialect of south eastern New Brunswick, known as "chiac", but some compositions are in English as well.
^"Feature Article #6". www1.gnb.ca. Government of New Brunswick. Retrieved 2021-09-04.
Further reading
Duguay, Roland (2002). L'épopée 1755. Éditions de la Francophonie. ISBN978-2-923016-01-6.
Le Groupe 1755 (2017). Les chansons du groupe 1755. Éditions de la Francophonie. ISBN978-2-89627-521-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)