Five years after his debut display
Aurora, Garden City Display Fireworks was back with another atmospheric theme (please see P.S.1 below),
Four Seasons. Being the penultimate contestant of a season considered below the average by some fanatics, many of us anticipated a potential Gold Jupiter winning display, which would make the triumph of the Canadian troika (along with Royal Pyrotechnie and Fireworks Spectaculars Canada) completed. Many supporters from Royal Pyrotechnie purposefully attended the display, joining wives and children of many members of the Canadian crew, whose enthusiasm became vocal as the pyros walked through the grandstands from the floating stage to the control room.
While we have already enjoyed the
Four Seasons theme in the Montreal International Fireworks Competition, namely with Marutamaya (Japan) in 2002 and with countless shows featuring Vivaldi’s famous musics, this one was truly innovative with songs related to each season, distinguished with short and pretty effective narratives (despite that I couldn’t understand few words, possibly because unadjusted, too loud sound system) delivered by children, including designer Michael Bohonos’ daughter. In contrast with previous shows, this one didn’t start with an anti-climactic narrative : instead, an introductive segment had been planned before the spring narrative. No fireworks appeared when children introduced us to the spring and summer seasons, but setup pieces of red and green leaves (including a maple leaf) and a white bird came into life during the fall narrative, and shells burst before the end of the winter one. Children quickly came back once the finale over to only add "Je vous souhaite une bonne nuit!". Overall, I found the narrative effective and it didn’t detract from a very good display.
At this advanced stage of the competition, I think the Canadian entrant has been the most successful to fill 30 minutes without significant repetitions, featuring a very broad range of pyrotechnic effects. Pyromusical and technical designs were done to make the most of the firing area and to pyrotechnically represent each season.
The spring part, beginning with a series of tree-shape setup pieces of gerbs, was festive and noisy, with whistling serpents and smiley-face shells, among others (as well as the trendy, presumably Zaragozana’s, mushroom-shape three-colour shells). Great word-synchronized rainbow sequences appeared on the music of
Ça fait rire les oiseaux; they were produced with Magic Fire electronic devices embedded in skymines (or a similar product).
The summer part was especially spectacular, with low-level effects on the music of
Splish Splash, with surfing meteor-headed comets (while they would have been more appropriate in the previous
Surfin’ USA), barrage of nautical shells, and a fan of blue meteor-headed comets, which ended in a dramatic thunderstorm sound, leading us to the music of
Thunderstruck, with spectacular loud and bright effects : we saw strobes and shells of photoflashes, followed by bright flashes along the third ramp, and candles of tourbillons ending in salutes, then the
brightest single flash effect I have ever seen (apparently shooting from candles on ramp 3), causing me to almost close my eyes, as we are not supposed to watch lightning anyway!
The fall season was obvious with many shells of green, yellow, orange and red falling leaves. A flight of double-ascension girandolas, blue nautical flares and a waterfall, tightened between scaffolds above the second ramp (that is, higher than in 2008), were also featured in this part.
The winter part began with a very short segment of Gilles Vigneault
Mon pays (we only heard the famous refrain), followed by three more segments. In addition to the anticipated white effects, produced with strobes, stars, comets and horsetails, we saw phantom shells of various colours, and shells of white comets bursting in small bunches of crackling thin stars, as well as a finale made with sequences of shells of orange (then purple, then red, then green, and then blue) stars with inner white comets, reminding me the Grupo Luso signature finales, which are typically made of successive monochromatic sequences of small-size shells of stars.
Unfortunately, the pyromusical design has been impacted by countless technical failures which caused several asymmetric segments. Each of these failures were minor and didn’t detract from the show, but taken together, they were pretty obvious. I wonder whether these problems were related to the late start of the show, which actually began close to 10:06pm. Furthermore, the design was less clean-cut than in the Spanish and Croatian shows. Sometimes, we could not fully appreciated some pyrotechnic effects because they were mixed with too many things. That was the case of the double-ascension girandolas, which often fascinate the audience, but their impact was lost as they appeared along with shells of falling leaves above and behind a (asymmetric) barrage of cakes of blue stars.
As I have written above, the soundtrack was augmented with an interesting narrative. Mixing between segments within each seasonal parts was carefully done, and pretty spectacular with the transition between
Splish Splash and
Thunderstruck. However, I believe that the show would have been improved by edited segments of some songs (
Ça fait rire les oiseaux…), but that may be just me. Synchronization with the soundtrack was done in different ways throughout the performance. Some sequences were word-, voice-, percussion- and note-synchronized; in other segments, synchronization was a little more atmospheric.
Overall, that was a very good performance from Garden City Display Fireworks. However, it is not obvious for me that the Canadian team surpassed the Croatian and, especially, the Spanish ones. Positive and negative aspects were not the same in all these shows. The Spanish and Canadian displays were more climactic and delivered their themes more effectively than the Croatian one. Their soundtracks were interesting and well-done, though may have been improved with more editing along the road. Richness and vividness of colours was slightly better with Zaragozana. Synchronization appeared more flawless in the Spanish and Croatian displays. The Canadian show suffered of several technical problems causing asymmetric patterns, but I think it featured a broader range of products and was slightly more creative with its pyromusical design. So it is not obvious to rank them...
All that should not make us forgetting the great and creative segments of the show. Michael Bohonos told in interview to Paul that he devoted about one year to design this display. I think the diverse and creative segments of this show reflected all these efforts. Garden City Display Fireworks is, for sure, a contender for a Jupiter. We will know the decision of the jury in less than one week and, maybe, it can lead to the triumph of the Canadian troika!
My ranking so far:
1. Zaragozana (Spain)
2. Garden City Display Fireworks (Canada)
3. Mirnovek Pirotehnika (Croatia)
4. Merlin Fireworks (England)
5. Arthur Rozzi Pyrotechnics (United States)
6. Fireworks by Ian Riedle (Australia)
* Vulcan Fireworks (Hong Kong)
Fred
P.S.1 : I’m sure this atmospheric theme pleased to our in-house meteorologist, Trav. Following the display, designer Michael Bohonos, who obviously reads this forum, interestingly looked around and asked us where Smoke was! Paul provided the appropriate answer. But it leads me to believe that Trav should be at La Ronde instead of on Notre-Dame street!
P.S.2 : Duncan_S, I imagine that you don’t want to see the Canadian entrant to win the Green Achievement Award!
P.S.3 : Before the show, I purchased a (advertised 24 oz) glass of limonade at the Kool Limonade kiosk located near the Jardin des Étoiles. It looks attractive, but think twice : it’s actually a glass filled of ice, with few limonade which obviously tastes more water than anything else. $5.50 is pretty expensive for a glass of ice…
P.S.4: Thank you to the second crew of ride operators who turned off lights on La Spirale last night.
