For a second year in a row, the Montreal International Fireworks Competition ended with a non-Panzera off-competition display. The American team of Melrose Pyrotechnics, winner of the Gold Jupiter in 2006 and Bronze Jupiter in 2009, designed this tribute to Elton John as part of the “Finale des étoiles” series, inaugurated in 2010. As there was no mention of competition technical director Paul Csukassy involvement in the soundtrack design, I assume that it was crafted by Melrose itself, in constrast with previous closing displays.
I thought it was a
very good show. For sure, that was the most intensive use of nautical products this season. While Paul reported about the use of a 5th ramp, which is typically located toward the centre of the lake, they were actually three platforms located next to the third ramp. Various nautical products were launched from this location, with additional ones from other positions on ramp 3. Most notably, during the song
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, we saw an amazing 25-second barrage of white nautical mines which gently erupted from the lake. Several carpets of flares filled the lake and nautical shells toward the end of the display.
As explained by Paul and Mylène following their interview, we say as many as 50 shells of 12 inches. Indeed, there were a lot of large shells combining different effects and shapes. Candles of meteor-headed comets appropriately characterized the
Candle in the Wind segment, as did several blue products for
I Guess That’s Why They Call It the Blues. I especially liked the
Circle of Life part, which began (and ended) with a carpet of green nautical flares, and also featured shells of green falling leaves, shells with double rings of farfalles and z-cakes of tourbillons. This part came to a close with a circular chase of green electric comets launched from the fourth ramp.
The tempo of this pyromusical performance didn’t feature many variation, maybe not as many as a design would like to have. I guess that it was not an easy order to craft an entire show on Elton John musics, as most songs we heard had similar rhythms. Nonetheless, the pace of the performance increased significantly during
Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting with a crescendo of crackling and salutes. The finale, on
Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me, was also powerful.
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I provide some details about the award ceremony, which occured before the closing display, in another thread (
click here ). For a 2nd year in a row, the interlude between the ceremony and the start of the display took a new form. Rather than the usual Vangelis’s musics, a DJ from the local radio station The Beat FM 92.5 (which has sponsored a post-fireworks dance party in Fort Edmonton through the season) entertained the audience from the concrete area where the old control room used to be, right in the centre of the grandstands. I prefer the most quiet Vangelis interlude before regular shows, as it creates to my eyes a more dramatic atmosphere well suited for a competition. However, for the closing night, this highly energetic and very entertaining concept sounds perfect !
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A tribute to a popular singer, the peak of the vacation season, a last opportunity to see an extravaganza from the Montreal competition and perfect weather conditions : all ingredients were mixed for a large attendance, possibly the most crowded day of the year at La Ronde. And with another well-attended event on Ste. Hélène Island the same day and ending approximately at the same time than the fireworks (music festival Osheaga), the public transport authority has posted signs that the regular bus service would resume only once reopened the Jacques-Cartier bridge. I assume that the plan was to move all public transit users from La Ronde to the Papineau – instead of Jean-Drapeau – metro station. Since the park was crowded and that the bridge doesn’t reopen before 11:15pm or so, I can only imagine how chaotic it was to leave the area immediately after the show. I was fortunate to be invited to the aftershow closing party and to benefit of a lift from STL, so I avoided it. Nonetheless, when my pyrofriends and me left the Salon des artificiers around 2am, several cars were still exiting the island.
In the “old times” of the competition, all tickets for the fireworks competition shows were often sold out, at their full price. There was no discount for season pass holders at the time. In the late 90s and early 2000s, the attendance has decreased and during many years, tickets were still available for all shows. It was a shame to see the grandsstands sometimes half empty, or so. In the 2000s, La Ronde began to provide discounted tickets for season pass holders, which helped to fill the seating area. The 2009 tribute to Cirque du Soleil, a special 45-minute displays held as part of the 25th edition, was the first “sold out” show since a long time. Then, with the introduction in 2010 of the “Finale des étoiles”, an annual tribute to one famous music group or artist, the closing off-competition shows are held in front of a capacity audience. As reported by Enkil, yesterday wasn’t an exception.
That brings the 2016 season to a close.
Fred