That was an
excellent debut display by Feux d’artifice Orion, a Canadian company based in Shawinigan. Presented just three days after another excellent show, it obviously elicited comparisons with the Hungarian performance. If I was a member of the jury, I would have taken a long time to establish my score and to make my ranking! Both teams have different strengths and weaknesses, as well as different artistic and technical approaches.
According to a news report of the Mauricie regional station of Radio-Canada/CBC available
here, this nearly 34-minute extravaganza was the largest fireworks show ever produced by Orion – between 5000 and 6000 pieces – and appears to be an important step in the history of the company. An overview of the setup from the ferris wheel allowed to anticipate the largest number of nautical products so far and the first flight of girandolas this year, and a narrow waterfall attached to a lifting platform. Otherwise, the technical design appeared more standard than the Hungarian show.
I will start with the theme of the show,
Myths and Legends of Québec, which is key to this display, especially to assess the pyromusical design and the soundtrack. Orion has certainly put a lot of work into the development of that concept inasmuch as it recruited Québec storyteller Bryan Perro to record the narrative, which referred to 9 mythical or legendary stories. It reminds some previous displays in this competition, especially the award-winning Royal Pyrotechnie and Fireworks Spectaculars Canada’s
Kutuan, Legends of Fire in 2014, or the
Butterfly Lovers story illustrated in the Chinese shows in 2008 (Sunny International) and 2018 (Dancing Fireworks). However, to depict so many different stories through fireworks and a soundtrack is a bolder challenge... Many people I discussed with were surprised not to find in that selection the legend of the
Chasse-Galerie (or Flying Canoe – see
here for details), likely one of the most famous in Québec. I had heard about the White Lady of the Montmorency Fall (see
here) and the monster of the Memphrémagog Lake (see
here), but I didn’t know about any other of these stories. I was able to easily find details about the first legend of the line-up, “puppets” (i.e., aurora borealis) moving to the sound of a violin (see
here), as well as the Gladiolus Lady (see
here). Despite my research, I was less successful with the dogs race around a church in Charlevoix, the blue pig next to the Chicoutimi River, the werewolf in Pointe-aux-Trembles, and the Quebec area “serpent child.”
So it appears that stories were unevenly known, and I would say they were unevenly depicted in the show. The most obvious case was the White Lady of the Montmorency Fall, when the waterfall came into life above the 2nd ramp. Blue bees and stars purposefully followed the narrative about the blue pig. Smiley face shells evoked the smile of the Gladiolus Lady. Morever, it is possible that some mines and shells of tourbillons illustrated the aurora borealis on the music of Lindsay Stirling. Shells of rings, which lit up in a sequence evoking a race, were maybe selected to illustrate the race between dogs around a church on
Navras from the Matrix Revolution original soundtrack, as well as some spirals (the dogs tail?). To summarize : beyond some exceptions, the illustration of these myths and legends was abstract, to say the least.
The soundtrack included 15 titles and a total of 11 narrative segments. The narrative was extremely well integrated, always with musics in the background and some fireworks as well, so we really had an uninterrupted pyrotechnic performance during almost 34 minutes, in contrast with the extended pauses in Nuvu’s show. I felt very engaged by the epic music, most coming from various movies. That being said, I am not sure to what extent the music was actually linked to the selected myths and legends. As far as I know, none of these musical pieces originate from Quebec. I wonder whether some folks music – a popular genre in recent years – might have strengthened the concept. Many people I discuss with had wondered about the link between the Hungarian music culture and Céline Dion, Bryan Adam and Marie Mai. The same could be said with many items in the Canadian show.
With pyrotechnic material installed on the five firing ramps (three platforms composed the non-permanent 5th ramp for that show) and one lifting platform, the Canadian team had arguably designed a show to make the most of the firing area. Indeed, the display was sometimes very wide, and it included many nautical products. On the music of
Empire of Angels, I really enjoyed a barrage made of about 30 nautical shells, the very first nautical shells displayed this year! However, as we compare with the previous show, the Canadian technical design was not as elaborated as the Hungarian one, with its perpendicular ramps made of 30 pontoons which really added to the depth of the design.
The opening and the closing of the show were spectaculars. The first shell was launched at the midpoint of the countdown and it burst right at the beginning of the show. The introduction featured extremely well-synchronized fast sequences of fans of comets and mines across the firing ramps, shells of 3D cubes, apparently followed by some 3D variants (I am not sure whether they were cylinders or distorted cubes). Complex patterns of flashes and other products along the third ramp also characterized the closing of the show (i.e., the last two parts), including some “rotating” schemes created from the lifted platform. The last minute of the show had several beautiful shells of stars with three colour changes (from blue to yellow, to purple, to green). However, that level of complexity wasn’t constant throughout the show, many segments being based on candles and some repetitive patterns, while the range of the products was nonetheless extensive. Unfortunately, the waterfall was narrow, and the double-ascension girandolas extinguished quickly.
Overall, that was a bold artistic approach, a very engaging show for me, and an exhibition of the
savoir-faire of Orion’s designers. The Canadian entrant certainly joins Nuvu as another serious contender for a Jupiter. I spent a good amount of time to think about my ranking. On one side, the theme of the Canadian show was more elaborated than in the Hungarian one and the performance was really uninterrupted. On the other side, the technical design was somewhat less elaborated and constant than in the Hungarian display, the latter being also distinctive due to the quality of its pyrotechnic products.
So, my personal ranking so far :
1. Nuvu (Hungary)
2. Feux d’artifice Orion (Canada)
3. Sirius Pyrotechnics (Mexico)
I feel the race is tight between these two contestants, but there are three more contestants to come!
Fred