condition (record/cover): NM / NM - Oiseaux Du Canada brings Jean-Claude Roché to northern latitudes, documenting species adapted to harsh winters and brief summers. The Canadian soundscape differs fundamentally from tropical profusion: fewer species, longer silences, the weight of cold audible in every recording.
L'Oiseau Musicien's Canadian volume completes a kind of triptych with Madagascar and Venezuela, three points defining the range of Roché's travels. The loon's call, haunting symbol of Canadian wilderness, presumably features somewhere in these grooves, along with dozens of less famous voices. Each species represents evolutionary experiment, millennia of adaptation encoded in syrinx and song.
The LP serves scientific and aesthetic purposes simultaneously. Ornithologists use such recordings for species identification, behavioral study, conservation planning. Artists use them as source material, raw sound awaiting transformation. Roché himself may not have distinguished these uses; for him, the recording was the thing, complete in itself, needing neither analysis nor manipulation.