Spanning five decades, Yves Daoust’s catalogue embraces electroacoustic, mixed, and instrumental composition — each work treating listening itself as a dramatic act. His music has been performed and broadcast internationally, and is distributed on the empreintes DIGITALes label.
Fonofone is a sound-creation instrument conceived by Yves Daoust in 2004 to awaken musical creativity in young people. It has become the cornerstone of a sustained pedagogical engagement reaching thousands of students across Québec and beyond.
A central pillar of Daoust’s practice is transmission — the conviction that listening, creativity, and sonic awareness can and must be taught. Over thirty years at the Conservatoire de musique et d’art dramatique du Québec, he shaped generations of electroacoustic composers and built enduring institutional programs.
A study of Yves Daoust’s musical evolution — from his radical beginnings in 1975, through the invention of a new genre, the full flowering of his aesthetic, and a late immersion in intimate memory.
The absolute formal signature of Daoust. Every piece operates on at least two simultaneous levels: the apparent (the surface narrative) and the deep (the true philosophical or emotional subject).
Bach, Couperin, Mozart, Debussy — not as cultivated references, but as organic continuation. Daoust claims a continuum, refusing the radical breaks valorized by the contemporary scene. His persistent tonality is its most audible trace.
A methodological constant: he records, lets the subject speak, then edits with a discretion close to an ethnographer’s. The other’s voice becomes musical notation.
Present vs past, frozen time vs living time, repetition vs forgetting — his central philosophical obsession, expressed in each work under a different form.
Born in Longueuil, Québec, Yves Daoust is one of the most distinctive and influential voices in contemporary electroacoustic music — trained at the NFB, at the GMEB in Bourges, and at the Conservatoire de musique de Québec, where he spent thirty years building the electroacoustic programs. Recipient of the Prix Serge-Garant (2009).
First Electroacoustic Composition
For inquiries regarding scores, commissions, Fonofone, teaching, or collaborations: