Lyricist, producer, b St-Raymond-de-Portneuf, near Quebec City 2 Mar 1945. As a child, he heard the 'turlutes' (comic ritournelles) of La Bolduc at his aunt's home in Limoilou. He took his classical and musical studies at the Séminaire de Québec and at the Collège des Jésuites where he discovered literature. Thanks to an inheritance, he travelled for six years in Europe and in the USA where he learned languages. In Paris, he met the singer Diane Dufresne who was studying voice. On his return to Quebec, he wrote 'Dans ma Camaro' with music by André Gagnon, which Steve Fiset made into a immediate hit. His lyrics were promptly sung by Monique Leyrac, Renée Claude, Donald Lautrec, Nicole Martin and Pauline Julien.
In 1972 he began an association with Diane Dufresne and François Cousineau which produced some of the greatest pop hits of the Quebec chanson of the 1970s. 'J'ai rencontré l'homme de ma vie,' 'En écoutant Elton John,' 'La Chanteuse straight,' 'Pars pas sans me dire bye-bye' created a new style. At first inspired by Léo Ferré and Georges Brassens, Plamondon quickly developed his own style. His 'flash' phrases taken from popular speech and his modern subjects entranced the young generation. He wrote nearly 75 songs for Diane Dufresne, including such classics as 'Chanson pour Elvis' (music by François Cousineau), 'Le Parc Belmont' (music by Christian St-Roch), 'J'ai douze ans maman' and 'Oxygène' (music by Germain Gauthier). Their collaboration ended with Dioxine de carbone, a 'cartoon-opera' (music by Angelo Finaldi) which received mixed reviews and only ran for one month at the Cirque d'hiver de Paris in 1983.
In the 1980s, Plamondon became one of the most popular lyricists in France. He wrote for Françoise Hardy ('Flash-Backs'), Catherine Lara ('Haut les mains'), Petula Clark ('Mister Orwell'), and Johnny Hallyday ('Le Repos du rocker'), and collaborated on the texts for the opera Lily Passion, premiered at the Zénith de Paris in 1986. 'Coeur de rocker,' written for Julien Clerc, sold more than 75,000 copies in France in 1984. Plamondon has contributed to the success of several Quebec singers in France, including Robert Charlebois ('J'taime comme un fou,' 'Les Talons hauts'), Fabienne Thibeault ('Les Uns contre les autres,' 'Question de feeling'), Claude Dubois ('Le Blues du businessman'), and Martine St-Clair ('Quand je tombe en amour'). He produced Marc Drouin's musical comedy Pied de poule (1982) and Louise Forestier's show Un rendez-vous. A collection of his greatest hits, performed by several artists, was released in 1985 by Kébec-Disc (KD-633). A founding member of the Société professionnelle des auteurs et compositeurs du Québec (SPACQ), his startling outburst at the ADISQ gala in 1983 focused attention on the reform of copyright laws by the Quebec and Canadian goverments.
Plamondon has since devoted himself mainly to the writing of modern operas dealing with show business stars, the living legends of the closing quarter of the 20th century. Starmania, music by Michel Berger, illustrates the shortcomings of the 'star system' and was premiered at the Palais des congrès de Paris in 1979. In 1980 Plamondon wrote Suite rock en rose, with music by Nanette Workman, which was premiered by the latter at the Spectrum in Montreal. In 1990 he wrote a second rock musical with Michel Berger, La Légende de Jimmy (stage setting by Jérome Savary), inspired by the life of James Dean and featuring Diane Tell, Renaud Hantson, and Nanette Workman. Légende ran for five months at the Mogador and the record sold more than 100,000 copies (CBS CK-90857-CD). The complete libretto was published by the Éditions Cherche midi in 1991.
Plamondon holds a unique place in the history of Quebec chanson by virtue of the sheer quantity of his output and by his international success. He is a 'tragic poet,' according to the writer Jacques Godbout, each of whose songs creates a theatrical universe where the rocker has replaced the heroes of the past. 'A spokesman of his generation, of his times of our sensitiveness,' he has given the French song a language riddled with foreign words and popular expressions capable of expressing solitude and the hopes of modern men. 'It seems that Plamondon's Québécois can be heard from now on as much in Paris as in Montreal,' states Godbout. Plamondon is a member of the Advisory Committee on the status of Quebec artists. He was made Chevalier of the Ordre national du Québec in 1990 and decorated with the Ordre des francophones d'Amérique in 1991.