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Artists rally behind Montreal concert hall after court orders it to stop making noise

MONTREAL - Benoit Pinette, known by his stage name Tire le coyote, was set to perform his upcoming album at Montreal’s La Tulipe concert hall next year. But after the Quebec Court of Appeal recently ordered the venue to stop making noise that is audible inside an adjacent building, the historic venue temporarily closed its doors.

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Artists rally behind Montreal concert hall after court orders it to stop making noise

More than 100 Quebec musicians, comedians and other artists are rallying behind a historic Montreal concert hall that temporarily closed its doors this week after a court ordered it to stop making noise. Coeur de pirate performs at the Juno Awards in London, Ont.,March 17, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn


MONTREAL - Benoit Pinette, known by his stage name Tire le coyote, was set to perform his upcoming album at Montreal’s La Tulipe concert hall next year. But after the Quebec Court of Appeal recently ordered the venue to stop making noise that is audible inside an adjacent building, the historic venue temporarily closed its doors.

In response, the singer-songwriter united more than 100 musicians, comedians and other artists to sign an open letter decrying the court ruling that led to La Tulipe’s closure. Heavyweights of Quebec’s entertainment industry, like composer Robert Charlebois, singer-songwriter Coeur de pirate, and folk-rock band Les Cowboys Fringants signed the letter published in La Presse on Friday.

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