Montreal Composer Cédric Dind-Lavoie Unveils Textural Folktronica Single “Chrysalide,” New Album ‘Collages (2019–2022)’ Out April 17th

Hope your week is off to a good start! I'm looking forward to sharing a new track with you.
Montreal-based multi-instrumentalist and composer Cédric Dind-Lavoie returns with “Chrysalide,” a textural, comforting, and quietly melancholic instrumental piece that moves between shelter and transformation. Rooted in folktronica and electroacoustic exploration, the track unfolds like a memory.
Intimate, enveloping, and gently evolving, it’s taken from Cédric’s upcoming album, Collages (2019–2022), a new series of studio explorations and reinterpretations of music originally created for contemporary dance and documentary film, set for release on April 17th.
“Chrysalide” took shape naturally around a two-part guitar motif. That repeating pattern inspired an arrangement steeped in childhood nostalgia, evoking the warmth and safety of a familiar refuge. From there, the composition expanded outward, layering subtle textures while maintaining a restrained emotional core.
Listen: https://m.releaseradar.ca/cedric-dind-lavoie_chrysalide
The title “Chrysalide” reflects both protection and change. Suggesting the soothing nature of a cocoon while alluding to metamorphosis, the name mirrors the passage from childhood to adulthood, a space where vulnerability and growth coexist.
What distinguishes the track is its meticulous textural exploration. Modified guitar, harmonium, bass synth, autoharp, and carefully manipulated samples (many created from cardboard boxes) form an unexpected yet cohesive palette. The result is a surprising blend of organic and experimental elements, shaped into a soundscape that feels tactile and immersive.
For Cédric, production choices are always guided by intimacy. Even as the instrumentation shifts from project to project, his approach remains consistent: recording sounds closely and interpreting them with restraint and gentleness. The goal is not grandeur, but proximity; an enveloping sonic environment that invites listeners inward.
With “Chrysalide,” Cédric offers a piece grounded not in spectacle, but in subtlety, capturing the fragile space between memory and transformation.




