FME 2025 Recap: Baby Berserk, Empanadas Illegales, & More

 

Photo by Malaika Astorga

We've returned from our yearly pilgrimage to FME (or almost at least, this recap is being written on the very long bus ride back home to Montreal). Despite the distance, the festival remains one of our favourites of the year. Another delegate put it perfectly, FME feels like summer camp, but if you were to swap out the friendship bracelets with secret punk shows and an abundance of beer.

The festival ran from Thursday, August 28th to Sunday, August 31st, and hosted a variety of acts, both Canadian and international. Every year, the festival chooses a theme that takes over the town, and this year, we were greeted by mysterious craters, dinosaur footprints, aliens, and more, with photo-op stands in front of each venue. In terms of the musical highlights, here's the day-by-day summary.

Photo by Malaika Astorga

Thursday welcomed delegates from around the world, and despite the long travel day for many, everyone made it out to the first shows of the festival. Crasher kicked off the night with a shimmering and electric performance, so electrifying, actually, that it blew the subwoofer. However, Bibi Club had it sorted in no time and had the crowd dancing along in the freakiest ways.

Population II at the Bonsound BBQ by Malaika Astorga

The iconic Bonsound BBQ is always hosted on the Friday morning of the festival, and this year's poolside performance was by Population II, whose crusher performance made the perfect soundtrack for our hungover hotdog brunch. We had the opportunity to speak with Crasher at the BBQ on a giant chess set for a video interview, which will be released very soon. Then we grabbed one last sparkling paloma before heading to Meggie Lennon's show. She had the crowd captivated and singing along till the last song. 

Baby Berserk by Malaika Astorga

Baby Berserk followed up shortly after with a killer secret show at the local favourite poutine spot, Chez Morasse. Arguably dance punk, and provenly incredible performers, the lead singer was climbing up street posts and storage units in heels, all while keeping everyone dancing and screaming. La Flemme, a punk group from Marseille, took over Le Petit Theatre, drawing on classic punk references, while keeping the hardcore spirit alive with a wall of death and probably the friendliest mosh pit we've ever seen. 

Poolgirl by Malaika Astorga

Saturday, welcome our own DJ Flleur to the main stage area of the festival, with three diverse sets throughout the night, spinning everything from Fontaines D.C. dance edits to darkwave to Strawberry Switchblade's cover of Jolene. Empanadas Illegales took to the stage first, with an incredible cumbia set. The OBGMs were up next, introducing themselves as a Celine Dion cover band, and demanding the crowd to "open up the pit for Celine!" They also publicly shamed a crowd member's shitty ex-boyfriend, and helped everyone process their emotions. Les Trois Accords closed out the night on the main stage with Quebec classics that had everyone singing their hearts out. Around the corner, Boutique Feelings did a secret show across from Cabaret de la Derniere Chance in an alleyway, and Poolgirl pulled off a killer riot girl-style set down the street, with pool floaties flying through the crowd. 

Les Freaks de Montréal by Malaika Astorga

Empanadas Illegales returned to the stage, or more specifically to the garden, on Sunday with a beautiful secret show at Parc Botanique À Fleur d'eau. Automelodi closed out the festival in the main stage area, with a perfectly spooky darkwave set that had all the local teens dancing like proper goths.

As always, we had the best time at FME, and can't wait for next year. We hope to see you then! In the meantime, stay tuned for video interview with Crasher, Meggie Lennon, and Poolgirl, to be released on the site & our YouTube.


 

What's Cool at FME 2025 (Crasher, Ada Lea, DJ Flleur & More)

 

It’s our favourite time of year again, where we journey to Rouyn-Noranda Abitibi for FME (Festival de musique émergente en Abitibi-Témiscamingue) to see some of the best local and international music of the year. 

We at Also Cool have been big fans, and attendees, of the festival since 2021, and are happy to head back again this year for its 23rd edition. As always, we like to keep our festival schedules organized, so we’ve broken down our FME Top Picks for the weekend ahead. 

Listen along below:

Crasher via FME

Crasher, the electro-punk trio from Montreal, play on Thursday at 8pm at Cabaret de la Dernière Chance. The band is fronted by Airick Asher Woodhead (Doldrums / Errhead), and formed during COVID while ‘bubbling’ in a shared jam space. Their 2021 tape STREET CLEANING MACHINES OF THE WORLD made major waves, and we’re eager to hear new songs from their to-be-released debut full-length ODDITI POPULAIRE. It’s easy to get freaky to Woodhead’s caustic lyrics and melodic singing, and is a perfect way to kick off the festival.

Yoo Doo Right via FME

Yoo Doo Right take over the same venue on Friday at 9pm with their hypnotic wall of sound (also known as krautrock). Bring your earplugs and settle in for noisy, melodic guitar parts, effects-laden synthesizer soundscapes, deep bass grooves and patented percussive furies into sprawling, cathartic musical pieces. Drawing inspiration from post-rock, krautrock, shoegaze, classical music, electroacoustics, and musique concrète, they create a unique sound where “towering monoliths of roaring riffs crash against swarms of restless rhythms”

The OBGMs via FME

The mainstage welcomes one of our very own Also Cools, DJ Flleur, on Saturday, who plays 7–8pm, and in between sets by Empanadas Illegales (cumbia/surf), The OBGMs (punk/rock), and Les Trois Accords (pop-rock). Pull up and dance hard, this won’t be your typical DJ set. 

Sunday welcomes a more laid-back vibe to wrap up the weekend, with a set from Ada Lea at Apéro Air Canada at 6:30pm. Alexandra Levy, known as Ada Lea, is a Montreal-based multidisciplinary artist whose third album, when i paint my masterpiece, blends music and visual art through a deeply intuitive and imagistic lens. Levy’s lyrics explore transformation, dreams, and the act of observing oneself. 

Insider Tip: Keep an eye out for the “secret shows” that tend to pop up all weekend! Make sure to download the app to stay up to date with all of the festival’s surprises. 

Get your tickets here, we’ll see you in the pit. 


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