Some artists chase fame. Others simply live their truth so honestly, so consistently, and so fearlessly that the world eventually comes to them. Richard Séguin belongs firmly in the second category. Over more than five decades, this Québécois singer-songwriter has built a body of work that is at once deeply personal and unmistakably political music that carries the weight of the land, the heartache of injustice, and the stubborn persistence of hope. In 2025, the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame finally gave him the national recognition he has long deserved. And yet, for those who’ve followed Richard Séguin across his long career, the honour felt less like a surprise than an overdue inevitability.
Richard Séguin’s Age, Birthplace, and Early Roots
Richard Séguin was born on March 27, 1952, in Pointe-aux-Trembles, a working-class neighbourhood in Montreal, Quebec. As of 2025, he is 73 years old. He arrived into the world alongside his twin sister, Marie-Claire Séguin a fact that would shape the entire early arc of his artistic life. Growing up in a modest, community-oriented neighbourhood instilled in him values of equity, social solidarity, and a deep suspicion of indifference. Those values never left him. They show up in album after album, decade after decade, as insistently as ever.
The Guitar That Started Everything
At the age of 14, Richard Séguin received a guitar from his father. That single gift changed the direction of his life completely. He didn’t put it down. He and Marie-Claire began performing together almost immediately, singing under the name Les Nochers before forming the duo Marie et Richard in 1967. Remarkably, that duo earned the title of Discovery of the Year at Le Patriote in 1968 before either of them had even finished secondary school. That early momentum was no accident. Richard Séguin was born with an instinct for songwriting that formal training could only sharpen, never manufacture.
Family, Relationships, and Personal Life
Richard Séguin is an intensely private man when it comes to his personal life, and he has always kept the details of his romantic relationships well away from the public eye. He has never married publicly, and confirmed information about a long-term partner is not available in the public record. What is known, however, is that he has at least one daughter. In his 2006 album Lettres ouvertes a deeply personal record in which he composed individual letters in song form to 15 people his daughter was among those he addressed directly. The fact that he chose to honour her in that way tells you something about the kind of father he is: thoughtful, emotionally present, and willing to express love through the most honest medium he knows.
His Bond With Twin Sister Marie-Claire
If there is one relationship that has defined Richard Séguin’s personal and professional life above all others, it is his lifelong bond with Marie-Claire. They were literally born together, began performing together as teenagers, and have continued to orbit each other’s careers well into adulthood. Even after they parted ways artistically in the late 1970s to pursue independent paths, they never truly separated. Richard frequently collaborated on Marie-Claire’s solo albums, and she remained one of the 15 people he wrote to in Lettres ouvertes. Their story is, in many ways, one of the most quietly remarkable sibling partnerships in the history of Canadian music.
Life in the Appalachian Region
Beyond his family ties, Richard Séguin’s relationship with the land itself has been deeply formative. Embracing the back-to-the-land movement that swept through progressive Quebec in the early 1970s, he found his sanctuary in Saint-Venant-de-Paquette, a small community nestled in the Appalachian region of Quebec. That landscape its forests, its silences, its rhythms seeped directly into his music. His 2011 album Appalaches is the most explicit expression of that love, but really, the influence runs through almost everything he has created.
Career: From Les Séguin to Solo Stardom
The Les Séguin Years (1969–1977)
After the duo Marie et Richard, Richard and Marie-Claire joined other musicians to form La Nouvelle Frontière in 1969, recording two albums before the group disbanded in 1971. Then, in 1972, the two siblings officially became Les Séguin and released their self-titled debut album. From the very first track, they were already singing about environmental concerns and Indigenous rights topics that were far from mainstream conversation at the time. Between 1972 and 1976, they released four albums: the self-titled debut, En attendant, Récolte de rêves, and Festin d’amour. By 1977, both felt the pull of individual artistic expression, and they agreed to pursue solo careers.
The Breakthrough Collaboration With Serge Fiori
Almost immediately after going solo, Richard struck creative gold. He partnered with Serge Fiori the driving force behind the recently disbanded group Harmonium to record the album Deux cents nuits à l’heure (1978). The record became a cultural phenomenon, eventually selling over 200,000 copies. Furthermore, at the very first ADISQ Gala in 1979, it swept three Félix Awards, including Album of the Year – Singer-Songwriter and Record of the Year. For a debut-level solo collaboration, that was an extraordinary achievement, and it announced Richard Séguin as a major voice in Québécois music on his own terms.
Solo Career and Major Albums
Richard launched his official solo debut in 1979, followed by Trace et contraste in 1980 an album inspired by his encounter with poet Louky Bersianik. His song “Chanson pour durer toujours” from that record won three awards at Belgium’s Festival de Spa in 1981, including the Grand Prize for French-language radio programming. That same year, he placed second at the Festival mondial de la chanson française in Antibes.
Then came Double vie in 1985 a pivotal record that shifted his sound decisively toward rock. Some longtime folk fans weren’t sure what to make of it, but the broader public embraced it enthusiastically. The album spent more than 50 weeks on Quebec radio charts and won the Félix Award for Best Rock Album in 1986, the same year Séguin was also crowned Best Songwriter at ADISQ. His follow-up, Journée d’Amérique (1988), won the Félix for Best Rock Album again and became a gold record. That particular album also earned the public’s award at the Festival d’été international de Québec in 1989.
Aux portes du matin and the 1990s Peak
The early 1990s brought perhaps the commercial peak of his solo career. His 1991 album Aux portes du matin won the Félix for Best-Selling Album of the Year. The accompanying tour was a record-breaking success, earning both the ADISQ Gold Ticket and the Miroir Award for Most Popular Performance at the Festival d’été de Québec. His song “Ici comme ailleurs” also won the CBC competition Notre chanson in 1989, cementing his crossover appeal.
Achievements and Awards
Richard Séguin’s list of accomplishments is genuinely staggering for any artist, let alone one who has always put artistic integrity above commercial strategy. He has released 13 solo albums and participated in seven collaborative projects. He has won multiple Félix Awards from ADISQ, achieved gold and platinum sales certifications, and earned international recognition at festivals in Belgium, France, and Senegal. In 1990, he received the title of Artist for Peace a distinction that recognized not just his music but his sustained civic engagement and advocacy for social justice, Quebec sovereignty, and environmental causes.
In 2010, the SPACQ Foundation honoured him with the prestigious Sylvain-Lelièvre Award for his exceptional career as a songwriter. Then in 2012, celebrating his 60th birthday and the 40th anniversary of his songwriting career, Spectra Musique released the box set Ma demeure, which won the Félix Award for Anthology of the Year a fitting summation of a life spent in song.
Most recently and most significantly, Richard Séguin was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame on May 4, 2025, during the SOCAN Gala at La Tohu in Montréal. He was inducted by fellow songwriter Patrice Michaud, and the evening featured tributes and performances by artists including Luce Dufault, Vincent Vallières, Jorane, Ivan Boivin-Flamand, and his longtime collaborator and guitarist Simon Godin.
Richard Séguin’s Net Worth
Richard Séguin has never been the kind of artist who built his career around maximizing commercial earnings, and accordingly, he keeps his finances entirely private. Based on his sustained output over five-plus decades including platinum-selling albums, decades of touring, songwriting royalties, and ongoing SOCAN licensing income industry estimates place his net worth at approximately $1 million to $2 million CAD. That figure reflects a career built on consistent artistry rather than blockbuster stadium tours, and for someone as philosophically grounded as Séguin, that balance likely feels exactly right.
Recent Activities: Still Creating, Still Speaking Out
Richard Séguin has shown absolutely no signs of slowing down. Following his 2016 acoustic album Les horizons nouveaux and his 2018 release Retour à Walden – Sur les pas de Thoreau a tribute to the American philosopher and naturalist Henry David Thoreau, a lifelong personal influence he continues to be creatively active and publicly engaged. His 2025 induction into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame brought him renewed attention across Canada, introducing his extraordinary catalogue to a new generation of music lovers who may have only known his name from their parents’ record collections.
Beyond music, Richard Séguin remains an outspoken advocate on issues of Indigenous rights, environmental protection, and Quebec cultural sovereignty causes he has championed since he was literally a teenager writing songs about them. At 73, his voice carries decades of lived conviction. And somehow, it still sounds urgent.
Richard Séguin represents something increasingly rare in any era of popular music: an artist whose work and whose life tell the exact same story. He didn’t write protest songs for attention and then retire to a comfortable silence. He kept showing up for the music, for the causes, and for the people who needed someone to say the hard things out loud. That, more than any Félix Award or Hall of Fame plaque, is the real measure of what he has accomplished.
