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Dans mes cordes

Renaud

French Music - Released December 1, 2023 | Parlophone (France)

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Règlement de comptes

Alonzo

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released January 26, 2015 | Universal Music Division Island Def Jam

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POV CETTE MEUF en cours qui a TOUT DANS SON SAC

Tina ASMR

Comedy/Other - Released January 28, 2023 | Tina ASMR

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POV CETTE MEUF en cours qui a TOUT DANS SON SAC

Tina ASMR

Alternative & Indie - Released September 2, 2022 | ASMRdB

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Spontini: Olimpie

Flemish Radio Choir

Classical - Released March 22, 2019 | Bru Zane

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Olimpie was described by Hector Berlioz as a “sublime work” and Spontini himself viewed it as his best composition. When it was premiered in Paris, however, it gathered no interest. The work is based on a lesser-known play by Voltaire and was considered out of fashion before it even reached the stage in 1819. In Berlin two years later, in a translated and happier version modified by E.T.A. Hoffmann, Olimpie was more of a success. Back in Parisian venues in 1826, the piece was rarely played, which Berlioz regretted. It occasionally made it to Germany, but was eventually forgotten until its rediscovery in the 1950’s as an Italian version performed by La Tebaldi in Florence. Olimpie is not often included in operas’ repertoires, but nevertheless, with its visuals and refined language, it features many magnificent moments and offers a plethora of staging opportunities.The original 1819 musical score has disappeared. Jérémie Rohrer is presenting instead the 1826 version of the score prepared by Federico Agostinelli with various printed sources as well as an autographed manuscript. The album follows this version with the exception of two cuts during Acts I and III. The recording is meticulous and benefits from the splendid acoustic of the Philharmonie de Paris. Recorded before the concert given at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, it features a set of excellent soloists led by Jérémie Rohrer’s imagination and energy. A perfect resurrection and a gift from the indispensable Bru Zane Foundation in Venice. © François Hudry/Qobuz
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Musique douce et son de nature pour se sentir bien

Hypnose Meditation Relaxation

Relaxation - Released January 22, 2019 | Reiki Dream

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Son de la nature et chakra sacré

Jardin de détente

Pop - Released September 30, 2022 | Rehegoo USA

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Rabelais: Fay ce que vouldras - Plaisirs de gorge et joyeux instruments

Les Sacqueboutiers

Classical - Released July 10, 2012 | Flora

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The title of this album, Fay ce que vouldras (Do what thou willst), is taken from the 1532 novel La vie de Gargantua et de Pantagruel by François Rabelais, and the recording features readings from the book interspersed with vocal and instrumental music of the period by composers like Josquin Desprez, Claude Lejeune, Clément Janequin, Orlande de Lassus, and Claudin de Sermisy. This is an album that should be highly entertaining for fans of these composers and anyone who enjoys music that's quirky or sometimes just plain strange. The spoken texts, in Middle French, are delivered with such gusto and panache by Vincent Bouchot that they should engage even listeners who don't understand a word of what is being said. (The CD comes with a gorgeous, lavishly produced book in French that includes no translations.) The performances by the wind ensemble Les Sacqueboutiers and the male vocal group Ensemble Clément Janequin are ebullient and polished. This is rowdy secular music and the performers sound like they are having the time of their lives with its high spirits and occasional loopiness. The music's oddness peaks in the second part of Janequin's chanson, La chasse, in its depiction of a pack of dogs, barking, howling, and yelping. The music itself is riotously unconventional -- Janequin obviously had a wicked sense of humor -- and the singers' very free rendering of the hounds' gnof, gnof, tronc, tronc, plif, plof is hilarious. The sound is immaculate and detailed. © TiVo
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J’ai deux amours - The Paris Album

Félicien Brut

Classical - Released October 28, 2022 | Warner Classics

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Platinum

Iam

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released May 3, 2005 | Parlophone (France)

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