Les Lunaisiens, Arnaud Marzorati - Revolutions (2014) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: Les Lunaisiens, Arnaud Marzorati
- Title: Revolutions
- Year Of Release: 2014
- Label: Paraty Productions
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 88.2kHz +Booklet
- Total Time: 01:12:31
- Total Size: 346 mb / 1.16 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. L’Internationale
02. J’ai peur
03. Le Chant du Pain
04. Le Vieux Drapeau
05. Valse minute No. 1, Op. 64
06. Aime, travaille et prie
07. Ne criez plus : « A bas les communistes ! »
08. Marseillaise des Cotillons
09. Marche des Trompettes
10. Garibaldi
11. Le bal et la guillotine
12. Danse Macabre
13. Quand viendra-t-elle
14. Le Temps des Cerises
15. Le Chant des Ouvriers
16. Marseillaise de la Commune
17. Lettre de la Périchole
18. Claire
19. Le Sir de Fisch-Ton-Kan
20. Quel est le fou
21. Marseillaise des Requins
Musical chronicles gravitating around the Marseillaise and the three 19th-century revolutions in France After the ancient régime and a brief Napoleonic craze, France took almost a century to define its national symbols. From 1795 to 1879, it took a long, perilous and bloody route for the Marseillaise to definitely become the national anthem of all the French, and for the tricolour flag (saluted by Béranger in his ‘Vieux Drapeau’ [‘The Old Flag’]) to be forever acclaimed as ‘standard of the Republic’.
For an epoch often seen as little more than a long stretch of Romantic infatuation, the 19th century was, above all, a century of battles, resistance and barricades. No fewer than three revolutions in 50 years: the ‘Trois Glorieuses’ of 1830, the Days of February and June 1848, and the 1871 Commune. And we might also mention the Canuts Revolt of 1831 and the June 1832 insurrection, with its drama of the Rue Transnonain… All along these fratricidal battles, battles of streets and cobblestones painted and described by artists like Delacroix, Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas or Berlioz, hymns and songs echoedwith the roar of the insurgents’ guns and cannons. It was in this atmosphere, this storm of gunpowder and blood, that songwriters like Pierre Dupont and his ‘Song of Bread’ or ‘Of the Workers’ or Gustave Leroy and his ‘The Ball and the Guillotine’ joined forces with the rebels’ clamour, with committed and vindictive texts taking aim at successive governments that had proved too clumsy to satisfy the will of a population all too often starved and exploited, prey to doubt and to anger. Song of glory or keen of death? May all this music renew the struggles of those men of good will who fought for the three values: Liberty, Equality and Fraternity.
01. L’Internationale
02. J’ai peur
03. Le Chant du Pain
04. Le Vieux Drapeau
05. Valse minute No. 1, Op. 64
06. Aime, travaille et prie
07. Ne criez plus : « A bas les communistes ! »
08. Marseillaise des Cotillons
09. Marche des Trompettes
10. Garibaldi
11. Le bal et la guillotine
12. Danse Macabre
13. Quand viendra-t-elle
14. Le Temps des Cerises
15. Le Chant des Ouvriers
16. Marseillaise de la Commune
17. Lettre de la Périchole
18. Claire
19. Le Sir de Fisch-Ton-Kan
20. Quel est le fou
21. Marseillaise des Requins
Musical chronicles gravitating around the Marseillaise and the three 19th-century revolutions in France After the ancient régime and a brief Napoleonic craze, France took almost a century to define its national symbols. From 1795 to 1879, it took a long, perilous and bloody route for the Marseillaise to definitely become the national anthem of all the French, and for the tricolour flag (saluted by Béranger in his ‘Vieux Drapeau’ [‘The Old Flag’]) to be forever acclaimed as ‘standard of the Republic’.
For an epoch often seen as little more than a long stretch of Romantic infatuation, the 19th century was, above all, a century of battles, resistance and barricades. No fewer than three revolutions in 50 years: the ‘Trois Glorieuses’ of 1830, the Days of February and June 1848, and the 1871 Commune. And we might also mention the Canuts Revolt of 1831 and the June 1832 insurrection, with its drama of the Rue Transnonain… All along these fratricidal battles, battles of streets and cobblestones painted and described by artists like Delacroix, Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas or Berlioz, hymns and songs echoedwith the roar of the insurgents’ guns and cannons. It was in this atmosphere, this storm of gunpowder and blood, that songwriters like Pierre Dupont and his ‘Song of Bread’ or ‘Of the Workers’ or Gustave Leroy and his ‘The Ball and the Guillotine’ joined forces with the rebels’ clamour, with committed and vindictive texts taking aim at successive governments that had proved too clumsy to satisfy the will of a population all too often starved and exploited, prey to doubt and to anger. Song of glory or keen of death? May all this music renew the struggles of those men of good will who fought for the three values: Liberty, Equality and Fraternity.
Classical | FLAC / APE | HD & Vinyl
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