Divine
Comedy
Geronimo ( A Yann Tiersen Mix ) de Divine Comedy . ( le plus grand artiste musical français invite le temps d’un concert radiophonique son grand frère spirituel : Neil Hannon. En reprenant l’un des plus grands morceau de Divine Comedy, Yann Tiersen lui donne un aspect étrangement plus Divine que la première version. Peut être, est ce du, et cela l’est sûrement, par le fait que Geronimo est beaucoup plus proche de l’univers de « Rue des cascades » que de Something For The Week End )
Geronimo
de Divine Comedy ( Ahhhhh….. Un jour ce genre de délire me sera peut être
permis reste à trouver la fille qui saura aimer ce genre de cri victorieux )
The two bedraggled figures
That huddle in the doorway
With nothing vaguely waterproof to wear
Are now secretly wishing
They'd listened to their mothers
When being told to always be prepared.
Screaming
'Geronimo!',
They run for it, down the road.
With an arm around her waist,
He leads her to a place
He knows.
Theme
From Casanova de
Divine Comedy ( le genre de musique qu’un mec ne
doit pas aimer : trop romantique )
Becoming More Like Alfie de Divine Comedy ( une version avec the french pop singer : Valérie Lemercier existe et c’est bien rigolo. Celle ci est encore mieux pasqu’en plus j’y comprends pas grand chose. )
extrait:
"Are you all settled in? Right, then we can begin. My name is..."
"ALFIE!"
Once there was a time
When my mind lay on higher things
And once there was a time
I could find pretty words to sing
But now, well now I find
It saves time to say what you mean
I know it seems so unrefined
but it's time to let off some steam
Oh come on!
Everybody knows that No means Yes
Just like glasses come free on the N.H.S.
But the more I look through them the more I see
I'm becoming more like Alfie
The Book Lovers de Divine Comedy ( comment briller en société sans pour autant avoir lu tous les auteurs cités. Sinon, comme c’est Neil il faut toujours qu’il ne se prenne pas au sérieux en ajoutant les voix des écrivains : Ah le passage des Sœurs Brontë et surtout celui de Kafka, le vrai écrivain le seul. : "What Do You Want For Me ?" )
extrait:
Aphra Benn, Cervantes, Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson,
Henry Fielding, Lawrence Day, Mary Wolstencraft, Jane Austen,
Sir Walter Scott, Leo Tolstoy, Honore de Balzac, Edgar Allen Poe,
Charlotte Bronté, Emily Bronté, Anne Bronté, Nikolai Gogol,
Gustav Flaubert, William Makepeace Thackeray, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
Herman Melville, Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, Fyodor Dostoevsky,
Mark Twain, George Eliot, Emile Zola, Henry James, Thomas Hardy,
Joseph Conrad, Catherine Mansfield, Edith Wharton, D.H. Lawrence,
E.M. Forster
Happy the man
And happy he alone
Who in all honesty
Can call today his own
He who has life
And strength enough to say
'Yesterday's dead and gone -
I want to live today'
James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Marcel Proust, F.Scott Fitzgerald,
Ernest Hemingway, Herman Hesse, Evelyn Waugh, William Faulkner,
Anais Nin, Ford Madox Ford, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir,
Albert Camus, Franz Kafka, Thomas Mann, Graham Greene, Jack Kerouac,
William S. Burroughs
Happy the man
And happy he alone
Who in all honesty
Can call today his own
He who has life
And strength enough to say
'Yesterday's dead and gone -
I want to live today'
Kingsley Amis, Doris Lessing, Vladimir Nabokov, William Golding,
J.G.Ballard, Richard Broughtigan, Milan Kundera, Ivy Compton Burnett,
Paul Theroux, Gunter Grass, Gore Vidal, John Updike, Kazuro Ishiguro,
Malcolm Bradbury, Iain Banks, A.S.Byatt, Martin Amis, Brett Easton Ellis,
Umberto Eco, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Roddy Doyle, Salman Rushdie
The names will live forever...