Paléo Festival Nyon [fr]

Je serai à  Nyon mardi, mercredi, jeudi et dimanche. Faites signe si vous avez envie qu’on s’y retrouve!

[en] I'll be at Paléo Festival (Nyon) on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Sunday. Let me know if you would like to meet up there!

Juste un mot pour dire que je serai au Paléo mardi, mercredi, jeudi, et dimanche. Je ne sais pas trop dans quelle mesure je serai joignable par sms les premiers jours vu que je loge au camping. Si jamais vous y allez et que ça vous dit qu’on s’y voie, faites-moi signe déjà  maintenant!

EPFL Offers Blogs to All Its Students [en]

A major engineering school in French-speaking Switzerland (Lausanne) has opened a blogging platform for all students and staff.

[via Hannes, Roberto]

The EPFL (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne) has set up a blogging platform for all students and staff.

The platform is home-cooked, Java-based, and still in early stages. Trackback and external comments have not been implemented at this stage because of potential spam problems. Their archiving system is in my opinion a little basic, but the blogs all have RSS feeds, so I think there is definitely hope for the future.

I blogged about this in French yesterday, but I think it’s significant news enough for me to mention it again in English. (Plus, I’m thinking very hard about the implication of being a multilingual blog with monolingual readers…)

Déferlement de blogs sur la Romandie [fr]

L’EPFL offre des blogs à  ses étudiants!

[via Hannes, Roberto]

L’EPFL offre des weblogs à  ses étudiants! C’est assez notable pour que j’outrepasse la limite de un billet par jour que je me suis fixée post-BlogTalk afin de préserver mes mains. Dire qu’on s’étonnait lundi quand je répondais qu’il n’existait pas de fournisseur de solution de blogging suisse! Il y en a désormais au moins un, même s’il s’adresse à  un public limité.

Fils RSS et catégories pour tous les weblogs, c’est bien. Permaliens pour les articles qui n’incluent pas le nom du weblog (http://blogs.epfl.ch/article/xxxx), moins bien.

Commentaires, bien — pas de trackback, moins bien.

Mais franchement, chapeau! Je suis épatée. Très très bel effort. Qui est à  l’origine de cette initiative? Qui a développé la plateforme? Je serais vraiment ravie de rentrer en contact avec ces personnes.

Mise à  jour 19h30: il s’agit du KIS de l’EPFL.

Pour les étudiants de l’EPFL qui se trouverait à  lire cet article, je suggère deux ressources que j’ai mises à  disposition:

  • C’est quoi, un weblog?, un article écrit en juillet 2002 et qui présente les weblogs aux néophytes;
  • Swissblogs.com, un annuaire des weblogs suisses, dans lequel vous pouvez ajouter le vôtre.

Chris de Burgh Concert in Lausanne [en]

A pretty long review of the fantastic show Chris de Burgh gave last night in Lausanne.

Warning: long, rambling, and clumsily written review ahead. I obviously still have progress to make in review writing! Thanks for bearing with me.

Chris de Burgh gave us a delightful solo show in Lausanne last night, armed with only his guitar, his piano and his songs (ok, with a very small dose of recorded choirs and stuff for a couple of songs).

The show started with The Road to Freedom, title song from his latest album, and continued for two and a half hours, including songs from a variety of albums. I was happy to hear It’s Such a Long Way Home, from the album Crusader, pretty early on in the show. Crusader is one of the first Chris de Burgh albums I actually owned, way back in the time of vinyl, and it’s an album I appreciate a lot.

Chris de Burgh introduced many of the songs he sang by giving the audience some background on them, often half in French and half in English. (We also got updates on the score for the ongoing Russia-Portual football match, which I found pretty cool — even if I don’t care about football at all.) Last Night (a personal favorite), a song about the damages of war, for the young soldiers who come back, and those who remain when they don’t, was an occasion to comment on actuality: Maybe Mr. Bush will think about this next time he wants to go to war. Right on the theme of war and its ills, Chris de Burgh later sang Borderline followed by Say Goodbye to It All — something I’d really been waiting for, as the second was written as a sequel to the first one.

Speaking of sequels, Lady in Red (a song you probably know even if you’ve never heard about Chris de Burgh, and that you might also understandably be sick of hearing too much on the radio) has a sequel in the latest album: Five Past Dreams. Before singing it, he told us about this strange fact: women spend a lot of time making themselves beautiful before going out, but men seem incapable of remembering what they were wearing. Lady in Red is about this man who is a party, and is looking at this beautiful woman in the crowd… and suddenly realises that it’s the woman he came with…

After poking a bit of fun at Britney and playback singers, Chris de Burgh put on a headset mike and actually got off stage with his guitar to walk through the public and shake hands while he sang a medley. Pretty impressive, if you ask me!

One great present of this evening for me was hearing the song Sailor again. Sailor is a song from the album Eastern Wind, which, along with The Getaway and Man on the Line, made me discover Chris de Burgh nearly twenty years ago. I remember the time when I listened to this song over and over again — it was one of those spine-prickling songs for me. And when Chris de Burgh started singing it tonight, I realised that I had totally forgotten it existed. I was incapable of naming it until he reached the chorus — something which hardly ever happens to me, as I have a pretty spooky memory for names.

I won’t go through all the songs which were sung. Imagine how many songs can be sung in two and a half hours, even with a fair amount of chatting en between! However, I’d like to mention one that I found particularly moving: Songbird, written after Chris de Burgh heard Eva Cassidy singing on the radio. Unknown in her lifetime, she died of cancer at the age of thirty-three, and it is said she had one of the most wonderful singing voices ever heard.

To sum it up, this show was a real treat. Chris de Burgh was the first artist I ever got to see live, almost twenty years ago, and I have trouble understanding how I let all those years pass without seeing him again. I’ll definitely be on the lookout for his next tour.

My friend Rachel, who accompanied me, knew only two Chris de Burgh songs (the inevitable Lady in Red and High on Emotion, but of course she had no idea who sang those songs), but she had a really great time too. I think that like me, she was moved by how very human and close to the public Chris de Burgh is. It seems to me (and the notes you can read in the Ask Chris section on his official website seems to confirm this) that he really has a sincere belief in his work — thirty years after his first album.

As I was saying to Steph a few hours ago: I like artists that look like human beings. If you have a chance to see Chris de Burgh live, do so — particularly if all you know of him is Lady in Red!

For the curious, here is a list of the songs I didn’t mention here but that I remember from the show:

  • Don’t Pay the Ferryman
  • Living On The Island
  • Sight and Touch
  • Sailing Away
  • St Peter’s Gate
  • Lebanese Night
  • High on Emotion
  • Natasha Dance
  • medley: Carry Me (?), Save Me, Tender Hands, Crying and Laughing…
  • Snows of New York
  • Where Peaceful Waters Flow
  • Nothing Ever Happens Round Here
  • Rain in Paris (the only song I did not know)
  • new album: The Words I Love You, Five Past Dreams, Snow is Falling, Read My Name, The Journey, Here For You (?)

Update 24.06.04: I’ve been thinking quite a lot these last days about why I like this singer so much, and why I’ve stuck with him for the last 20 years. Here is something he says about feeling what he sings that I really like:

When I sing, I like to convey a total and absolute honest belief in what I am singing. It’s very important for me to convey an emotion, and unless you feel that emotion, you can’t convey it. It’s my belief. So when I sing, I wear the song like a coat, I try to convey everything that I put into it initially. All the ideas, all the feelings, all the emotions.

Chris de Burgh

If you’ve listened to his songs a bit, I think you’ll agree with me that this is a man who seems to know what it is to love.

Urgent: chambre à  louer à  Lausanne [fr]

Chambre à  louer à  Lausanne, 310.- par mois, urgent.

Ma copine Christine et son colocataire cherchent d’urgence une colocatrice pour occuper la troisième chambre de leur joli appartement. Quartier Montelly, à  côté de la Migros et de la pharmacie, TSOL et poste à  deux minutes, Centre à  15 minutes. Prix: 310.- par mois charges comprises!

Si ça vous intéresse, envoyez-moi un e-mail ou lancez-moi un coup de fil, et je transmettrai.

Bollywood au Flon [en]

Main Hoon Na, film hindi projeté lundi qui vient à 20h30 au Flon.

Un petit billet en vitesse avant de m’écrouler de sommeil: la semaine a été bien remplie (plus à ce sujet prochainement), mais je ne pourrai pas dormir avant de vous avoir annoncé la projection de Main Hoon Na lundi soir au Flon (à 20h30, hindi sous-titré anglais).

Si l’envie vous prend de passer une soirée un peu indienne (et de découvrir peut-être sur écran un de mes acteurs de films hindis favori), réservez votre soirée!

Expo photo [fr]

Vernissage de l’expo photo de l’Helvète Underground ce soir à  Blonay.

Chers amis et chères amies de la région, on n’oublie pas d’aller montrer le bout de son nez printanier au vernissage de l’Helvète, ce soir dès 18h00 à  Blonay (oui, c’est bien 18h00, quoi qu’en dise l’affiche).

Immortel de Enki Bilal [fr]

Projection de Immortel de Enki Bilal demain dimanche au ciné-brunch du Ciné Qua Non (11h00).

Immortel sera projeté demain à 11h00 au Ciné Qua Non à Lausanne. Virginie nous en a parlé brièvement jeudi soir dans l’émission Garage, et si je ne me trompe pas, c’est elle qui assure la projection!

Rendez-vous dès 10h30 pour le petit déjeuner au Café Corto avant le film.

Nostalgie de quartier [fr]

La Place de la Barre par une après-midi ensoleillée de printemps, et des souvenirs qui reviennent.

Alors que je monte en voiture l’Avenue de l’Université, par cette belle journée ensoleillée qui sent doucement le printemps, voilà  que je me retrouve propulsée huit ans en arrière, à  la même époque de l’année.

Ma dernière année de chimie. Une année de judo intensif, de remise en question, de boulversement émotionnel. Une époque où je me retrouvais souvent au Sherlock’s de la Place de la Barre (c’était avant la faillite) et où j’ai recommencé à  écrire. Ma vieille BMW parcourait souvent les routes du coin, entre le dojo, l’université, et le domicile parental qui m’hébergeait encore.

Je suis sur la placette qui surmonte le tunnel, avec vue sur la place. Il y a l’école derrière et le bruit des enfants dans la cour; la terrace du bistrot déborde de son territoire d’alors.

Sur ce même banc où j’écris ces lignes, un an plus tard (en février pour être précise), je lisais La phénoménologie de la perception de Merleau-Ponty en cinq jours. Je m’y suis peut-être assise encore l’année suivante, je ne sais plus trop bien, puis est venu mon dernier printemps difficile en Suisse avant de partir pour l’Inde, le retour en Suisse, Orange, et maintenant, la fin d’Orange…

C’est une odeur dans l’air — je ne peux pas vous en dire plus.

Cinémathèque — cycles Al Pacino et David Lynch [en]

Cycles Al Pacino et David Lynch ces temps à  la Cinémathèque.

Je continue ma série pub pour les cinémas non-multiplexes, dans la foulée.

Ces temps à  la Cinémathèque Suisse (c’est sous le Casino de Montbenon, si jamais), cycles Al Pacino et David Lynch. Le programme complet version papier peut se ramasser au Cine Qua Non ou à  la Cinémathèque elle-même, et sans doute ailleurs.

On va attaquer avec Blue Velvet demain soir.

Erratum: Blue Velvet, c’est le 14 avril, et non pas aujourd’hui!