Part 1: MUSC songs by the wind band and choir
Part 2: Dogora
Part 2: Dogora
On stage, the MUSC ensemble and around a hundred children: the CM2 class from Barcelonnette as well as 3 classes of 6ème and 4 classes of 5ème from the collège A. Honnorat, representing between 100 and 150 musicians.
Dogora was composed by Etienne Perruchon.
The action takes place in an imaginary country, Eastern Proszeshny, and the texts are written in Dogorien, the forgotten language of a vanished people, reinvented by the author and inspired by the languages of Central Europe.
Dogora is a small town that was the birthplace of the uprising of 1832, which forced some of the population to flee the mines and steelworks and become nomads.
(Dogorian: name given to nomads).
The whole of the Slavic soul is to be found in these popular songs, which offer a wide range of emotions. It is particularly moving to hear the children interpreting sorrow, anger or even joy, accompanied by the orchestra and the adult singers.
This work has continued to win rave reviews since its premiere in 2004.
Dogora was composed by Etienne Perruchon.
The action takes place in an imaginary country, Eastern Proszeshny, and the texts are written in Dogorien, the forgotten language of a vanished people, reinvented by the author and inspired by the languages of Central Europe.
Dogora is a small town that was the birthplace of the uprising of 1832, which forced some of the population to flee the mines and steelworks and become nomads.
(Dogorian: name given to nomads).
The whole of the Slavic soul is to be found in these popular songs, which offer a wide range of emotions. It is particularly moving to hear the children interpreting sorrow, anger or even joy, accompanied by the orchestra and the adult singers.
This work has continued to win rave reviews since its premiere in 2004.
