L'intelligence émotionnelle est l'art de comprendre et de maîtriser ses émotions au quotidien. Elle permet d'affronter ses angoisses, mais aussi de mieux vivre avec les autres et d'être plus positif. Être heureux malgré les aléas de la vie, ça s'apprend ! Pratiquer la pensée positive, c'est poser un regard bienveillant sur soi et sur son quotidien, gagner en harmonie, en sérénité et en énergie. …
Michèle Torr is celebrating her 60 years of her career, the opportunity to rediscover the 50 most beautiful songs of this popular artist who knew how to conquer the hearts of the French.
Introduction à 50 théories mathématiques : triangle de Pascal, algorithmes, nombres de Fibonacci, etc. …
Although not the owner of conventional high-level vocal skills, Bardot invested her frivolous songs with a contagious sense of playful fun, and a refusal to take the music or herself too seriously. Certainly some of the tunes – and their breathy delivery – capitalize on her iconic sex kitten persona. But the guileless joy she projects is reminiscent of some of the early work by France Gall (one of the finest '60s French pop singers), though Bardot's voice is less girlish and more adult in tone.
Divisé en sept sections comme autant de branches du savoir, telles le microcosme, le corps et l’esprit ou encore l’évolution humaine, cet ouvrage expose en une double page les 50 théories scientifiques les plus importantes et intrigantes qui régissent notre Univers. …
The three-disc, 50-track collection 50 Plus Belles Chansons is an excellent compilation of material from throughout Alain Bashung's three decade career. It contains all the hits and some well-chosen live and album cuts. It is both an excellent introduction to the artist and a seamless listening treat for fans.
Je pense donc je suis », la Caverne de Platon, le Pari de Pascal, le Surhomme de Nietzsche, l’état de nature, la théorie du langage…
One of French pop's most poetic songwriters, Georges Brassens was also a highly acclaimed and much-beloved performer in his own right. Not only a brilliant manipulator of language and a feted poet in his own right, Brassens was also renowned for his subversive streak, satirizing religion, class, social conformity, and moral hypocrisy with a wicked glee. Yet beneath that surface was a compassionate concern for his fellow man, particularly the disadvantaged and desperate. His personal politics were forged during the Nazi occupation, and while his views on freedom bordered on anarchism, his songs expressed those convictions more subtly than those of his contemporary, Léo Ferré.