To help you make your choice, the editorial journalists have put together a new selection of “cultural products” from the current plethora of offerings. And “I promise”, their “culture” favorites should please you.
Like every week, the editorial team invites you to discover its “culture” favorites:
Musique
The Cure : Songs of a lost world. Sixteen years without a new album from The Cure. Almost a generation. The British group, which wrote some of the most beautiful pages of rock in the 80s, comes out of a long artistic sleep with this Songs of a lost world that we no longer expected. Of course, the Robert Smith gang (photo credit Sam Rockman) never separated, but she reserved her activity exclusively for the stage. Until September 26 and the release, without warning, of the first single, Alone, prelude to this 14th album, released this Friday. A title so majestic and glacial that it takes us back thirty-five years, to the time of one of the group’s last peaks, Disintegration. Nothing retro here, however, but a certain consistency in inspiration and a desire to pick up things where we left them. And it’s true that we had forgotten The Cure a little, after several less notable records, like Wild mood swings (1996) or 4:13 dream (2008). These new pieces, already played in concert for at least two years (And nothing is forever, Endsong), bring back to life the Cure that fans cherish, but who seemed to belong to an increasingly distant past. How good it is to find them…