avoir un cheveu sur la langue - significado y definición. Qué es avoir un cheveu sur la langue
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Qué (quién) es avoir un cheveu sur la langue - definición

ALBUM
Le tresor de la langue

Le trésor de la langue         
Le trésor de la langue (English: The treasure of language) is an album by guitarist René Lussier. It was released by Ambiances Magnétiques in 1989.
La Clé sur la porte         
BOOK BY MARIE CARDINAL
La Cle sur la porte
La Clé sur la porte (meaning "The Key is in the door") is a novel written by Marie Cardinal and published in 1972. It is the story of a woman trying to reexamine her own values and free herself from social restraints after suffering a lifetime of oppression.
Sur un air de déjà vu         
2008 ALBUM BY LES COWBOYS FRINGANTS
Sur un air de deja vu
Sur un air de déjà vu is a studio album released in 2008 by Québécois néo-trad band Les Cowboys Fringants. This album mainly features songs with a lighter tone as the band did on their first few albums.

Wikipedia

Le trésor de la langue

Le trésor de la langue (English: The treasure of language) is an album by guitarist René Lussier. It was released by Ambiances Magnétiques in 1989.

The album contains several interviews with residents of Québec on the importance of the french language within the province. A number of famous historical recordings are also featured, including Charles de Gaulle's famous "Vive le Québec libre!" speech of 1967 and a recitation of the FLQ Manifesto. These spoken-word recordings are interspersed with the music, as Lussier plays a single note on his guitar to correspond with every syllable of speech. He is quoted as saying, "It's remarkable what melodies we speak to each other every day! And no one's the least bothered by these phrases, but transpose them into music and they can become surprising, even disturbing!"

Although much of Le trésor de la langue is devoted to the continued importance of French in Québécois culture, its message is not one of unadulterated Québec nationalism. The album includes a poem by Richard Desjardins entitled "Qui s'en souvient?", which chronicles the destruction of several Native American societies by English and French colonialists. The liner notes also refer to contemporary events in Canadian politics as a "poisoned chalice" for the survival of the language.