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Les Misérables, album di Victor Hugo: lista delle canzoni e traduzione testo

Informazioni sull'album Les Misérables di Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo ha finalmente reso pubblico Venerdi 20 Dicembre 2024 il suo nuovo album, chiamato Les Misérables.
Questa è la lista delle 268 canzoni che compongono l'album. Potete cliccarci sopra per vederne la traduzione e il testo.
Questi sono alcuni dei successi cantati da Victor Hugo. Tra parentesi trovate il nome dell'album:
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XIII: “Solus Cum Solo, In Loco Remoto, Non Cogitabuntur Orare Pater Noster'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. I: “An Ancient Salon'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. III: “The Lark'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. IX: “New Troubles'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. X: “The Man Aroused'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. VI: “The Wild Man in his Lair'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. X: “Tariff of Licensed Cabs: Two Francs an Hour'
  • Vol. IV, Book II, Chap. I: “The Lark's Meadow'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. IV: “Composition of the Troupe'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. IX: “Cloistered'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. IV: “Authority Reasserts Its Rights'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. III: “He is Agreeable'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. II: “The Lowest Depths'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. III: “A Tempest in a Skull'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. II: “In Which Little Gavroche Extracts Profit from Napoleon the Great'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. XI: “What He Does'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. V: “Monseigneur Bienvenu Made his Cassocks Last too Long'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. IV: “The Remarks of the Principal Tenant'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. VIII: “The Emperor Puts a Question to the Guide Lacoste'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. VI: “In Which Magnon and Her Two Children are Seen'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. V: “Prayer'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. V: “Which Would Be Impossible With Gas Lanterns'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. III: “Foliis Ac Frondibus'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. III: “The Heroism of Passive Obedience'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. VI: “The Consequences of Having Met a Warden'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. XII: “M. Bamatabois's Inactivity'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. II: “A Double Quartette'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. VI: “A Chapter In Which They Adore Each Other'
  • Vol. IV , Book VIII, Chap. IV: “A Cab Runs in English and Barks in Slang'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. III: “On What Conditions One Can Respect the Past'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. II: “Marius Poor'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. I: “The History of A Progress in Black Glass Trinkets'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. II: “Fantine Happy'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XI: “A Bad Guide to Napoleon; A Good Guide to Bulow'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. V: “Tranquility'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. VII: “Rule: Receive No One Except in the Evening'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. I: “Origin'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. IV: “The Gropings of Flight'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. II: “Fauchelevent in the Presence of a Difficulty'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XX: “The Trap'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. I: “The House With a Secret'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. IV: “Entrance on the Scene of a Doll'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. VI: “Jean Valjean'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. V: “The Rose Perceives That it is an Engine of War'
  • Volume IV, Book IX, Chap III: “M. Mabeuf'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. III: “Marius Grown Up'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. V: “The Little One All Alone'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. III: “A Hard Bishopric for a Good Bishop'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XI: “A Restriction'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. XI: “End of the Petit-Picpus'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XV: “Cambronne'
  • Vol. I, Book VI, Chap. I'The Beginning of Repose'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. VIII: “The Enigma Becomes Doubly Mysterious'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. IX: “The Man With the Bell'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XIII: “What He Believed'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. III: “Babet, Gueulemer, Claquesous, and Monparnasse'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. I: “Well Cut'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap IV: “A Rose in Misery'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. III: “The Eighteenth of June, 1815'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. III: “Austerities'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. XIII: “Little Gervais'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. III: “Slang Which Weeps and Slang Which Laughs'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XVII: “Is Waterloo to be Considered Good?'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. IV: “Beginning of a Great Malady'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. VI: “Res Angusta'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. XII: “The Bishop Works'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. II: “Lux Facta Est'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. II: “The Convent as an Historical Fact'
  • Vol. IV, Book VI, Chap. I: “The Malicious Playfulness of the Wind'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. II: “The Obedience of Martin Verga'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. III: “Enriched with Commentaries by Toussaint'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. IX: “Madame Victurnien's Success'
  • Vol. IV, Book IV, Chap. II: “Mother Plutarque Finds No Difficulty in Explaining a Phenomenon'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. IV: “The Two Duties: To Watch and to Hope'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. II: “First Sketch of Two Unpreposessing Figures'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap II: “The Root of the Matter'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. VII: “The Old Heart And The Young Heart In The Presence Of Each Other'
  • Vol. IV, Book II, Chap. II: “Embryonic Formation of Crimes in the Incubation of Prisons'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. I: “The Zigzags of Strategy'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. IV: “Gayeties'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. II: “Jean Valjean as a National Guard'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. I: “Mines and Miners'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. II: “Prudence Counselled to Wisdom'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. VI: “Who Guarded His House for Him'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. II: “Roots'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. IV: “Works Corresponding to Words'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. IV: “A Centenarian Aspirant'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XIV: “In Which a Police Agent Bestows Two Fistfuls on a Lawyer'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. IX: “A Place Where Convictions are in Process of Formation'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. VIII: “Billows and Shadows'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XIX: “The Battle-Field at Night'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. VII: “Some Silhouettes of This Darkness'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. I: “The Year 1817'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. I: “Sister Simplice'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XIV: “The Last Square'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. VI: “The Substitute'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. I: “In What Mirror M. Madeleine Contemplates His Hair'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. III: “The Beginning of Shadow'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. II: “Treasure Trove'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. II: “In Which the Reader Will Peruse Two Verses, Which are of the Devil's Composition, Possibly'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XXI: “One Should Always Begin by Arresting the Victims'
  • Vol. I, Book VI, Chap. II: “How Jean May Become Champ'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. VI: “Marius Becomes Practical Once More To The Extent of Giving Cosette His Address'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. VIII: “An Entrance by Favor'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. VI: “The Absolute Goodness of Prayer'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. V: “Basque and Nicolette'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. I: “The Water Question at Montfermeil'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. IV: “Forms Assumed By Suffering During Sleep'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. III: “Four and Four'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. VI: “Father Fauchelevent'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. IX: “A Merry End to Mirth'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. VIII: “The Ray of Light in the Hovel'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. X: “Origin of the Perpetual Adoration'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XVIII: “A Recrudescence of Divine Right'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. III: “Luc-Esprit'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. VII: “Fauchelevent Becomes a Gardener in Paris'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XIV: “What He Thought'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. VIII: “Philosophy After Drinking'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. VI: “Which Possibly Proves Boulatruelle's Intelligence'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. II: “A Nest for Owl and a Warbler'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. IX: “Jondrette Comes Near Weeping'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. VIII: “The Veterans Themselves Can Be Happy'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. III: “The Vicissitudes of Flight'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Javert Satisfied'
  • Volume IV, Book IX, Chap II: “Marius'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. IV: “Details Concerning the Cheese-Dairies of Pontarlier'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. V: “His Frontiers'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. VI: “Sister Simplice Put to the Proof'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Quadrifrons'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. VIII: “Two Do Not Make a Pair'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. VI: “The Battle Begun'
  • Volume IV, Book IX, Chap I: 'Jean Valjean:
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. X: “Which Explains How Javert Got on the Scent'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XXII: “The Little One Who Was Crying in Volume Two'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. III: “Two Misfortunes Make One Piece of Good Fortune'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. VII: “Cravatte'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. IV: “Change of Gate'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. I: “Number 24,601 Becomes Number 9,430'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. VIII: “Marble Against Granite'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Apparition to Father Mabeuf'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. I: “Marius, While Seeking a Girl in a Bonnet, Encounters a Man in a Cap'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. X: “The Bishop in the Presence of an Unknown Light'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. III: “Sums Deposited With Laffitte'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. II: “Hougomont'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. IV'The Back Room of the Cafe Musain'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. I: “One Mother Meets Another Mother'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. IV: “He May Be of Use'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. III: “The Ankle-Chain Must Have Undergone a Certain Preparatory Manipulation to be Thus Broken by a Blow With a Hammer'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. X: “The System of Denials'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. II: “One of the Red Spectres of That Epoch'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. I: “The Evening of a Day of Walking'
  • Vol. IV, Book II, Chap. IV: “An Apparition to Marius'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. VII: “Napoleon in a Good Humor'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. VI: “Four O'Clock in the Afternoon'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. IX: “Eclipse'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. IX: “The Old Soul of Gaul'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. V: “Enlargement of Horizon'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XIII: “The Catastrophe'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. VIII: “The Death of a Horse'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. IV: “Cracks Beneath the Foundation'
  • Vol. IV, Book IV, Chap. I: “A Wound Without, Healing Within'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. VII: “Some Petticoat'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. II: “Some of his Particular Characteristics'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. II: “Two Complete Portraits'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. II: “Madeleine'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. VII: “The Traveller on His Arrival Takes Precautions for Departure'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XII: “The Solitude of Monseigneur Welcome'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. V: “Cosette After the Letter'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. V: “Vague Flashes on the Horizon'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. III: “To Wit, The Plan of Paris in 1727'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. III: “Men Must Have Wine, and Horses Must Have Water'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. VII: “The Interior of Despair'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. XI: “Champmathieu More and More Astonished'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. II: “Blondeau's Funeral Oration by Bossuet'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. II: “Cosette's Apprehensions'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. VIII: “In Which the Reader Will Find a Charming Saying of the Last King'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. V: “It is Not Necessary to be Drunk to be Immortal'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. II: “Like Master, Like House'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. VI: “The Little Convent'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. VII: “Continuation of the Enigma'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. II: “The Perspicacity of Master Scaufflaire'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Mother Innocente'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. IV: “M. Mabeuf'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. IX: “A Century Under a Guimpe'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. V: “The Utility of Going to Mass, In Order to Become a Revolutionist'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. III: “Requiescant'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XVIII: “Marius' Two Chairs From a Vis-a-Vis'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. V: “Poverty a Good Neighbor for Misery'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. VIII: “The Unpleasantness of Receiving Into One's House A Poor Man Who May Be a Rich Man'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. IV: “The Convent From the Point of View of Principles'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. IV: “A'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. IV: “A Heart Beneath a Stone'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. X: “The Plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. IV: “In Which Jean Valjean Has Quite the Air of Having Read Austin Castillejo'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. V: “Things of the Night'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap V: “Originality of Paris'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. V: “The Quid Obscurum of Battles'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. IV: “End of the Brigand'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. II: “Badly Sewed'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. IV: “Taken Prisoner'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. I: “Which Treats of the Manner of Entering a Convent'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. V: “A Providential Peep-Hole'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap III: “A Burial, an Occasion to be Born Again'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. I: “Number 62 Rue Petit-Picpus'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. XI: “Number 9,430 Reappears, and Cosette Wins it in the Lottery'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. X: “Result of the Success'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. VIII: “A Successful Interrogatory'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. I: “What is Met With on the Way from Nivelles'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. IX: “The Brother as Depicted by the Sister'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. VII: “The Wisdom of Tholomyes'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XV: “Jondrette Makes His Purchases'
  • Vol. VI, Book VIII, Chap. I: “Full Light'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. V: “A Suitable Tomb'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. IX: “The Unexpected'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. I: “The Convent as an Abstract Idea'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap IV: “The Ebullitions of Former Days'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. I: “Marius Indigent'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XI: “Offers of Service from Misery to Wretchedness'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. VI: “Old People are Made to Go Out Opportunely'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. I: “A Group which Barely Missed Becoming Historic'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. VII: “Precautions to be Observed in Blame'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. IV: “M. Madeleine in Mourning'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. III: “Marius' Astonishments'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. VIII: “The Chain Gang'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XVII: “The Use Made of Marius' Five-Franc Piece'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XVI: “In Which Will be Found the Words to an English Air Which was in Fashion in 1832'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. III: “Effect of the Spring'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XIX: “Occupying One's Self with Obscure Depths'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. VII: “The Gamin Should Have his Place in the Classifications of India'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. VIII: “Faith, Law'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. IV: “Tholomyes is So Merry That He Sings a Spanish Ditty'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XII: “The Guard'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. VII: “To One Sadness Oppose a Sadness and a Half'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. VI: “A Bit of History'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. XI: “Christus Nos Liberavit'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XII: “The Use Made of M. LeBlanc's Five-Franc Piece'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. I: “The Sobriquet: Mode of Formation of Family Names'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. I: “Ninety Years and Thirty-Two Teeth'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. VII: “Strategy and Tactics'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. XIII: “The Solution of Some Questions Connected with the Municipal Police'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. I: “Solitude and the Barracks Combined'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. V: “A Five-Franc Piece Falls on the Ground and Produces a Tumult'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. II: “It is Lucky that the Pont D'Austerlitz Bears Carriages'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. II: “M. Myriel Becomes M. Welcome'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. V: “Divers Claps of Thunder fall on Ma'am Bougon'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. X: “Ecce Paris, Ecce Homo'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. VII: “In Which Will be Found the Origin of the Saying: Don't Lose the Card'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. V: “Distractions'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. V: “Facts Whence History Springs and Which History Ignores'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. V: “At Bombarda's'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. VIII: “Madame Victurnien Expends Thirty Francs on Morality'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. VII: “Adventures of the Letter U Delivered Over to Conjectures'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. XI: “To Scoff, To Reign'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. I: “Parvulus'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. II: “The Bewilderment of Perfect Happiness'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. X: “He Who Seeks to Better Himself May Render His Situation Worse'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. I: “Master Gorbeau'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. VIII: “Post Corda Lapides'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. XIII: “Little Gavroche'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. III: “Louis Philippe'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. VI: “Between Four Planks'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. XII: “The Future Latent in the People'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap I: “The Surface of the Question'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. V: “Hindrances'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. VI: “Enjolras and his Lieutenants'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. VI: “The Beginning of an Enigma'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XVI: “Quot Libras in Duce?'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. IX: “Thenardier and His Manoeuvres'

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