"Boom, boom, boom, it's gone from you to me."
What do you give a child? A heartbeat, for starters. And then what? A recipe, a few dance steps?
What do you give a child? A heartbeat, for starters. And then what? A recipe, a few dance steps?
"Boom, boom, boom, it's gone from you to me."
What do you give a child? A heartbeat, for starters. And then what? A recipe, a few dance steps?
After Chansons d'amour pour ton bébé (Love Songs for Your Baby), which tackled in song and poetry the (to say the least) upsetting arrival of a child, Julie Bonnie turns to the question of intergenerational transmission.
With her mischievous pen, guitar and violin, she brings to life an imaginary world populated by eccentric, funny and touching characters. Tata Lala prepares her Chouliloula, Gertrude, the cousin, dances the three little steps, and the song of funny words spins its berlingots, hurluberlu, récépissé, kamishibaï, tohu bohu? A warm welcome for toddlers and older children alike
What do you give a child? A heartbeat, for starters. And then what? A recipe, a few dance steps?
After Chansons d'amour pour ton bébé (Love Songs for Your Baby), which tackled in song and poetry the (to say the least) upsetting arrival of a child, Julie Bonnie turns to the question of intergenerational transmission.
With her mischievous pen, guitar and violin, she brings to life an imaginary world populated by eccentric, funny and touching characters. Tata Lala prepares her Chouliloula, Gertrude, the cousin, dances the three little steps, and the song of funny words spins its berlingots, hurluberlu, récépissé, kamishibaï, tohu bohu? A warm welcome for toddlers and older children alike



