Saturday 30 May, 19:00

Listening Salon with Sophie Solo

Sophie Solo presents intimate French chansons rooted in wit and social engagement. A singer, musician, actor and self-taught illustrator, she blends humor and feminist insight in a repertoire of original songs and carefully chosen covers from Anne Sylvestre to Allain Leprest, accompanying herself on guitar. The evening offers close, conversational phrasing, warm acoustic timbres and incisive storytelling that moves between tenderness and mischievous bite, creating an intimate, reflective atmosphere.

In French.

Rue Élisabeth-BAULACRE,
Photo Credit: DR
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Photo Credit: DR

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Friday 29 May, 20:00

Organist Vincent Thévenaz presents an inaugural recital showcasing the restored Metzler organ. With refined technique and a nuanced touch, Thévenaz explores a programme that highlights the instrument’s tonal range and historical character. The performance balances luminous baroque textures with expansive romantic sonorities, offering a contemplative yet vivid musical journey that reveals the instrument’s recent restoration and acoustic presence and craftsmanship.

29 – 31 May

Le train, directed by Joséphine de Weck and produced by Opus 89, stages a tense solo journey of a woman fleeing a controlling relationship. The text, breathless and fragmentary, follows her search for refuge as it probes longing, codependence and the politics of care. The staging is intimate and sensory, combining sparse language with live sound. The programme also includes a writing workshop and a concert by L’Amour du ciel.

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Friday 29 May, 21:00

Led by drummer-composer Lukas Briner, Hyla Crucifer sets narratives to music with a dark, playful and hypnotic sound. The quintet—Vera Baumann (vocals), Julia Rüffert (trombone), Cyrill Ferrari (guitar), Johanna Pärli (double bass) and Briner on drums—crafts a curious sonic palette and a distinctive rhythmic language that blurs genre lines. Sparse textures, propulsive grooves and timbral surprises create an intimate, immersive atmosphere, presenting material from their new EP on Austrian label Boomslang.

27 – 31 May

Choreographer Cindy Van Acker brings Iannis Xenakis’s Pléïades to the stage, assembling five dancers, six percussionists from the Eklekto collective and a large percussion arsenal. Van Acker shapes a moving percussion landscape where bodies confront the score’s power and complexity, constantly shifting posture and relation to sound. Music is played live; scenography and lighting by Victor Roy frame waves, galaxies and whirlwinds in a rigorous, visceral performance. Creation 2026; coproduction.

Friday 29 May, 18:00

An opening celebration that inaugurates the new Estrade Sonore and the participatory Art & Inclusion project. Gabriel Valtchev presents a site-specific electronic set designed for eight benches, blending electronics with acoustic elements. The enigmatic duo MeTadoCa (Doca and Empire Sauvage) explores improvisation and traditional-contemporary rhythms in a laboratory of sound. Le Horla adds additional sonic textures, while Artemisia offers culinary creations that echo wild, forest flavours. The evening unfolds as immersive, communal listening and experimental conviviality.

19 – 31 May

Are Demons Among Us? Berbiguier de Terre-Neuve du Thym was a French citizen from Avignon who, after having his cards read by a fortune-teller, began to see malevolent beings all around him, whom he called “goblins.” The delusion lasted his entire life. His book on demons is an impressively detailed work, written in a rich literary style and containing utterly bizarre content—both pathetic and unintentionally comical.

It constitutes the most complete account of the inner world of a man gripped by profound madness. It was rediscovered in the following century by the Surrealists, notably Raymond Queneau, as well as by enthusiasts of outsider art. The performance will be a montage of the very words of this famous “literary madman” and will offer the audience a journey into the labyrinth of his thoughts.

In French.

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