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The Pasteur Institute in Paris, known for its clinical research that is changing the world, has made breakthroughs in one field: the musical arts.
By Jessica Roy
Reporting from Paris
Since its opening in the 15th arrondissement of Paris in the late 1880s, the Institut Pasteur has been known for its world-changing clinical discoveries. The institute, named after Louis Pasteur, the pioneering French scientist who founded it, helped fight tetanus and influenza. vaccines and at the forefront of the search for the virus that causes AIDS.
In recent years, the Pasteur Institute has made progress in the field of boxing, as some of its scientists have formed teams and other events involving colleagues and academics who have studied there. This group honed their hobby and musical talent in a continuous way. -Study of the site they call Music Lab.
On a Friday night in March, three groups formed in the lab occupied the front page of an event held in the school’s cafeteria. Among them were Polaris and also Billie and the What?!, two blues-rock bands, also a cappella. group, Les Papillons.
A faint violet light bathed the room, decorated with balloons and streamers in shades of pink, gold and white. It was filled with more than a hundred people, as well as a wide variety of equipment, adding microphones, speakers, guitars, and elaborate instruments. battery.
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