Bocce volo ('flying bocce') is a variant of bocce, a boules-type game.
In bocce volo, the balls are thrown overhand (palm down), and are metal. In standard bocce, the wooden or plastic balls are tossed underhand (palm up) and rolled.
Volo, as it is called for short by the Italians, derives its name from the Italian verb volare meaning 'to fly', and refers to the technique of throwing a ball through the air in an attempt to knock away an opponent's ball.
It is basically the same game as, and the Italian counterpart of, the French game jeu provençal, also known as boule lyonnaise, the ancestor of pétanque. Bocce volo is similar to pétanque in that the ball is thrown rather than rolled or bowled. It is similar to traditional bocce (and different from pétanque) in that the ball is delivered with a run-up. A volo players' run-up is athletic, even theatrical, as in jeu provençal.
Bocce (/bɒtʃi/; Italian pronunciation: [bɔttʃe]), sometimes anglicized as bocci, is a ball sport belonging to the boules family, closely related to British bowls and French pétanque, with a common ancestry from ancient games played in the Roman Empire. Developed into its present form in Italy (where it is called bocce, the plural of the Italian word boccia which means 'bowl' in the sport sense), it is played around Europe and also in overseas areas that have received Italian migrants, including Australia, North America, and South America (where it is known as bochas, or bolas criollas ('Criollo balls') in Venezuela, bocha in Brazil). Bocce was initially played among the Italian migrants but has slowly become more popular with their descendants and the wider community.
The sport is also very popular on the eastern side of the Adriatic, especially in Croatia, Montenegro and Herzegovina, where the sport is known in Croatian as boćanje ('playing boće') or balote (colloquially also bućanje). In Slovenia the sport is known as balinanje or colloquially 'playing boče', or bale (from Italian bocce and Venetian bałe, meaning 'balls', respectively).
Bocce is an electronic rock band from Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Mike Bond and Ben Ong formed the band in 2005, and later added Tony Salomone and Nik Must to round out the foursome. Bocce has toured throughout Canada and played several music festivals including Pop Montreal, Hillside Inside, LOLA and Canadian Music Week. Their first EP, Hi Birdbear, was released in 2006 to positive reviews in the Canadian press and reached #9 on Earshot!'s Canadian campus and community radio charts. Bocce released a limited edition EP, …Should Be an Olympic Sport, in 2008 and remixed several Canadian artists including You Say Party! We Say Die!'s "Poison" and Slow Hand Motem's "Mathemagical" in the year following. In Spring 2010, Bocce released their first full length album, Disambiguation, both as a physical disc and as a Pay what you can digital download.
( Pich )
Les journes sont passes
Dont t'avais besoin pour savoir
Le temps s'est coul
T'arrives m'oublier
Pour moi c'est un abme noir
Tu n'changeras plus d'ide
Et j'essaie d'viter
La tentation de ne pas y croire
Mon coeur est effleur
Il me reste un infime espoir
J'espre que tu t'es trompe
Et que tout a te fait mal
J'l'espre mais j'en suis bris
Car je t'aime, je t'aime vraiment
Tu prvoyais la fin
D'un film que t'avais dessin
O j'tais comdien
O l'amour tait maquill
O l'amour tait loin
Je sais que tu t'es trompe
Je sais que a me fait mal
Je sais que je t'attendrai
Car je t'aime, je t'aime vraiment
Nos coeurs taient suspendus
Tout a dboul
L'amour a perdu
Mais j'aurais jamais cru
Je n'aurais jamais d
Pourtant
Les journes sont passes
Et j'essaie d'viter mais
Je sais que tu t'es trompe
Je sais que a nous fait mal
Je sais tout ce que je sais