The French national anthem is La Marsellaise. It means "song from Marseilles".
Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle wrote the music and lyrics in 1792 and it became the National Anthem of France in 1795.
It is the French National Anthem.
It is Bastille Day, Fête Nationale (but more commonly as le quatorze juillet, which simply means July 14), the day the Bastille in 1789 was stormed by the French public and volunteer soldiers. La Bastille represented, to the French people, all that repressed them. What they found when they took la Bastille gave them certainty about this, though what they replaced it with did them no credit. Many volunteers marched to Paris from Marseille, and sang the de Lisle song, La Marsellaise, in the streets of Paris. It became the French national anthem. Over the years, various French leaders (including Napoleon) banned it, but the voice of the people was heard and the song became arguably the best, most tuneful (in the Berlioz arrangement) and most evocative national song in the world. Many composers evaded the ban, markedly Beethoven and Tschaikovsky, who sneaked bits of it into their compositions.
La la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la
To blend in or
You first say LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA!
la la la la la la la la la la la lalalalalalalalalalalalala la la la la la la la la la lalalalalalalalalalala la la la la la la la la laaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
La la la la la la la La la la la la la la
LA la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la
la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la lal ala la la la lal la lal la la la l a la la la la la ala la lal lal
Too Low for Zero - song - was created in 1983.