La chanson à l'affiche: Histoire de la chanson française du cafe-concert à nos jours. Rochester, New York: University of Rochester Press, 2015.
Dances with Darwin, 1875–1910: Vernacular Modernity in France. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002. Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant-Garde. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004.Ĭaradec, François, and Alain Weill. Montréal: CIADEST, 1991.Īppignanesi, Lisa. Café-concert: Archéologie d’une industrie culturelle. Moreover, the cabaret infiltrated other venues: Yvette Guilbert, who briefly performed at the Chat Noir, was responsible for bringing the cabaret repertoire and performance style to the café-concert stage.Īngenot, Marc. For instance, both Debussy’s and Satie’s musical development was shaped by the fertile ground of the cabaret. Cabarets merged low and high culture, leading Bernard Gendron to view them as “sites of modernist aesthetic practice” that contributed to the development of modernism in the twentieth century (2002, 31). The anti-establishment songs addressed social injustice, street life, and the underworld of crime and prostitution. Alongside poetry, theatrical experiments, and shadow plays created by avant-garde artists and writers, singers performed socially critical songs (notably the chanson réaliste and the chanson à Montmartre) for a “bohemian” working-class and bourgeois audience. Rising out of a post-Commune Montmartre and the working-class goguettes, the cabaret flourished between 18, and positioned itself as an antithesis to what Marc Angenot calls the “silly falsity” of the café-concert (1991, 94). Others included the Cabaret des Quatz’Arts and the Mirliton, associated with chansonnier Aristide Bruant (1851–1925). The Chat Noir, founded by Rudolph Salis (1851–1897) in 1881 and immortalized in Théophile Steinlen’s 1896 poster, is arguably the most famous of these cabarets. Just up from the boulevard music halls was Montmartre, the realm of the cabaret artistique. Interest in the café-concerts began to wane during these years, and many venues responded by either offering music-hall style entertainment or transforming themselves into music halls proper.
With bigger budgets, opulent décor, and a rotation of stars, the music hall offered a varied entertainment-operettas, ballets, popular dances, singers’ tours de chant, gymnastics, circus-act routines (trapeze artists, acrobats, and animal acts), and eventually revues-to an audience that included aristocrats, bourgeois families, students, and the petite bourgeoisie. The Folies-Bergère was the first music hall in Paris in the 1870s, and numerous imitators opened in the years that followed, including the Olympia, the Parisiana, the Casino de Paris, and the Moulin Rouge (which functioned primarily as a dance hall). Pas de quatre chantéImported from England, the fashionable music halls offered Tout-Paris a titillating visual spectacle that exhibited a “fundamental tension between elegance and ill repute” (Gutsche-Miller, 2015, 15). Commonly referred to as the “Belle Époque,” the period also experienced the rise of mass commercial culture and a new form of entertainment that proliferated across the metropolis: the music hall. Amid governmental instability, the early years of the Republic witnessed dramatic political, social, demographic, technological, and cultural change. The Third Republic (1870–1940) emerged out of the année terrible, a period marked by French military loss in the Franco-Prussian war and the tumultuous Commune uprising. There exists in Paris a strange place, exquisite, not at all orthodox, half café, half theatre, as Parisian as possible, very sought out by provincials and tourists.