'Wanted to have fun': How jazz infected post WWI Europe – Art & Culture



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Among the many novelties that crossed the Atlantic when the United States entered World War I in 1917, jazz was arguably the most upbeat – and infectious.

Then known as ragtime, the new syncopated sound emanating from American military bands had an irresistible energy and newness that turned the European music scene upside down.

"It was really striking," said musicologist Laurent Cugny. "They performed at every railway station they passed through, something most French people had never heard before."

The gender was also set by the performers, who were all black, Cugny told AFP. "Beyond any racism, it was an extreme oddity for the time."

Historians pinpoint the jazz's arrival in France to December 1917, with the 369th Infantry's Harlem Hellfighters under the baton of Lieutenant James Reese Europe.

While the Harlem Hellfighters gave their first official jazz concert in Europe in the western French city of Nantes on February 12, 1918, the music had already begun making inroads on the Old Continent.

Sheet music from London started crossing the Channel in 1912, with British and French editors striking copyright agreements, according to popular music expert Bertrand Dicale.

Piano sales boomed between 1900 and 1914, when some million were sold in France alone, Dicale said.

Inevitably, the new sound infiltrated classical music, influencing composers including Erik Satie, Igor Stravinsky, Maurice Ravel and Darius Milhaud.

Satie, for example, brought back to his ballet "Parade" with a rage in the hope of drawing more punters, according to Russian choreographer Leonide Massine.

Cugny said these avant-garde musicians were reacting to Wagner's "sublime, grandiloquent side" Debussy's "impressionist, too ethereal" music. "What they liked was (jazz's) rhythm, its vigor, even if they lost interest in it in the end."

On the other hand, France's burgeoning music hall stars truly caught the bug.

The emblematic Maurice Chevalier first came across ragtime sheet music in 1914.

Chevalier's 1920 "The Jazz Bands", among his first recordings, was the first French song to mention jazz.

Read also: WWI brought back to life in Peter Jackson's new 3D documentary

– 'Black Montmartre' –

"During this time, American brass bands have been improvising with Parisian orchestra and bistro musicians," Dicale told AFP. "The influence of jazz was growing, but there was an exchange."

For example, the 1920 song "My Man" by Chevalier's composer Maurice Yvain later in the United States, by Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday, Dicale noted.

Jazz bands ruled Paris cabarets, clustered in the shadow of Sacred Heart in the dubbed district "Black Montmartre" at the time.

Black American jazz singer Josephine Baker burst onto the scene in 1925 with her sensational, performance risk at The Negre Review.

Duke Ellington's first recordings was taken by Europe at the same time.

"The perception of black people changed," Cugny said. "Jazz became the stuff of dreams." It was associated with carelessness, life, dynamism, "It was linked to the modernism of the time."

Most important, Cugny said, Europe was recovering from World War I. "After years of slaughter, people wanted to open the windows, to have fun."

Many of the American military performers who came out of Europe, rather than return home.

Pushing east, some came across the Ashkenazi Jewish genre klezmer, which has had a lasting influence on jazz – and vice versa.

Jazz and Dixieland saxophonist Sidney Bechet, who performed across Europe with Baker in Paris, made it as far as Moscow in 1926.

Jazz was also popular in Germany postwar, where Charles Trenet, who would go on to become one of France's most prolific songwriters, discovered the genre as a teenager, living in Berlin with his mother's artist, Dicale said.

"It was the beginning of talking movies, and the studios were starting to use these musicians. (Trenet) watched them work."

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