Terri J. Gordon,
"Synesthetic Rhythms: African American Music and Dance Through Parisian Eyes"
(page 2 of 8)
By the mid-1920s, the jazz vogue was in full swing. Eugene Bullard's
nightclub Le Grand Duc in Montmartre provided a gateway for New York
talent in Paris, while Jean Cocteau's bar Bœuf sur le Toit attracted the
vanguard of Parisian intellectuals, artists, and celebrities. When Baker
arrived on the scene in 1925, she seemed to provide physical expression
to the synchronized rhythms of jazz. For one viewer she appeared to be
"the frenetic and unbridled soul of jazz;" for another, she constituted
"the rhythm of jazz" itself.[8] For many critics of the period, African
American dance and musical idioms were inextricably intertwined.
According to André Rivollet, Baker's performances with La Revue
Nègre revealed to the Parisian public the formula that was to
characterize the more flexible and improvisational sounds of the
1930s—le jazz hot. As opposed to "straight jazz," symphonic
music-hall jazz that had been tempered to meet the tastes of an older
generation, le jazz hot was, in Rivollet's words, pure, primal
music whose voluptuous and boiling notes stood close to an exotic source
and whose solo instruments spoke, leapt about, joked and improvised.[9]
"This new formula of jazz, which relies more on personal improvisation
than the immutable rules of harmony, was revealed to us in Paris [...] in
La Revue Nègre, whose star was Josephine Baker. [...]," writes
Rivollet. "She danced..., she danced..., certainly, but she was
unconsciously part of this jazz hot with her improvised Tyroleans [...]"
(Rivollet 1935, p. 103). For André Levinson, Baker's movements were so
infused with the ethos of jazz that her body directed and led the music:
[T]here seemed to emanate from her violently shuddering body, her bold
dislocations, her springing movements, a gushing stream of rhythm. It
was she who led the spell-bound drummer and the fascinated saxophonist
in the harsh rhythm of the "blues." It was as though the jazz, catching
on the wing the vibrations of this mad body, were interpreting, word by
word, its fantastic monologue. This music is born from the dance, and
what a dance! (Levinson 1991, p. 74).
This dance was rooted in the soil of African American musical
traditions. Josephine Baker grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, amid
segregation and race riots. In 1925, she was engaged in an all-black
dance troupe directed by Caroline Dudley Reagan, an American society
woman intent on bringing the "authentic" African American spirit to
Paris. The company of La Revue Nègre, which opened on
October 2, 1925, included pianist Claude Hopkins and his orchestra, the
dancer and choreographer Louis Douglas, the blues and spiritual singer
Maud de Forest, and the soprano saxophonist and clarinetist Sidney
Bechet [Figure 2].[10]
After making her début in La Revue
Nègre, Baker obtained the principle role in La Folie du
Jour (1926), a revue à grand spectacle directed by Paul
Derval at the Folies-Bergère. In comparison to the United States,
where African American performers were subject to overt racial
practices, Paris constituted an artistic haven. Baker's appearance on
the Parisian entertainment scene ushered in a series of all-black
troupes, from the Black People starring Louis Douglas and the
Blackbirds with Florence Mills in 1926 to Lew Leslie's
Blackbirds, which performed in 1929 at the Moulin Rouge.[11]
"Black, with Josephine Baker, has come back into fashion," remarked a
critic at the time.[12]
Figure 2: "La Revue Nègre au Music-Hall des
Champs-Elysées," poster by Paul Colin, 1925. Photographs and
Prints Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New
York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. © 2004 Artists
Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris. [Back to text]
Baker's choreography, which drew on the musical idioms of American
jazz and vaudeville, was inscribed in a vogue nègre
unfolding in Paris. While African painting and sculpture had exercised
an important influence on the visual arts before the war, particularly
in the work of Matisse and Picasso, the mode for "primitivism" extended
to all the artistic domains in the interwar period. In 1921 Blaise
Cendrars published his Anthologie nègre, while René
Maran received the prix Goncourt for his novel, Batouala,
véritable roman nègre; the 1925 Exposition
Internationale des Arts Décoratifs featured cubist works with a
markedly African influence; the surrealists held African art as the art
of the epoch; the sounds of jazz and ragtime filled the interiors of
bars and cabarets; and the "Bal Nègre" at the rue Blomet in
Montparnasse drew the center of the Parisian artistic scene. "Parisian
taste, we must admit, is at the present moment Afro-American," wrote a
critic in 1929.[13]
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