Terri J. Gordon,
"Synesthetic Rhythms: African American Music and Dance Through Parisian Eyes"
(page 5 of 8)
Like Baker's dance, jazz was seen as a particularly revitalizing
musical form. The powerful tempo of the syncopated rhythms of jazz and
the liberty of its improvised scores allowed for a freedom and immediacy
that was particularly suited to an era in need of escape and healing.
The metaphor of jazz as a drug resurfaces in the critical literature of
the period. A "drug against suffering," a "dispenser of joy," jazz was
seen as a vital healing agent in the troubled postwar climate.[33] For
German film critic Siegfried Kracauer, jazz represented the present in
its presentness. In an essay entitled "Renovierter Jazz,"
Kracauer attributed to jazz the power both to induce forgetting and to
instill life into war-weary bodies.[34]
As Nancy Nenno points out, jazz
as a "healing tonic" rejoined the host of drugs that provided a
temporary haven from recent memories of the war.[35] In "The Negro
Dance," Levinson also conceived of the African American musical idiom as
a narcotic, as a healing agent with both sedating and intoxicating
effects. On African American dance, he wrote, "The primitive, human
instinct is violently affected by such rhythmic insistence. The monotony
of this measured tramping, the symmetry of its pattern, has the effect
of a narcotic, while its gradual acceleration brings about a sense of
exhilaration amounting to a positive ecstasy" (Levinson 1991, p. 72).
The impact of this new "drug" on French culture was so powerful that
jazz, often described as an invading or conquering force, opened up
heated debates in intellectual and musical circles. On July 1, 1925,
music critic André Schaeffner and ethnomusicologist André
Cœuroy launched a "Jazz Survey" in Paris-Midi. The survey, which
opened with the statement, "The jazz band has invaded Europe," posed a
number of questions concerning the autonomy and influence of jazz, of
which the first was: "Do you consider jazz to be 'music'?"[36] In a
column entitled, "Jazz Before the Judges," Paris-Midi published
44 of the responses drawn from figures across the music industry,
including musicians, composers, singers, and critics. Responses ran the
gamut, from jazz as an anti-musical abomination ("'Jazz??,'" protests
baritone Lucien Fugère, "An abomination! A horror!!! The negation
of musicality") to jazz as a "super-music" effecting an artistic
revolution.[37]
On the whole, critics found jazz to be an influential
popular form of music whose artistic merits derived primarily from
rhythm and whose authenticity lay in its African or African American
roots.
As with the dance to which it gave birth, jazz had its detractors.
For some, jazz music was seen as pure noise. One critic, applying the
popular denomination of bruiteur to jazz musicians, writes,
"Dadaists of music, they bustle about [...] to discover everything that
bad international taste has produced, and import it to the heart of the
capital [....]"[38]
Jazz seemed to capture the pulse of modernity itself,
its temporal simultaneity, its tumult, its dynamism and its unceasing
energy. In a 1927 article that appeared in Débats,
significantly entitled "The Orchestra of Dr. Moreau," the theater critic
Gustave Fréjaville considered the modern sounds of jazz to be the
sounds of the machine age and an echo of the wailing and weapons of war:
Suddenly, an astonishing organized din responded to the
clamor of the sirens, to the roar of the Gothas, plucking, grating,
scratching, shuddering, the rattle of drumsticks, the rumble of the
drum, the cries of the trumpets and horns, the ringing of metallic snare
drums, the noise of chains, rods and gongs, brass calls, an entire
sonorous production of an ingenious complexity.
A la clameur des sirènes, au ronflement des gothas
répondit tout à coup un étonnant vacarme
organisé, pincements, grincements, grattements,
frémissements, crépitement de baguettes, roulements de
tambour, cris de trompes et de klaxons, tintements de timbres
métalliques, bruits de cha”nes, de tringles et de gongs, appels
cuivrés, toute une mécanique sonore d'une complication
ingénue.[39]
A French doctor warned against the harmful effect on the nervous
system of such a cacophony: "[...] when we are dealing not with symphonic
music but JAZZ," he claimed, "we can expect the worst repercussions on
the nervous system."[40]
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