Terri J. Gordon,
"Synesthetic Rhythms: African American Music and Dance Through Parisian Eyes"
(page 6 of 8)
As art historian Jody Blake has pointed out, avant-garde artists such
as the Dadaists embraced the so-called "noise of jazz," considering jazz
to be "the musical counterpart of Dada's own anti-art activities," an
"anti-music" that furthered dada's anarchic program of social and
political protest (Blake 1999, p. 60). Surrealist writers, such as
Philippe Soupault, Robert Desnos, and Louis Aragon, composed poems
devoted to the subject of jazz, while jazz music provided the backdrop
for many avant-garde theatrical productions.[41] Jean Cocteau, whose Bœuf
sur le Toit gave birth to the expression faire le bœuf, or "have
a jam session," considered the jazz band to be the "soul of modern urban
forces," from machines to skyscrapers to ocean liners, lyrically
expressing both the cruelty and the melancholy of postwar life.[42] For
Philippe Soupault, the lure of jazz for the Dadaists was intimately
linked to the experience of the war: "To fully understand this taste for
scandal," he explained in his 1927 Mémoires de l'oubli,
"it is necessary to remember the brutal rupture that occurred between
our childhood and our youth. We were precipitated from childhood into
the war, and from the war into a sort of euphoria of lust for life and
will for oblivion. The Charleston fully expressed this frenzy that
possessed us."[43]
For more conservative critics, jazz was a sign of cultural decadence
and degeneration that threatened to undermine the French "civilizing
mission." In an article that appeared in Le Soir in June 1926,
one critic asked anxiously, "Are we still in Paris? Are we still in a
civilized country?"[44]
Under the aegis of its president, Princess Anna
de Saxe, the League against the Jazz Band banned all jazz music at its
events.[45]
In a long article on African American music and dance that
appeared in Mercure de France in September 1926, critic
André Rouveyre saw jazz as the living proof of the racial theory
expounded in racial theorist Joseph Arthur de Gobineau's Essai sur
l'inégalité des races humaines (1853-55), which
attributed a heightened sensuality and musical capacity to the "Negroid"
race: "[T]he jazz band is the abdication of music in its role as an
instrument of traditional culture. And this in the service of a virulent
disorder, one that benefits only the instincts violently pulled out of
the train of civilization, and then nurtured, with a blast of brass,
drums and woodwinds, according to their ingenuity, their savagery, their
sensuality, by the blacks" (Rouveyre 1926, p. 412). As critic Jeffrey
Jackson points out, jazz provided a unique cultural vehicle for the
expression of an entire constellation of concerns about French identity
in the postwar period, fears both of regression and advance, of African
arts and the machine age, of foreign influence and the loss of political
power.[46]
John Souter's Breakdown, which was exhibited at the
Royal Academy of Arts in London in 1926, captures both the fear and
fascination attending this new musical form. The painting depicts a
black saxophonist seated atop a classical statue in ruins, a statuesque
nude moving in time with the music. The mammoth size of the statue
suggests the enormity of the loss, the enraptured white dancer the
potency of this cultural rebirth. The scandal caused by the painting,
which resulted in its removal from the exhibit, expressed the larger
cultural scandal that was jazz in the 1920s.[47]
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