About this Recording

AURIC • BAEYENS • BENOIST-MÉCHIN • BONIS • CLIQUET-PLEYEL • DOUCET • DURLET • DUTILLEUX • ÉRICOURT • FERROUD • HAHN • IBERT • INGHELBRECHT • LENSEN • MESSAGER • MILHAUD • MOUTON • PIERNÉ • RAVEL • ROSENTHAL • SAINT-SAËNS • SATIE • VELLONES • WIÉNER
AURIC • BAEYENS • BENOIST-MÉCHIN • BONIS • CLIQUET-PLEYEL • DOUCET • DURLET • DUTILLEUX
ÉRICOURT • FERROUD • HAHN • IBERT • INGHELBRECHT • LENSEN • MESSAGER • MILHAUD • MOUTON
PIERNÉ • RAVEL • ROSENTHAL • SAINT-SAËNS • SATIE • VELLONES • WIÉNER

Gottlieb Wallisch continues his acclaimed survey of jazz-influenced piano literature. In this volume we explore le tumulte noir (‘the Black craze’) in the French-speaking countries after the First World War, taking us to Paris and Brussels where the mood was hot for dancing. The fashionable status of this new craze attracted writers, composers, intellectuals and artists from all over the world, with American jazz music as the latest rage in the cafes and bistros of the day. The influence of dances from overseas spread like wildfire, taking hold amongst French and Belgian composers eager to free themselves from Germanic Wagnerism while riding the wave of popularity of hit records and cinema.

August Baeyens | © Centre for the Study of Flemish Music
August Baeyens
© Centre for the Study of Flemish Music
Mel Bonis | © Association Mel Bonis
Mel Bonis
© Association Mel Bonis
Emmanuel Durlet | © Fonds Emmanuel Durlet
Emmanuel Durlet
© Fonds Emmanuel Durlet
André Messager | © Bru Zane Mediabase
André Messager
© Bru Zane Mediabase
Darius Milhaud | © Universal Edition
Darius Milhaud
© Universal Edition
Gabriel Pierné | © Bru Zane Mediabase
Gabriel Pierné
© Bru Zane Mediabase
Maurice Ravel
© Bru Zane Mediabase
Camille Saint⁠-⁠Saëns
© Bru Zane Mediabase
Listen to an excerpt from
MILHAUD, D.: Caramel Mou, Op. 68