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La Diva de l'Empire

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Wikipedia article




"'La Diva de l'Empire'" (The Diva of the Empire) is a French popular song with music by Erik Satie and lyrics by and , composed in 1904. Along with "Je te veux" (1903) it is probably the best-known example of Satie's cabaret or "caf-concert" idiom. It was premiered by singer , dubbed the "Queen of the Slow Waltz",Carol Kimball, 'Song: A Study Guide to Art Song Style and Literature', Hal Leonard, 2006, p. 206. in the musical revue 'Dvidons la bobine' in Paris on July 26, 1904, and published that same year.

Description



The song is a cakewalk and an early attempt by a European composer to tackle nascent American jazz. John Philip Sousa and his band had introduced the cakewalk to France during their appearance at the 1900 Paris Exposition, but it gained little notoriety there until a danced version was performed in the revue (The Happy Negroes) at the Nouveau Cirque in October 1902. The show ran for over a year and sparked a national craze.Jeffrey H. Jackson, 'Making Jazz French: Music and Modern Life in Interwar Paris', Duke University Press, 2003, pp. 8384.Matthew F. Jordan, 'Le Jazz: Jazz and French Cultural Identity', University of Illinois Press, 2010, p. 20. Satie was intrigued with the new style and, as Darty's occasional accompanist and songwriter, prepared to capitalize on it. On May 20, 1904, he registered a piano piece called "Stand-Walk" with SACEM that was virtually identical with the keyboard part of "La Diva de l'Empire" except for its key. Satie, Bonnaud and Bls adapted it into a song for Darty, who was delighted with it. The refrain is in G major, with a syncopated ragtime melody strutting above an accompaniment in moderate march tempo. The two stanzas are in D major.

The lyrics with their references to Piccadilly and smattering of English words identify the "Empire" of the title as the Empire Theatre, a famous music hall on Leicester Square in London.Robert Orledge, "Satie & America", 'American Music', vol. 18, no. 1, Spring 2000, p. 81. Its indoor promenades were hotbeds of vice where high-class prostitutes, nicknamed "Daughters of the Empire" by the British press, plied their trade, and were the target of a much-publicized 1894 attempt by social reformers to shut them down.Barry J. Faulk, 'Music Hall and Modernity: The Late-Victorian Discovery of Popular Culture', Ohio University Press, 2004, pp. 7599. For Parisian listeners in the know this provided a salacious backdrop for the otherwise mildly "naughty" text. The Diva is an unnamed star performer at the theatre, who dresses like a little girl (complete with a "big Greenaway hat") and acts like one until she coyly lifts her skirts to reveal her "quivering" legs. Her loyal following of "snobs" and "dandies" throw bouquets of flowers onto the stage while she expresses contempt for them with mocking laughter. The verse concludes, "It is all very very innocent and very very exciting."

"La Diva de l'Empire" proved quite popular. Satie praised Darty for her interpretation: "You are so charming in that piece, one would have to have entrails of iron not to applaud you."Erik Satie, letter to Paulette Darty dated February 2, 1905. Quoted in Darty sang it on tour throughout France and held exclusive rights to the song until her retirement in 1908. It was first recorded by singer Adeline Lanthenay for Path in 1912 the earliest known recording of a Satie composition.[http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/erik-satie-part-one-saties-musical-and-personal-logic-and-satie-as-poet. "Satie's Musical and Personal Logic"] by Robert Orledge, transcript of Gresham College lecture delivered April 16, 2010. Text and footnote 6. After World War I, H. Ourdine published a piano transcription with the subtitle "Intermezzo amricain". Satie also provided an arrangement for brasserie orchestra.Robert Orledge, 'Satie the Composer', Cambridge University Press, 1990, pp. 287288. Satie's scoring is for piccolo, flute, oboe, two clarinets in B, bassoon or tuba, 2 horns, 2 cornets in B, 3 trombones, percussion and strings.

Satie's cabaret songs of the early 1900s were products of an unhappy period in his life, when he was unsure of his musical direction and poverty compelled him to write what he called "rudes saloperies" ("crude shit") to make a living. As Rollo H. Myers pointed out, he succeeded in doing this without sacrificing his creative integrity: "The interesting thing about these early 'Montmartre' compositions is that they show that Satie, even when aping the methods and language of the circus and music-hall, somehow managed to preserve all his innate candor and purity of style the same purity that can be perceived in such works as the 'Gymnopdies' or the 'Gnossiennes'". They had important repercussions, on his own subsequent development and for other French composers (notably Les Six) who would find inspiration in popular music. Satie's close friend Claude Debussy famously included a cakewalk (with a satirical Wagner quotation) in his piano suite 'Children's Corner' (1908) and Satie himself revisited the ragtime rhythms of "Diva" in his ballets 'Parade' (1917) and 'La belle excentrique' (1920).

Lyrics



. Her drawings inspired a popular fashion line for young girls in the late 19th Century. The subject of "La Diva de l'Empire" would have worn a similar outfit to tease her male fans.

'Refrain'

Sous le grand chapeau Greenaway,

Mettant l'clat d'un sourire,

D'un rire charmant et frais

De baby tonn qui soupire,

Little girl aux yeux velouts,

C'est la Diva de l'Empire.

C'est la reine dont s'prennent

Les gentlemen

Et tous les dandys

De Piccadilly.

1. Dans un seul "yes" elle met tant de douceur

Que tous les snobs en gilet cur,

L'accueillant de hourras frntiques,

Sur la scne lancent des gerbes de fleurs,

Sans remarquer le rire narquois

De son joli minois.

'Refrain'

2. Elle danse presque automatiquement

Et soulve, aoh! trs pioudiquement,

Ses jolis dessous de fanfreluches,

De ses jambes montrant le frtillement.

C'est la fois trs trs innocent

Et trs trs excitant.

'Refrain'


'Refrain'

Beneath the large Greenaway hat,

Putting on her brilliant smile,

The fresh and charming laugh

Of a wide-eyed sighing babe,

Little girl with velvet eyes,

That's the Diva of the Empire,

That's the queen they're smitten with,

The gentlemen

And all the dandies

Of Piccadilly.

1. Into a single "Yes" she puts such sweetness,

That all the snobs in waistcoats

Welcome her with frenzied hurrahs,

Toss bunches of flowers on the stage,

Without observing the sly smile

On her pretty face.

'Refrain'

2. She dances almost mechanically

And lifts, Oh! so modestly,

Her pretty frilly underwear,

Showing her wriggling legs,

At the same time it's is very, very innocent

And very, very exciting.

'Refrain'


Notes and references



'Notes'

'References'

'Sources'

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