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Traditional french cafe music
Traditional french cafe music








traditional french cafe music traditional french cafe music
  1. TRADITIONAL FRENCH CAFE MUSIC MOVIE
  2. TRADITIONAL FRENCH CAFE MUSIC FREE

Mainstream music hall and movie stars of the day such as Jean Gabin and Damia add an urbane touch, while Edith Piaf's legendary "L'Accordioniste" still sounds as fresh and poignant as the day it was released. Among the other important orchestras on hand are Tony Murena et son Ensemble, Guerino et son Orchestre, Medard Ferrero et ses Clochards, Orchestre Musette Victor, and Gus Viseur et son Orchestre. Emile Vacheur, a much-imitated icon whose precise squeezebox technique featured a trademark quick vibrato, is represented by a delightful pair of melodies. The instrumentals are intensely redolent of an earthier Paris back when it was a festival of intellectual grace, dubious plumbing, and bawdy pleasures, hovering on the perilous brink of war. Although the more cooperative Italian accordion eventually replaced the pipes and fiddles, guitars, and double reeds were later added to the mix, the waltzes and javas retained a defiantly rustic, naïve charm. The performers are barely two generations removed from the homesick Auvergnat (natives of the Auvergne, a mountainous region in southern France) migrant workers who once puffed their imported bagpipes at bar dances. The ambience here is quite different from that of the second set, more like a black-and-white photo by Robert Doisneau than a tourist's color-saturated Polaroid. Johnny Hallyday is France's biggest-selling musician. French people play bagpipes There are even French varieties of bagpipes which sound just as bad as the Scottish ones. To celebrate this annual noise-fest, let's take a look at some lesser-known facts about French music.

TRADITIONAL FRENCH CAFE MUSIC FREE

While the subsequent release, Sound of Paris, concentrates primarily on modern bands, these 18 tracks cover some of the best-known interpreters who were active from 1930 through 1941. Today is La Fte de la Musique, that wonderful French festival where (often) free music events take place across France. This was the first of Music Club's two compilations dedicated to the bal-musette, an accordion-based tradition that, to many, is the very soul of Paris.










Traditional french cafe music