Maurice Yvain’s operettas were immensely successful in the 1920s. The fantasy of the ‘swing’ music, the catchy songs and the perfectly oiled rhythms were all the rage in the Paris of the Roaring Twenties. But the success of these comedies, with their caustic humour, also owed much to the fabulous texts by Albert Willemetz, considered as one of the fathers of modern operetta in the twentieth century. Yvain and Willemetz’s numbers were hummed in the streets and charmed all who hear them – and still do, even a century later! Les Frivolités Parisiennes set out to revive this music, which is still as young as ever. Yes! was premiered at the Théâtre des Capucines on 26 January 1928 and was an immediate hit: this story of a complicated marriage, moving between Le Touquet and London, was to remain on the bill for years to come. The version presented here by Les Frivolités Parisiennes is as close as possible to the spirit of the work’s premiere, and includes all available musical material. With the exceptional participation of Clément Rochefort as narrator.
Captive des brigands de la mer de Chine, F. Loviot, aventurière et écrivaine, émigrée en 1852 à San Francisco, fait le récit de quatre années d'aventures et témoigne sur la piraterie chinoise au milieu du XIXe siècle. Ce récit constitue aussi un exemple de la littérature populaire du XIXe siècle faite d'apitoiement, d'images grandiloquentes ou de pamoison. …
L'histoire du château de Versailles, théâtre du triomphe de la monarchie française, a connu des détours insoupçonnés. Sait-on par exemple que, derrière les portes infranchissables des appartements privés du roi, Louis XIV mena une lutte acharnée contre la maladie ? Que, dans les allées du premier parc de Le Nôtre, Molière et sa troupe se produisirent devant la Cour ? Qu'en forçant les grilles de la cour d'honneur, les Parisiennes firent basculer le cours de la Révolution ? Que sous les ors de la galerie des Glaces le chancelier Bismarck proclama l'Empire allemand ? …
Forty-two songs cut between November 1940 and August 1946, and the perfect companion to Bear Family's It's Magic box set – anyone who's been even tempted to own that will have to get this more modestly priced precursor to that material. Day's period singing with Les Brown is, today, regarded with a degree of love and affection reserved for Ella Fitzgerald's era with Chick Webb, or Frank Sinatra's work with Harry James and Tommy Dorsey. Yet Sony Music's own releases devoted to Doris Day and Les Brown spread the music around to several different CDs, and suffered from sound that, today, seems substandard. These newly remastered tracks, offered in chronological order, including one previously unissued song ("Are You Still in Love with Me"), not only display a far richer, warmer sound, but have been presented with the kind of care that is normally reserved for the best parts of a label's catalog – which these sides definitely are. Day's voice during this period (she was 16 when she cut her first sides with Brown) was an astonishingly expressive instrument.