Chacun sait que l'Orient-Express, le train mythique qui relie Paris à Istanbul, a inspiré la fiction dès sa mise en service en 1883. Mais le public n'en a guère retenu que les noms d'Agatha Christie, de Graham Greene ou de Paul Morand. Pourtant, cette littérature est aussi abondante que méconnue. Dès 1914, elle aborde par exemple de grandes thématiques telles que le luxe et la luxure, le brigandage, le complot et l'imaginaire d'une plus grande Europe. La Belle Époque explore plus particulièrement les paradoxes de cet imaginaire, de la séduisante madone des sleepings au train de l'angoisse. …
The latest in Hervé Niquet's 'reinvigorations' of French operatic music from the Baroque and beyond for Glossa is Rameau’s 1747 'Les Fêtes de l’Hymen et de l’Amour'. A ballet heroïque in a prologue and three entrées, the whole work was designed to comprise a complete theatrical spectacle. Music for dancing – as befits a ballet – is given a prominent role and Rameau is able to create especially expressive symphonies and to give the choruses – even a double-chorus – an integral role in the action. Added to this are supernatural effects, and plots for the entrées which explored the then uncommon world of Egyptian mythology (including a musical depiction of the flooding of the River Nile).
When he wrote the cycle that was to change the musical course of the twentieth century, Arnold Schönberg wanted the 21 melodramas based on Albert Giraud's famous collection of poems to be 'spoken and sung' in the language of the country in which they were set, in keeping with the fledgling Berlin cabaret tradition… In doing so, he may not have appreciated the problems that the exercise would pose. The fate of Albert Giraud's verses is inextricably linked to Otto Erich Hartleben's free translation of them. It was in this version that they were most frequently set to music. Stripped of their rhymes and original metre, they are in fact another poetic work. When Darius Milhaud presented Schönberg with a French version recited by Marya Freund in 1922, the composer was disappointed and went so far as to say that he did not recognise his own work!
Jean-Denis Bredin, l'auteur de L'Affaire, reconstitue ici de la manière la plus vivante les grandes étapes du procès qui se tint à Riom, au printemps 1942, sur l'ordre du gouvernement de Vichy, pour déshonorer la République.
La "France de Vichy", inspirée de la volonté exprimée par Adolf Hitler, voulut faire juger que les hommes du Front populaire et des années qui l'avaient suivi étaient responsablkes de la défaite de la France, de son humiliation, de sa honte.
Léon Blum, Edouard Daladier et plusieurs autres accusés devaient donc être déshonnorés et punis. …