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sentimentalised the plight of poor and dispossessed women, such as prostitutes, waitresses, failed singers in cheap bars, orphans, single mothers and the like. Some of the performers of the genre were also known to have lived the part—both Édith Piaf and Fréhel sang in the streets as children, were
308:, particularly the mother-son relationship; such songs were a speciality of the singer Berthe Sylva, whose songs dealt with such topics as dying mothers, mothers worrying about their sons at war, sons placing flowers on a mother's grave, and songs about the mundane experiences of a bored
159:(realist singers ) often wore black dresses, red lipstick and white face makeup—their faces highlighted with stark lighting, set against a modest, almost bare backdrop—all done to draw audiences' attention to the singers' emotive facial expressions.
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I don't like realist songs...For me they're vulgar tunes with blokes wearing cloth caps and girls plying their trade on the streets. I hate that. I like flowers and simple love stories, health,
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was a musical genre dominated by female vocalists, one of its earliest performers—and credited by some as "the creator" or "the father" of genre—was cabaret singer and comedian
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in the poorer
Montmartre district. His compositions were novel for the time because they included the everyday language and slang used by the commoners.
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was a musical style that was mainly performed by women; some of the more commonly known performers of the genre include
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434:Énonciation artistique et socialité: actes du colloque international de Montréal des 3 et 4 mars 2005
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sang songs of loss, hopelessness and abandonment; their songs dealt with life in the poorer
Parisian
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teenage mothers and lost their children very young—and many shortened their lives with
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Singing Our Way to
Victory: French Cultural Politics and Music During the Great War
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and brazen entertainment from the late 19th century to the early 20th century.
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Popular Music in France from
Chanson to Techno: Culture, Identity, and Society
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lived an excessive lifestyle and died at the age of 34; Fréhel became an
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Between
Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant-garde
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The Sphinx in the City: Urban Life, the
Control of Disorder, and Women
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during the 1880s. Home to such theatrical landmarks as the
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at 19 and eventually died in poverty; Piaf suffered from
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Chanteuse in the City: The
Realist Singer in French Film
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However, given the dramatic and melancholy aspects of
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Protest Song in East and West
Germany Since the 1960s
432:Fagot, Sylvain & Uzel, Jean-Philippe (2006).
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587:Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall
568:, University of Chicago Press. pp. 36 & 53.
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653:Cannon, Steve & Dauncey, Hugh (2003).
41:primarily from the 1880s until the end of
37:) refers to a style of music performed in
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192:who called them home; its themes of
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51:naturalist movements in literature
16:Style of music performed in France
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634:Bohemians: The Glamorous Outcasts
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116:, Montmartre became a centre for
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162:In contrast to the picturesque
585:Moore Whiting, Steven (1999).
1:
498:Popular Theatre: A Sourcebook
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436:, L'Harmattan. pp. 200-203.
300:Another common theme of the
131:. Bruant began a career at
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411:Sweeney, Regina M. (2001).
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253:at an early age, attempted
65:'s poor and working-class.
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632:Wilson, Elizabeth (2003).
521:Wilson, Elizabeth (1992).
500:, Routledge. pp. 181-183.
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386:Realism in the visual arts
149:Borrowing elements of the
564:Gendron, Bernard (2002).
496:Schechter, Joel (2003).
265:and alcohol and died of
170:post-World War II France
61:dealt with the lives of
30:[ʃɑ̃sɔ̃ʁealist]
692:Realism (art movement)
682:French styles of music
544:Conway, Kelly (2004).
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83:Origins and influences
470:Frith, Simon (2004).
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168:which was popular in
152:comédie en vaudeville
26:French pronunciation:
608:Robb, David (2007).
174:chanteuses réalistes
157:chanteuses réalistes
198:criminal underworld
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202:literary realists
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135:in 1885 and his
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45:. Influenced by
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43:World War II
35:realist song
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344:Marie Dubas
208:writers as
186:prostitutes
141:bourgeoisie
676:Categories
392:References
306:motherhood
295:Édith Piaf
290:and Paris.
259:addictions
210:Émile Zola
206:naturalist
137:vaudeville
118:hedonistic
102:Montmartre
73:Édith Piaf
349:Lys Gauty
310:housewife
251:alcoholic
178:faubourgs
123:Although
365:See also
354:Nitta-jô
293:—
263:morphine
196:and the
144:slumming
98:cabarets
49:and the
371:Chanson
255:suicide
243:illness
239:alcohol
194:poverty
190:orphans
165:chanson
100:of the
55:theatre
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267:cancer
188:, and
155:, the
112:, and
77:Fréhel
39:France
339:Damia
235:drugs
182:pimps
106:Paris
63:Paris
659:ISBN
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614:ISBN
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304:was
278:waif
241:and
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