In continuation of french
influence on jazz, there was a soundtrack that i discovered from the same
animation "triplettes de belleville." This nice modern twist of
rag-time is called "générique d'ouverture." It's quite short, but it
starts out with a suspenseful trumpet escalation followed by an immediate
descending piano arpeggio (tapering off). Then, the attitude completely changes
into something very fun and enjoyable. The music is very danceable. There is a
nice flowing conversation taking place between trumpets and saxophones. The
piano and percussion adds a very satisfying background accompaniment to the
excerpt.
The video above is not the music to
"générique d'ouverture" but the animation is
to give you an idea how the music and the animation go hand in hand. Compared
to American animation, where things tend to be more conservative, the French
are not afraid to express human emotion to any limits. In their perspective,
the human art of expression should not be censored because it is who we are. If
we are covering up/sugar-coating the way humans portray their emotions, then we
are not being true to ourselves.
These ideas are not something I
read about, but rather several conversations I had with my French friend about
her culture and the comparisons of the French and American culture.
From an American point of view, we
tend the French to be very exposé when it comes to the arts, sexuality, and
etc. because we developed from a conservative Puritan mindset. In France, their
intentions were not meant to defy or rebel against a set of 'morals,' but
expression was something to be shown and revered by leaving it in its original
and its purest form.
At the same time, she also told me
the French are very trendy. They always look for something new in all areas
such as fashion, film, music, the arts. I believe this is why jazz became such
a hit because jazz was not a European phenomenon. It was a phenomenon from the
New World. A world that most Europeans were so curious about. Even today, she
tells me America always leads and inspires the European youth in so many areas,
especially in music and film.
I do not mean to digress from the
excerpt of this animated piece, but understanding music and culture
tremendously helps me understand why and how things came to be.
Well done and quite interesting!
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