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Re-examining Salon Space: Structuring Audiences and Music at Parisian Receptions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2022

Abstract

Historians have viewed nineteenth-century music salons in Paris as concert-like environments where performers and audience gathered in a designated music room. Architectural studies and first-hand accounts, however, show that the music salon incorporated multiple reception rooms, and that guests frequently listened to musical performances from adjoining spaces. While conceptual space has been a subject central to salon studies, this project analyses material space, re-evaluating how the architecture of the salon influenced audience structure, listening modes and compositional practices. This architecture was ultimately central to the development of salon opera, which flourished between 1850 and the 1870s and was epitomized by Gustave Nadaud’s Le docteur Vieuxtemps (1854).

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Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Royal Musical Association

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Footnotes

The ideas for this article developed while I was participating in the working group Experiencing the Salon, led by Rebecca Cypess and Jennifer Jones at the Center for Cultural Analysis (CCA) at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. Many thanks to all those who exchanged ideas and feedback as this research project developed, especially Mark Everist and Nancy Yunhwa Rao. Translations are my own except where otherwise stated.

References

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22 ‘Un concert a eu lieu ce soir chez nous. Les deux grandes galléries étaient comblées.’ From Apponyi, Vingt-cinq ans à Paris, ii (1913), 305 (entry for 30 December 1832).

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27 Seventeenth-century hôtel designs embedded bedrooms into the foot traffic of the residence and even used staged bedrooms for receiving guests. This interior organization was later discontinued in eighteenth-century hôtel plans. See Dennis, Court and Garden, 69.

28 Marcus, Apartment Stories, 21. The distribution of rooms in the bourgeois appartement was the subject of debate and innovation as architects introduced features such as narrow corridors to discourage public circulation to private chambers. The architects César Daly and Eugène Viollet-le-Duc advocated for the strategic separation of public and private rooms. See Marcus, Sharon, ‘Haussmannization as Anti-Modernity: The Apartment House in Parisian Urban Discourse, 1850–1880’, Journal of Urban History, 27 (2001), 723–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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30 Henri Blanchard, ‘Auditions musicales’, Revue et gazette musicale, 21/11 (14 March 1852), 2–3.

31 Madame Verdurin, a bourgeois salonnière aspiring to higher social status, is characterized by her attentiveness to salon performances. On her affected immersion in music, see Proust, Marcel, La prisonnière from À la recherche du temps perdu (Paris: Nouvelle revue française, 1923), 5979.Google Scholar

32 Virginie Ancelot wrote, ‘L’on est placé, à mesure qu’on arrive, tant qu’il y a des sièges vacants, et, si vous avez à vos côtes des femmes que vous ne connaissez pas.’ Ancelot, Les salons de Paris, 221.

33 Murat, My Memoirs, 77–8.

34 The Hôtel du Châtelet, designed by the architect Mathurin Cherpitel and built in rue de Grenelle in the 1770s, was designated as the official residence of the archbishop of Paris from 1849 to 1905. Georges Darboy was archbishop of Paris from 1863 to 1871. ‘Une porte à deux battants, toute grande ouverte en face de la cheminée, laisse voir un jeune prêtre et un sous-lieutenant qui jouent au billard [… Les femmes] vont et viennent et se placent à leur guise. Les jeunes filles se sont naïvement rapprochées de la porte du billard […] On ouvre la porte de la galerie et une excellente musique de chambre se fait entendre. Un huissier distribue le programme des morceaux choisis par Monseigneur. On écoute d’abord religieusement, puis les conversations reprennent avec ce brouhaha discret produit par une nombreuse réunion de gens bien élevés. Les jeunes hommes ont abandonné le billard pour venir écouter la musique.’ ‘X.’, ‘Chez Monseigneur’, La vie parisienne, 6/23 (6 June 1868), 407.

35 On the gender politics of the French salon, see Goodman, The Republic of Letters, as well as Jolanta Pekacz, ‘The Salonnières and the Philosophes in Old Regime France: The Authority of Aesthetic Judgment’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 60 (1999), 277–97. On gendering the repertory of the salon, see William Cheng, ‘Hearts for Sale: The French Romance and the Sexual Traffic of Musical Mimicry’, 19th-Century Music, 35 (2011–12), 34–71. See also Kallberg, Jeffrey, ‘The Harmony of the Tea Table: Gender and Ideology in the Piano Nocturne’, Representations, 39 (1992), 102–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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37 Applying Theodor Adorno’s theories on listening to his study of nineteenth-century audiences in Amsterdam, Daryl Cressman argues that concertgoers engaged structural listening, intellectually navigating the past, present and future of the work to understand the formal whole. See Cressman, ‘Listening, Attentive Listening, and Musical Meaning’, Building Musical Culture in Nineteenth-Century Amsterdam: The Concertgebouw (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2016), 29–48.

38 Auguste Franchomme, Oeuvres de Chopin traduites pour le violoncelle (Paris: Gérard, 1870).

39 Princess Mathilde lived at 10 rue de Courcelles from 1848 to 1857, at 20 rue de Courcelles (now destroyed) from 1857 to 1870, and at 20 rue de Berry (now destroyed) from 1871 until her death in 1904.

40 ‘Quatre salons communiquant par une vaste serre. Dans celui du milieu, le piano autour duquel se groupaient les chanteurs, avec le quatuor instrumental à gauche, et à droite un piano-orgue sur lequel improvisaient Saint-Saëns ou Cohen. Au premier accord chacun des auditeurs avait choisi sa place, les plus musiciens près du piano échangeant des compliments avec les exécutants, les autres dispersés soit dans la serre, soit dans les salons voisins ou la poésie des fleurs et de leur parfum se mêlait au charme de la musique.’ François-Sappey, Brigitte, ‘La vie musicale à Paris à travers les Mémoires d’Eugène Sauzay, 1809–1901’, Revue de musicologie, 60 (1974), 159210 (p. 205).Google Scholar

41 It is widely established that London and Parisian society salons were similar. See Weber, William, Music and the Middle Classes: The Social Structure of Concert Life in London, Paris and Vienna between 1830 and 1848 (New York: Routledge, 2017), 3840 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Guides such as the anonymous The Young Lady’s Book: A Manual of Elegant Recreations, Exercises, and Pursuits (London: Vizetelly, Branston & Co., 1829) taught English ladies Parisian social practices (pp. 405–7).

42 Marshall, Nancy Rose, Warner, Malcolm and Tissot, James, James Tissot: Victorian Life, Modern Love (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1999), 99.Google Scholar

43 The sociologist Erving Goffman theorized that walls and doors create situational boundaries. Goffman, ‘Communication Boundaries’, Communication Theory, ed. C. David Mortensen (New York: Routledge, 2017), 213–25.

44 Gaylin, Ann, Eavesdropping in the Novel from Austen to Proust (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 912.Google Scholar

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48 Jules Lovy, ‘Causeries musicales: Soirées’, Le ménéstrel, 21/18 (2 April 1854), 2.

49 Piat, Jean, Gustave Nadaud, 1820–1893: Sa vie et son œuvre (Roubaix: Musée de Roubaix, 1993).Google Scholar

50 d’Onquaire, Galoppe, Le spectacle au coin de feu (Paris: Lagny, 1863), 25.Google Scholar

51 Henri Blanchard, ‘L’opéra de salon’, Revue et gazette musicale, 18/6 (9 February 1851), 44.

52 A number of salon operas, including Charles Manry’s La bourse ou la vie (1856), Gustave Nadaud’s Porte et fenêtre (1857), Jean-Baptiste Weckerlin’s L’amour à l’épée (1858) and Paul Bernard’s L’accord parfait (1863), are set in Parisian residences.

53 If additional resources were needed for a production, a circuit of salon vendors would supply hosts with the necessary props. Adolphe Belloir, an ‘entrepreneur des fêtes’, painted screens and constructed other set decorations; and the sculptor Mathurin Moreau provided a variety of costumes. See Émile Barateau, ‘Opéras de salon: Le Docteur Vieuxtemps et la Volière – À deux pas du bonheur’, Le ménéstrel, 22/13 (25 February 1855), 1.

54 D’Onquaire, Le spectacle au coin de feu, 93–7.

55 ‘Un salon. Porte au fond. Portes à droit et à gauche. Trois chaises et deux guéridons chargé de tapisseries. Sur le guéridon, à gauche, de l’encre et une plume. La scène est vide. Rosine et Isabelle sont enfermées dans leurs chambres à droit et à gauche’ (emphasis added). Nadaud, Gustave, Le docteur Vieuxtemps: Opéra-comique de salon en un acte (Paris: Heugel, [c. 1854]), 9.Google Scholar

56 The performance took place at the princess’s Sunday salon, 30 April 1854. See Henri de Viel Castel, ‘Conversation: Une représentation théâtral chez S. A. I. Madame la princesse Mathilde’, Le constitutionnel, 36/122 (2 May 1854), 1–2. Also see Galoppe d’Onquaire, ‘Soirée de S. A. I. Mme Princesse Matilde: 100e Réprésentation du Docteur Vieuxtemps’, Le ménestrel, 21/22 (30 April 1854), 2.

57 The libretto indicates that Géronte speaks in a loud voice throughout the scene so that he is heard by his nieces. ‘Il dit tout cette scène à haute voix de manière à être entendu par ses nièces.’ D’Onquaire, Spectacle au coin de feu, 85.

58 The cuckoo motif first appears in the trio’s instrumental introduction in bars 1–7, and it is heard again in bars 56–62, before Géronte turns his attention to Isabelle.

59 The opportunistic cuckoo is known to be one of nature’s tricksters because it lays its camouflaged eggs in other birds’ nests.

60 Nadaud’s other salon opera works, such as La volière and Porte et fenêtre, also incorporate interspatial scenes, using the sonic seepage between rooms to propel the plot and to add dramatic interest to the scene. Nadaud’s salon operas were in high demand and were heard in the salons of Mme Orfila, Camille Doucet and MM. Rodrigues and Gide, as well as the minister of state Eugène Rouher. See Barateau, ‘Opéras de salon’.

61 Parisian audiences may even have heard the 1822 Parisian adaptation of Mozart’s Idomeneo, in which the commanding voice of Neptune sounds from offstage, ordering Idomeneo to save his son. See Rushton, Julian, W. A. Mozart: Idomeneo (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

62 On the limited stage and wing space at the Opéra Comique from 1840 to 1887 at Salle Favart, see Evan Baker, ‘The Scene Designs for the First Performances of Bizet’s Carmen’, 19th-Century Music, 13 (1989–90), 230–42 (pp. 233–4).

63 Offenbach, Jacques, Un mari à la porte (Paris: Heugel, 1859).Google Scholar

64 Viel Castel, ‘Conversation’, 2.

65 ‘Quatre ou cinq talen[t]s de premier ordre, ou protégés par la faveur publique, répètent cent fois dans un hiver, au milieu des réunions du grand monde, les morceaux de musique et les chants qu’ils exécutent ou qu’ils chantent mieux, au Conservatoire, au grand Opéra, ou à l’Opéra Italien. Pourquoi ne les laisserait-on pas reposer l’hiver prochain. Pourquoi ne pas chercher pour nos salons des divertissemen[t]s nouveaux, composés pour nos salons? Pourquoi ne pas laisser se reformer une phalange de littérateurs et d’artistes, élevés et muris dans les serres-chaudes du monde et travaillant pour lui?’ (emphasis added). Ibid.