Tradition, modernity and the supernatural swing: re-reading ‘primitivism’ in Hugues Panassié’s writing on jazz

Perchard, Tom. 2011. Tradition, modernity and the supernatural swing: re-reading ‘primitivism’ in Hugues Panassié’s writing on jazz. Popular Music, 30(1), pp. 25-45. ISSN 0261-1430 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

Before WWII, Hugues Panassié (1912-74) was Europe’s leading critical authority on jazz, and by the time of his death he had published a dozen books on the music and been President of the Hot-club de France for over 40 years. Yet despite this life’s-worth of efforts made in jazz’s name, Panassié’s reputation is no longer a good one: pointing to the fantasies of black exceptionalism and Noble Savagery present in his work, historians have tended to dismiss the critic as a racist primitivist, one in thrall to that contemporary negrophilie most familiar today from early-century Parisian visual art. Indeed Panassié used the term ‘primitive’ himself, and positively. But this article traces the ultra-conservative writer’s intellectual and religious formation to show that, rather than contemporary negrophilie, it was a religious and cultural heritage quite distant from the modern European encounter with blackness that first informed Panassié’s primitivism. Though this re-reading does not aim to ‘rehabilitate’ someone who remains a troublesome and reactionary figure, the article nevertheless goes on to explore how, in his primitivist rejection of European modernism, Panassié sometimes pre-empts important arguments made by the post-modern jazz scholarship that would seem to marginalise the critic’s historical contributions.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1017/S0261143010000644

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Music
Research Office > REF2014

Dates:

DateEvent
January 2011Published

Item ID:

5532

Date Deposited:

18 Apr 2011 13:16

Last Modified:

30 Jun 2017 10:00

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/5532

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