Greek song in the 19th and 20th century
Our story is based on the unique collection of Greek songs of the Music Library of Greece “Lilian Voudouri” and covers a wide range of songs that embody both scholarly and popular music expression, taking into account that these compositional styles addressed wider audiences, whom they had no special music education. Through its content we can observe the evolution of Greek song from the 19th century until today, something that comes in close relation to the historical outline of Greece.
The Collection
Music Library of Greece ‘Lilian Voudouri’ collection of songs for voice and piano contains approximately 6000 titles, with almost half of them purchased from a single collector, while the remaining 3000 songs have been embodied from many different sources such as donations, purchases from a flea market and secondhand bookshops etc.
During the years of the Ottoman occupation in mainland Greece, Heptanisa (Ionian islands) have been the only part of the Greek world of that time that remained under the influence of the West, because they were under an English or French command. This resulted to a closer connection with the western spirit and the ability to absorb western influence. In the field of music, one can observe that there has been a close connection with the Italian popular element that was mainly expressed in the genre of melodrama. Melodramatic companies toured in the Ionian Islands and audiences had the opportunity to listen to popular arias from Italian operas.
The first steps
After the establishment of an independent Greek country in 1827, these companies initiated their sets of tours around mainland Greece and mainly in cities that had a strong bourgeois community. These were cities like Patras and Syros. Athens, on the other hand, was small and poor, with limited artistic life. However, with the enthronement of King Otto and the establishment of various cultural societies something seemed to be changing. He proclaimed Athens as the capital of Greece and established a university, a bank and a military band. The new capital was struggling to transform from being a small town into a metropolis according to Western Europe standards.
The Italian melodrama began to invade and slowly monopolize public interest. Fancy costumes, combined with beautiful theatre settings and new venues, which were built to host such performances, fascinated the Athenians. The only disadvantage was the language that did not allow the Greek public to fully identify with the sound. The adaptation of Greek verses to well-known arias by important poets of the time came as a rescue to fill the gap.
The union of the Ionian Islands with Greece in 1864 was the occasion for the beginning of a new era for the music of the country. The communication channel opened between Athens and the embedded islands brought the Greeks of the capital in contact with a different culture..
The musical cultivation of the Heptanese composers combined with the creation of the Athens Conservatory, which first laid the foundations for the domestic production of professional musicians, formed the backbone on which the Athenian song was later based.
During the final decade of the 19th century, one can observe the influence that the Italian Bel Canto had on Greek songs that were composed at the time. Composers, of Ionian descent mainly, such as Napoleon Lambelet, Georges Lambelet, Dionysios Lavragas, and Paolo Carrer, wrote songs that were meant to become popular.
Athenian Song and Variété
In the first decades of the 20th century and mainly during the Athenian bell époque period (1900-1920), a new song genre is being created, the ‘Athenian Song’.
Composers such as Dimitrios Rodios, Timotheos Xanthopoulos and Nikolaos Kokkinos, wrote melodies that were loved by the world, while poets such as Ioannis Polemis, Georgios Drosinis and Alexandros Rangavis wrote original Greek lyrics, praising joy, love and nature.
For the first time the Greek song, combining Italian influences with folk elements, began to shape its own identity and became popular. The two main types were an Italian canzonetta-style and the ‘kantada’, which actually was a polyphonic song.
In those years, a new type of entertainment, The Athenian Variété, became extremely popular. Composers like Theofrastos Sakellarides, Grigoris Konstantinides, Lola Votti, Attic (Kleon Triantafyllou) were the main representatives of this new genre that mixes music, songs and theatrical sketches.
The songs included in this type of variété were deeply influenced by western equivalents. This meant that audiences had the opportunity to be introduced in European popular music (a mixture of cabaret, operetta and variété music). In this case, publications of foreign songs in sheet music helped audiences receive them more easily.
This ‘light music’ was comprised of songs in styles that were only found in foreign countries and in genres such as tango, foxtrot, rumba, etc. Greek composers started writing their own melodies on patterns that did not have much resemblance to folk or other popular music types. Light music moved from theatre to nightclubs, bars and tavernas with music.
In later years, the musical elements introduced to the Athenian Variété, were described as ‘light’ or even ‘European music’ in order to significantly differentiate from other genres such as rebetiko, the urban songs of lower class people, a genre that was heavily influenced by the populations arriving to Greece just after 1922 and the Minor Asia Destruction.
Apart from any definition, we could give to rebetiko, it was strongly connected to these population exchange which led to changes in place of residence, work and economic conditions.
Migration, persecution, poverty, unemployment, misfortune, social injustice, prostitution and drug abuse are some of the characteristics of a long period in the lives of this social group. Issues which along with love, maternity and passion became the rebetiko themes.
Along with the Athenian Variété, operetta was one of the most popular types of music. It is a fact that the variété was eventually taken over by the operetta world and during the 1920s operetta conquered and extinguished it.
This musical genre was not unknown to the public. Extracts from operettas had appeared in Athenian society in the mid-19th century by foreign melodramatic companies who visited the city. The first Greek operetta dates back to 1913 and since then was a pole of attraction even for the most famous Greek composers of the era such as Dionysios Lavragas and Spyros Samaras.
However, the character of the Greek operetta was shaped after 1920, by Theofrastos Sakellarides and Nikos Hadjiapostolou. These two composers, who were both active at around the same time, added various and different elements in the operetta genre and helped bring things forward.
Sakellarides, on one hand, composed works based on European rhythms and adapted French texts, while Hadjiapostolou, on the other, approached the folk element by incorporating rhythms and melodies from the folk tradition of Heptanisian music and the Athenian kantada. Unfortunately, the reign of the Greek operetta was meant to be short and the nadir point seems to be around 1928. Nevertheless, composers seemed to be rather productive since It has been estimated that around 1000 operettas have been composed through these years. The most popular songs deriving from these operettas were heard in unconventional places such as tavernas and these were printed in sheet music form.
From 1930 onwards, one can observe a significant change. Now music could be diffused through the new technologies available. The new developments in discography brought a change to the music world. In Greece, the new radio station that was established in 1938 helped in the most positive way. Of course, sheet music was still available and that continued for many years to come. The composers that culminate are Michalis Souyoul, Kostas Giannides, Spyros Ollandezos, Iosif Ritsiardis and others. New types of songs and music appear and are now vividly described as ‘songs of wine and tavern’.
Moreover, from the ‘40s and during the German Occupation and Civil War years, the popularity of songs of all types deteriorates. Composers of that time, and especially those writing light music, had to move towards a new genre called “arhontorebetiko” which was a mixture of Rebetiko music but with lyrics and meanings that did not hesitate with the ones used in authentic Rebetiko, which were thought to be decadent.
During the next years and from 1950s onwards, one can see that light music (kantades, fox trot, tango music etc.) suffer a heavy blow and popular music separates in more than one branches. This means that types like: laika (urban popular music) and elafrolaika (light urban popular music where bouzouki is the primary instrument) are being introduced. Even art music composers venture to write these types of music, for example Mikis Theodorakis, Manos Hadjidakis and others.
Exhibition Producer: Małgorzata Szynkielewska