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Published: Friday, 12 July 2024 at 09:12 AM


At first, everything seemed to be going so well for Erik Satie. At the dress rehearsal of his new ballet Parade he had been approached by Jean Poueigh, one of the critics at the weekly journal Le carnet de la semaine, keen to congratulate him on a job well done.

The new work had its fair share of experimental elements that might raise the hackles of the Théâtre du Châtelet audience – not untypically for this quirkiest of composers. But Satie would at least be able to count on the support of one of Paris’s most influential opinion formers.

Don’t believe everything a critic tells you…

But all was not quite what it seemed. For some reason, Poueigh had a significant change of heart between rehearsal and performance. Or, of course, he may simply have been lying when he’d first approached Satie with such fulsome praise. Whatever the truth, when his review was published the next week, it was an absolute shocker.

The critic evidently now hated the work, pulling it apart with the most spiteful words he could summon up. Satie could have shrugged his shoulders with a resigned ‘C’est la vie’ and moved on. Instead, he responded in kind. Big mistake. 

Involving some of the finest creative talent of the day, Parade was always intended to cause a stir. The plot – about a group of performers trying to entice people into a show – was the brainchild of the writer Jean Cocteau, and it was he who invited Satie to come on board as the composer.