Jack Lang: “The Fête de la Musique was the biggest jitters of my life, it could have been a big flop”


The annual event celebrates June 21, its forty years of existence. Jack Lang, former Minister of Culture, talks about the creation of this festival and its success outside the borders.

“People were told go ahead, get out, make the music in the streets your own, but we feared they would stay holed up in their homes. But it worked”remembers for AFP the one who had been appointed Minister of Culture by François Mitterrand in 1981. “The Music Festival was the biggest jitters of my life, it could have been a big flop.” The event created by Jack Lang celebrates its 40th anniversary, an institution in France exported to more than a hundred countries.

From the winter of this year, the idea germinated in the minds of Lang and his close guard, Christian Dupavillon, architect-scenographer, and Maurice Fleuret, director of music and dance. It is the latter who launches “the music will be everywhere and the concert nowhere”. Jack Lang, 82 today, wanted “overturn the table”. Marking his time like André Malraux, one of his illustrious predecessors under De Gaulle.

“The party is this place of exchanges, of passions, of linking artists and people, it is constitutive of my temperament”confesses the one who stands out in the political landscape of the time with his pastel-colored jackets.

Music for the summer solstice

“One of my first steps as Minister of Culture was to go to a Stevie Wonder concert, for me it was normal, but it felt like an extravagance”. “At that time, the cultural policy for music was mainly oriented towards classical music and, more marginally towards contemporary music, musical research with (the composers) Boulez and Xenakis. The rest, rock, jazz … was absent subscribers”.

The concept is simple: the music must come out of conservatories and concert halls and be played by everyone on June 21, 1982, the day of the summer solstice. The project was quickly launched, Lang multiplied in the media and a first poster was printed in white on a blue background: “Party (Make) music June 21 8:30-9pm”. Only half an hour… Format has exploded since then.

“The first year, in 1982, it was not a great success, but people played the game and from 1983 it was really on”, decrypts Lang, today at the head of the Arab World Institute (IMA) in Paris. He pays with himself, sits at the piano in the street below his ministry in 1982 and in 1983 for the television news, while he still describes himself as “very bad pianist”.

The appointment is exported

Criticisms surface when Lang is interviewed: is it the time when inflation threatens (1982)? Is partying a way to forget austerity politics (1983)? “There will be some piss-vinegar for a while, for sincere reasons and for political reasons, but the popular movement has finally swept all that away”summarizes Lang today.

The nascent event also has great ambassadors, like Jacques Higelin who plays on a truck crossing Paris. Marie-France Brière, woman of radio and television, with whom Lang made “the 400 blows”also had electrical connections installed around the Trocadéro in Paris so that rock bands could play.

Over the years, the meeting has been exported, now to more than a hundred countries. “I was recently asked to do a video for the Australians, I can’t believe it”, Lang breathes. He lists the trips he made on this occasion “Berlin, Rome, Peru” and remembers, amused, this return flight from Russia “with Alain Delon, at the beginning of Gorbachev” (1990) where a large part of the delegation, including him, was “drunk”.

What is he most proud of? “I arrive parachuted into Boulogne-sur-Mer as a deputy candidate, a fisherman tells me thank you, thanks to you I became a pianist: the conductor Jean-Claude Casadesus had played the piano outside and the guy had been captivated”.


SEE ALSO – Non Stop People – Jack Lang: how he overcame the death of his daughter Valérie (Excluded video)



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