Jordaanlied
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The Jordaanlied ("Jordaan song") is a type of ''
levenslied Levenslied (Dutch, literally "life song" or "song about life") is a sentimental Dutch-language subgenre of popular music. ''Levenslied'' lyrics can be sweet or bitter, light and sentimental, but also reflective and dark, about subjects such as love, ...
'', the Dutch genre of nostalgic sentimental popular music; the ''Jordaanlied'' hails from and sings the praises of the
Amsterdam Amsterdam ( , , , lit. ''The Dam on the River Amstel'') is the Capital of the Netherlands, capital and Municipalities of the Netherlands, most populous city of the Netherlands, with The Hague being the seat of government. It has a population ...
neighborhood the
Jordaan The Jordaan is a neighbourhood of the city of Amsterdam, Netherlands. It is part of the borough of Amsterdam-Centrum. The area is bordered by the Singelgracht canal and the neighbourhood of Frederik Hendrikbuurt to the west; the Prinsengracht to ...
which, until the 1960s, was an impoverished working-class area. The genre first came to the fore in the late 19th century and reached extraordinary popularity in the 1950s, before becoming old-fashioned quickly when rock and roll came along. It continues to be sung in the now-yuppified Jordaan, as a local favorite and a tourist attraction in a profoundly changed neighborhood; already a nostalgic genre when it was first made popular, the situations it describes and the emotions it evokes are no longer directly accessible even by the older generations, a transformation due in part to the ''Jordaanlied'' itself.


History


Until World War II

The first ''Jordaanlied'', according to
cabaret Cabaret is a form of theatrical entertainment featuring music, song, dance, recitation, or drama. The performance venue might be a pub, a casino, a hotel, a restaurant, or a nightclub with a stage for performances. The audience, often dining or d ...
artist and historian Jacques Klöters, dates from 1897, and is a song called "Pietje Puck". The genre helped initiate and later perpetuate a myth of the Jordaan, Klöters argued, a myth of a world full of poor, hard-working, and fun-loving people who adhere to traditional values. A second wave of popularity came during and after World War I, and was prompted by the work of Dutch writer
Israël Querido Israël Querido (1 October 1872 – 5 August 1932) was a Dutch naturalist novelist. His novels are sympathetic to workers and the Socialist movement. Works *''Menschenwee'', English translation ''Toil of Men'Current Literature'' 1910 - Volume ...
, who had written a four-volume novel ''De Jordaan''. A play inspired by Querido's characterization of Jordaners, as "hard workers, hard drinkers, working under terrible conditions and having their emotions only just below the surface", was a big hit: Herman Boubers' ''Mooie Neel'' (1916) was the story of a factory girl who is seduced by her boss and left with the consequences. Boubers wrote a second play, this time with songs written in collaboration with
Louis Davids Louis Davids (born Simon David; 19 December 1883 – 1 July 1939) was a Dutch actor, singer, comedian and revue artist. He is widely considered one of the biggest names in Dutch performing arts. Biography Early years Davids was born in the ...
, one of the greatest artists in cabaret in the Netherlands, whom Boubers had met by chance in a cafe on the
Rembrandtplein Rembrandtplein (English: Rembrandt Square) is a major square in central Amsterdam, Netherlands, named after Rembrandt van Rijn who owned a house nearby from 1639 to 1656. History The square has its origins in the defensive walls constructed in ...
, one of the city's main entertainment areas. Davids composed a number of Jordaan-themed songs (though he was a Rotterdammer) with his then-girlfriend, the English singer and actress Margie Morris, for the enormously popular ''Bleeke Bet'' (1917) which had the Jordaan as background and topic. One of the play's songs, "O oude mooie toren", later specified as "O mooie Westertoren", became the area's first "anthem". Boubers followed the overwhelming success of ''Bleeke Bet'' with more of the same, including songs by Davids and Morris; ''Oranje Hein'' (1919) and ''De Jantjes'' (1920) were just as successful and made him a rich man (he bought himself a motorboat called ''De Jantjes''). In the 1930s, with the advent of cinema, his plays were made into films; singer Johan Heester and actress Fien de la Mar were the most popular stars of the time, and practically every successful Dutch movie of the era was set in Amsterdam, a theme continued until the outbreak of World War II. According to Henk van Gelder, popular Dutch sentiment seemed to identify completely with Amsterdam and especially de Jordaan.


The 1950s and after

The ''Jordaanlied'' was again popular after World War II and peaked in the 1950s, finally beginning to be accepted in mainstream national culture; notable singers in the genre of that era were
Johnny Jordaan Johnny Jordaan was the pseudonym for Johannes Hendricus van Musscher (7 February 1924 – 8 January 1989), a Dutch singer of popular music, in particular the genre known as ''levenslied'', a Dutch variety of the French ''chanson''. He was well kn ...
(the "uncrowned king of the ''Jordaanlied''"),
Willy Alberti Willy Alberti (born Carel Verbrugge; 14 October 1926 – 18 February 1985) was a Dutch singer, who sang in Dutch and Italian. He was also an actor and a radio and TV personality. Alberti was born in Amsterdam as the third of eight children to Ja ...
,
Tante Leen Tante is the French, Dutch (Nederland), German, Danish, and Yiddish word for aunt (female sibling of a parent) ''Tante'' may also refer to: * A novel by Anne Douglas Sedgwick, upon which the film ''The Impossible Woman'' is based * Tante Leen (19 ...
,
Zwarte Riek Zwarte is the Dutch word for black and may refer to: *Zwarte Piet, companion of Saint Nicholas in the folklore and legends of the Netherlands and Flanders *The Zwarte Water, a Dutch river *The Étangs Noirs/Zwarte Vijvers metro station, a Brussels ...
, and
Manke Nelis Manke Nelis (born Cornelis Pieters; 1919-1993) was a Dutch singer in the levenslied genre. Career Manke Nelis was born in Groenlo on 16 December 1919 and began his musical career as a bass player, often accompanying his brother-in-law, accordionis ...
. That surge in the 1950s began with a cabaret artist and two songwriters. The cabaret artist was
Wim Sonneveld Willem "Wim" Sonneveld (; 28 June 1917 – 8 March 1974) was a Dutch cabaret artist and singer. Together with Toon Hermans and Wim Kan, he is considered to be one of the 'Great Three' of Dutch cabaret. Sonneveld is generally viewed as a Dutch cu ...
, who early in the 1950s developed a character called Willem Parel for his Saturday evening radio show; Parel was a
barrel organ A barrel organ (also called roller organ or crank organ) is a French mechanical musical instrument consisting of bellows and one or more ranks of pipes housed in a case, usually of wood, and often highly decorated. The basic principle is the sa ...
player from the Jordaan, who made Sonneveld achieve stardom. Sonneveld came from Utrecht and his Amsterdam dialect was clearly imitative, but he did pave the way for a national audience to accept the Jordaan dialect and themes again. At the same time, two songwriters from Amsterdam, Henk Voogt ("Henvo") and Louis Noiret (real name Louis Schwarz), developed the actual ''Jordaanlied''; two of their songs, "Bij ons in de Jordaan" and "De parel van de Jordaan", were performed by Henk Berlips at a Jordaan festival in September 1954 to great acclaim. At the time, no record company showed any interest for a kind of music because they thought it lacked national appeal, but Henvo and Louis Noret managed to get Ger Oord, the manager of the record company Bovema, to sponsor a talent show and offer the winner a contract. The finals of that talent show were held on 2 March 1955 in
Hotel Krasnapolsky The Anantara Grand Hotel Krasnapolsky, often informally referred to as Kras'','' is a five-star hotel on Dam Square in central Amsterdam, Netherlands. Founded in 1865, the hotel has 451 rooms, a convention center, restaurants and a pier for boats ...
, and were won by a singing bartender, Jan van Musscher, also known as Johnny Jordaan. Helena Jansen-Polder, better known as
Tante Leen Tante is the French, Dutch (Nederland), German, Danish, and Yiddish word for aunt (female sibling of a parent) ''Tante'' may also refer to: * A novel by Anne Douglas Sedgwick, upon which the film ''The Impossible Woman'' is based * Tante Leen (19 ...
, finished second. Johnny Jordaan recorded "Bij ons in de Jordaan" and "De parel van de Jordaan" two days later, and the single was an instant success. The real breakthrough, though, was "
Geef mij maar Amsterdam "Geef mij maar Amsterdam" ("I prefer Amsterdam") is a 1955 List of songs about Amsterdam, song about Amsterdam by Dutch singer Johnny Jordaan. The text is by Pi Veriss, and the music is written by Harry de Groot. A hit song when it was first releas ...
", a
Pi Vèriss Pi Vèriss, born Piet Visser, was a Dutch songwriter and composer probably best known for writing the Johnny Jordaan hit "Geef mij maar Amsterdam", an immensely popular '' Jordaanlied''. He was awarded the Golden Harp in 1986 for his entire body of ...
composition that Johnny Jordaan recorded the same year. In all, Bovema sold 360,000 records in 1955. Jordaan and Tante Leen became stars, and the entire country was ready to embrace the ''Jordaanlied''. Still considered a low-brow genre, it was boycotted by a number of radio stations in the pillarized Dutch society of the period after World War II, including the socialist
VARA Vara or VARA may refer to: Geography *Vara (river), in Liguria, Italy * Vara Parish, former municipality in Tartu County, Estonia * Vara, Estonia, village in Peipsiääre Parish, Tartu County, Estonia * Vara Municipality, municipality in western S ...
; only the
AVRO AVRO, short for Algemene Vereniging Radio Omroep ("General Association of Radio Broadcasting"), was a Dutch public broadcasting association operating within the framework of the Nederlandse Publieke Omroep system. It was the first public broad ...
played this music in the 1950s. The artists from the 1950s, though, relied for their music and repertoire on the style of the period between the wars without making any significant changes, even while rock and roll and blues were on the way to take over popular culture. In addition, the ''Jordaanlied'' helped make the area so popular that since the 1960s it has gentrified completely; many of the lower-income classes have moved out of the city altogether, and the Jordaan is now largely inhabited by yuppies and professionals. Changing musical tastes in the 1960s and 1970s ended the widespread popularity of the genre, though it continues to play a part in the Jordaan's culture and is a significant tourist attraction.


Themes and style


Musical background

Musically, the ''Jordaanlied'' leans on the tradition of the 19th-century cabaret, and especially on the Italian style of opera which was very popular in the area, borrowing "chords, rhythms, melodies, and ways of singing". Willy Alberti, for instance, began his career singing Italian songs. Another notable influence during the 1950s was the swing repertoire, with lyrics in Dutch. Instrumentation is traditional, and the
accordion Accordions (from 19th-century German ''Akkordeon'', from ''Akkord''—"musical chord, concord of sounds") are a family of box-shaped musical instruments of the bellows-driven free-reed aerophone type (producing sound as air flows past a reed ...
plays an important role; important accordion players were
Harry de Groot Harry may refer to: TV shows * ''Harry'' (American TV series), a 1987 American comedy series starring Alan Arkin * ''Harry'' (British TV series), a 1993 BBC drama that ran for two seasons * ''Harry'' (talk show), a 2016 American daytime talk show ...
and
Johnny Meijer Johnny Meijer (born 'Jan Cornelis Meijer' 1 October 1912 in Amsterdam; died 8 January 1992 in Amsterdam) was an accordionist who played classical, folk, and swing. For a time he was known as a jazz accordionist and his 75th birthday was celebra ...
, the latter having a statue behind Johnny Jordaan on the Johnny Jordaanplein in Amsterdam.


Nostalgia

The ''Jordaanlied'' usually treats the past nostalgically; this past is a working-class history, the Jordaan having been deeply impoverished since the middle of the 19th century. In the songs, laborers and their families work hard and remain poor, but nonetheless, "Jordaners hop singing through life, despite poverty and misery". One particular profession that figures in the genre is shelling shrimp, a job done by many women of the area in the 19th and 20th centuries, as in "Grote garnalen" by Henvo and Louis Noret:
Ik zit aan de stal in het hart der Jordaan
En ik pel voor m'n brood de garnalen
Dat heb m'n familie al jaren gedaan
Dat waren zo hun idealen.
("I sit at my stall in the heart of the Jordaan, shelling shrimp for a living; my family has done that for years, that was their ideal")
As Klöters argues, that world was already gone by the time the ''Jordaanlied'' reached the height of its popularity and for the 1950s singers was little more than nostalgia for their youth; he sees this sentimentality it as a reaction to the threat posed by the fast-changing world of the post-World War II period, a nostalgia for a "safer" period. Van Gelder adds that 1955 was the year rock and roll was introduced from the United States to the Netherlands, and the same year a new word for young people,
Nozem Nozem was a term during the 1950s and 1960s to describe self-conscient, rebellious youth, often aggressive and considered problematic by authorities in the Netherlands. It was the earliest modern Dutch subculture, related to the Teddy Boy movement ...
, was coined to indicate a new and completely different youth culture.


The Westertoren

The Westertoren, the spire of the
Westerkerk The Westerkerk (; en, Western Church) is a Reformed church within Dutch Protestant Calvinism in central Amsterdam, Netherlands. It lies in the most western part of the Grachtengordel neighborhood (Centrum borough), next to the Jordaan, between ...
, symbolizes the area and plays an important role in the music--in 1917's ''Bleeke Bet'', in the songs of Johan Heesters from the 1930s, and in many ''Jordaanliederen'' of the 1950s. "Real" Jordaners have to be born within earshot of the tower's
carillon A carillon ( , ) is a pitched percussion instrument that is played with a keyboard and consists of at least 23 cast-bronze bells. The bells are hung in fixed suspension and tuned in chromatic order so that they can be sounded harmoniou ...
. "Aan de voet van die ouwe Wester" ("At the foot of that old Wester") is the title of one of Willy Alberti's greatest hits. The Westertoren is referred to as "De parel van de Jordaan" ("The pearl of the Jordaan"), also the subject and title of Johnny Jordaan's first big hit—and he himself came to be called "Parel van de Jordaan". Poet and writer
Willem Wilmink Willem Wilmink (; Enschede, 25 October 1936 – 2 August 2003) was a Dutch poet and writer. He was best known for the large number of songs he wrote for popular children programs and his accessible, straightforward poetry. Life and career Wilmi ...
remarked that the Westertoren is revered as a stand-in for God.


See also

*
Aan de Amsterdamse grachten "Aan de Amsterdamse grachten" (; "At the Amsterdam canals") is a Dutch song by Pieter Goemans. It was written in 1949 but not recorded until 1956, and many times more since then. It is one of the standard songs celebrating the city of Amsterdam, a ...
*
List of songs about Amsterdam * "'t Is Stil in Amsterdam" by Ramses Shaffy * "A Bar In Amsterdam" by Katzenjammer (band), Katzenjammer * "A Windmill in Old Amsterdam" by Ted Dicks and Myles Rudge * "Aan de Amsterdamse grachten", lyrics by Pieter Goemans in 1949, composed by ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jordaanlied Culture in Amsterdam Dutch styles of music