Performance · Other credits

Henri Christiné

Henri Christiné is credited on 812 releases across 233 albums tracked on Gatefold, active 1951–2022 — the collector-built map of who actually made the music.

Photo of Henri Christiné

812

Pressings credited

233

Albums

8

Decades active

4

In collections

Biography

Henri Marius Christiné (27 December 1867 – 25 November 1941) was a French composer of Swiss birth. The son of a French Savoyard watchmaker, Christiné was born in Geneva, Switzerland. He began by teaching at the lycée in Geneva, while pursuing his interest in music and playing organ in a local church. He married a cafe singer whose troupe was passing through Geneva, and went with her to Nice where they were married. He made his home in France, writing songs firstly for his wife and then for popular singers such as Mayol, Dranem, and Fragson. He also conducted for the music hall at the Place Clichy. Although Christiné wrote some operettas for the Scala theatre in Paris before the First World War, his career took off when he had his operetta Phi-Phi staged the day of the Armistice on 11 November 1918, with words by Albert Willemetz and Fabien Solar and which ran for three years at the Bouffes-Parisiens. This success was followed by Dédé in 1921, Madame (1923) and J'adore ça (1925). These works were in the forefront of a new fashion in music-theatre: sparkling, witty, jazzy musical plays. Christiné's tunes often build on repeated refrains of six or seven notes (a 'hook') which made them catchy and popular for contemporary audiences. In the 1930s Christiné contributed to the renewed fashion for more large-scale spectacular musicals, with pieces for the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, Au temps des Merveilleuses and Yana; for these he wrote the more vibrant numbers, while Richepin did the romantic songs. "Le Bonheur, Mesdames" and "Le Flirt ambulant" were rearrangements of his songs from the 1900s. He died in Nice, France. Phi-Phi and Dédé are still occasionally revived in France.

Bio from Wikipedia

Credited work

812 releases · 233 albums · active 1951–2022

  • Performance · 1,172
  • Other credits · 123

Studios: Théâtre des Champs-Élysées · Mozarteum · Ter Mar Studios · L'Alhambra

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Frequent collaborators

  • Various
  • Maurice Chevalier
  • Jean Sablon
  • Jack Lantier
  • Josephine Baker
  • Joséphine Baker
  • Henri Segers, Son Piano Et Son Orchestre
  • Luc Barney

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