Baudelaire, “Eminence Front” and the 1980s

I first thought the funk rock song “Eminence Front” by rock band The Who was about putting on a different face depending on who you meet, your mood, the time of day, and so on. For instance, I act one way around my family, another way around my friends, and a different way around my teachers. I wanted to compare this idea to what we discussed in a Modern Poetry class about Baudelaire and the notion of how we have different personas for different situations. It turns out the parallels between “Eminence Front” and Baudelaire are stronger than I originally thought.

In researching this post I discovered that according to the band’s leader singer, Pete Townsend, “Eminence Front” refers to what happens when someone takes too much cocaine. The chorus even reveals this idea somewhat as Townsend sings “behind an eminence front” while the lead guitarist, Roger Daltrey, simultaneously sings “it’s an eminence front,” as if they’re somehow intoxicated and “seeing double” so to speak.

Clearly this overlap shows two different sides to the same person too. But the only sources I can find claiming the cocaine connection are Wikipedia that references an article no longer available online and a Quora reply. Urban Dictionary also has a similar idea about the connection between the song and cocaine.

However, the idea makes sense because the song, published in 1982 also discusses the excesses of the period. The 1980s was known as “An Age of Excess” and opulence, meaning extreme wealth and glamour were at the fore of society. Everyone wanted to stand out, so even material objects needed to make bold statements. That meant objects like sunglasses were massive, shocking neon colors were the norm, and shiny materials like spandex and sparkly fabrics became common. Cocaine use was also high (no pun intended) and grew at a rapid rate.

Baudelaire described a kind of character, the dandy, in “The Painter of Modern Life” who aimed at being as individual as possible through the way he dressed and acted. Dandies remind me of people from the 1980s whose goal was to stand out by being different, by attracting attention in any way necessary.

The majority of the lyrics for “Eminence Front” focus on the following:

People forget

Forget they’re hiding

Behind an eminence front

Eminence front, it’s a put on

Come on join the party, dress to kill

Partial lyrics of “Eminence Front” by The Who

“Dress to kill” is likely a double entendre, referring to the idea of dressing to stand out or living a lifestyle that could lead to death that includes dressing excessively. “People forget…they’re hiding” because they’re either high or pretending to be someone they’re not, hence they’re putting on a front. There are also single phrases like “The drinks flow” and “That big wheel spins, the hair thins.” These phrases again focus on excess, that of alcohol and gambling.

So perhaps the best term for the 1980s is “hedonism.” This concept refers to the idea that one of the best goals a person can have is to pursue pleasure and self-indulgence. This concept reminded me of the modernist Decadent movement from about 100 years earlier. It was an artistic and literary movement that focused on excessive aesthetics and artificiality, but in conflict with hedonism. It was a response to the corruption of moral and cultural decay of the late 1800s rather than a promotion of it like that of hedonism.

But “Eminence Front” reminds me of the Decadent movement because the song is also against this moral and cultural decay. In fact, the last verse before the final chorus says: “The shares crash, hopes are dashed / People forget / Forget they’re hiding.” The Who is saying that the stock market might crash but people do not care. They’re hiding behind a false sense of reality, the “Eminence Front,” or being too high on cocaine to care or recognize what the drug is doing to them. Alternative “shares” could have a more social meaning too, in terms of shared experiences or shared realities. “Shares crash” could also refer to the withdrawal symptoms (“crash”) experienced after going off a drug like cocaine in which “hopes are dashed” and the reality that person was trying to avoid sets in again.

Also from the 1800s is Charles Baudelaire who, unlike the Decadent movement or The Who, promoted the idea of pleasure, especially drug usage. In 1850, he described the effects of hashish in striking detail in “The Poem of Hashish,” saying it is a form of “slow suicide” and “magic” that is unobjectionable and helps create the “artificial ideal.” Evidence suggests Baudelaire was describing opium, however.

Ten years later, in his book, “Les Paradis artificiels” (“Artifical Paradises”) Baudelaire discusses the effects of opium and hashish and suggests drugs could assist humans in achieving an idealized world. Like the “Eminence Front,” this state would create a false or “Artificial Paradise” that in some ways may be better for some people than having to deal with reality. More interestingly, it is said Baudelaire rarely indulged in drugs despite his reputation for debauchery. Either way, Baudelaire, known for his pursuit of pleasure through alcohol and sex, suffered from chronic alcoholism and the STD, tertiary syphilis.

The link between Baudelaire and “Eminence Front” can be further seen in Baudelaire’s prose poem, “The Eyes of the Poor.” The narrator is offended by the fact the woman he was with in a cafe appears to have no empathy for the poor father and his two children looking at them through the window.

Originally, I thought “the eyes of the poor” referred to those poor people who look on at the rich hoping but knowing they can never achieve such wealth. But after analyzing “Eminence Front,” and its idea that people put on fronts to hide their true nature, I now think differently. Perhaps the one with poor eyes is the lady who fails to see the divide between rich and poor and feel empathy toward them. Instead, she requests the narrator to “ask the maître d’ to send them away.” She also fails to see how the beauty and grandeur of antique art has been reduced to advertising gimmicks to attract the likes of her but also the narrator. Being a poem, this second meaning is perhaps obvious.

But the narrator who sees all of that also partakes in the cafe by visiting it when he has a choice not to do so, unlike the poor who have none. Yes, maybe the woman he was with would leave him, but he claims he will only be offended at her for a short time. So perhaps it is he who has the “eyes of the poor,” as he is able to see the injustice of poverty, to realize its implications, but would rather partake in enjoying the splendours of wealth than not. If he didn’t see poverty as a problem or feel “a little ashamed” that he could enjoy the cafe while the poor could not, his eyes would not be poor. He is also putting on an “eminence front” and covering it under the guise of being an observer. People “forget they’re hiding,” but do they really? Are they not just pretending they’re something else, playing dumb to avoid having to deal with the realities of the modern world whether in the 1880s or the 1980s or indeed the 2010s?

Art appears to encapsulate so much meaning from so many different periods that it proves the point that art reflects humanity. “Eminence Front” is music while Baudelaire’s writing and the Decadent movement are literature, but they all fall under the category of art. Their themes of drug usage, excess, moral decay, and pretending to hide the fact one recognizes reality seem as universal today as they did back then. One still has a choice to partake in it or to avoid it. But I think these three works of art suggest a third possibility, that we have the choice to do something about addressing the realities of the modern world, good or bad, whether for ourselves or for others.

Modernization and Modernity in Yerevan

I first visited Yerevan in 2010 and returned in 2014, which a relatively short time. But a lot changed over that brief period from a variety of angles based on modernization and modernity, including some aspects mentioned or implied by the famous French poet, Charles Baudelaire in “The Painter of Modern Life and Other Essays”.

Dandies, for instance, are noticeable in places like Northern Avenue and indoor shopping centers like Dalma Garden Mall and Yerevan Mall. These locations themselves signify a shift from traditional markets to Western-style malls, again a form of modernization. Except the dandies found here are mostly female unlike the males found in Baudelaire’s writing.

These women strut with class and confidence with a slight swagger to attract attention. They pose in coffee shops and on park benches with elegance, upright without a hint of rounded backs from slouching, appearing to observe the world pass by but in actuality attract attention due to their unique looks and poise. Some of their clothes appear expensive and thus of high quality. Others appear torn and tattered yet still pricey. Some women are immaculately groomed too, as one might expect with legs milkier white than the dairy inside their cappuccinos. Others appear almost Gothic and unkempt with their dark nails and lipstick, yet somehow that means they too are groomed.

Baudelaire says dandies have “a personal form of originality, within the external limits of social conventions” (p. 108). In Yerevan, many have different shades of dyed hair, and wear short dresses or skirts, revealing tops, tattered jeans, t-shirts with swear words printed on, and more. This kind of fashion is certainly an “opposition and revolt,” in this case against conservatism and traditions (p. 108).

This kind of fashion is certainly an “opposition and revolt,” in this case against conservatism and traditions (p. 108). When I first came to Yerevan in 2010, I do not remember this kind of dress.

In fact, I stuck out like a swollen leg wearing shorts at a time when few males did (I could count the number I saw on one hand). Now at university, I look odd for wearing jeans when most males I see are now wearing shorts. How times change!

It seems the dress code has become more open and socially acceptable and thus more modern as it has elsewhere in places like Europe. Though some of the older generation who reproach females for dressing in such ways might disagree.

In 2010, Northern Avenue was still under construction. What was there made me feel like I was in a European city, a great example of modernization. But then again, why? Why go the European route in terms of architecture when Armenian culture has its own distinct architectural cues that could have been used?

Indeed many new constructions are still being built to create “modern” buildings across Yerevan, but many locals describe them as “monstrosities” as they ruin the view of Ararat and the city too. In Research Methods we read Ter-Ghazaryan’s paper, “‘Civilizing the city center’: symbolic spaces and narratives of the nation in Yerevan’s post-Soviet landscape,” which explains the conflict between modernization and building a national identity through architecture, as well as between the political elite and residents.

This conflict is similar to that described by Baudelaire in describing how artists depict the new “in the dress of the past,” which in Yerevan’s case signifies the mentality of the historical reliance on and admiration of Europe. It also signifies internal conflicts on how the past should influence the future, which politicians view differently than citizens. Baudelaire implies one can gain inspiration from present and past, so the development of a new, modern, and distinctly Armenian architecture based on its unique past would make more sense in terms of modernizing the city (p. 107).

Indeed, a perfect example of this unity between new and old can be seen at Zvartnots Airport. When I arrived in 2010, the new airport was part-finished. The old airport with its Soviet influence had overdone its useful life, as its capacity, usability, lack of space, and style had become outdated.

When I left a few weeks later the check-in was in the old airport. But after the security I entered the newly built departures area. It was like I left the 1980s and teleported instantly into the 2010s.

I think that is a perfect example of the transformation and modernization Yerevan has undergone. When I returned to Armenia in 2014, everything was new. Unlike Dalma, Yerevan Mall, or Northern Avenue, the airport did not remind me of Dubai or Europe or the West. It was unique to me despite its European-style usability and contemporary style, because it somehow captures the warmth of Armenian hospitality representing past and present.

Baudelaire says, “He gazes at the landscape of the great city, landscapes of stone, now swathed in the mist, now struck in full face by the sun” (p. 105). To me, Baudelaire is revealing the contrast between old and new as Paris was being torn down (“the mist” that resembles the past) and reconstructed for the modern (the light of the “sun”).

In Yerevan, there is a mix of pre-Soviet, Soviet, and post-Soviet buildings. Cranes construct crude monstrosities with little or no architectural connection with other structures. Yet, buildings can look old outside but be entirely renovated inside, kind of like Yerevan and Armenia itself. Then again, many old buildings have air conditioning units hanging outside them as symbols of modernity.

Old green and white electric trolley buses have largely been replaced by modern, bright purple buses complete with air suspension and air-conditioning. Old and now pale Soviet cars converted into taxis attempt to shatter the space-time continuum by fighting over the same space of road as brand new white and shiny Yandex taxis with neither willing to yield. Some aspects modernize and some may never change.

Other technology has drastically changed Yerevan, however, like communication. In 2010, 3G was the fastest mobile connection and fiber optic connections were relatively new. Today, 4G is accessible from almost anywhere with fiber optic connections woven under the city and into almost all buildings.

My laptop’s WiFi currently shows 13 Ucom WiFi networks and thus fiber optic connections available. In 2015, public TV broadcasts switched from analogue to digital, a perfect symbol of modernization.

Armenian and Russian advertising can be seen everywhere while English branding, a sign of modernity in terms of tourism and globalization, has become more common too. The country’s largest supermarket chain, Yerevan City, uses its name pronounced in English though written with the Armenian alphabet, for example. Baudelaire’s fascination with the advertiser whom he calls an artist, M.G., leaves room for comparison with Yerevan’s advertising. Some is garish and appealing while others are bold and inspiring, almost works of art.

Then there’s trash collection too (when it used to happen). Old Soviet trucks that required manual filling by hand were replaced by modern trucks, some capable of lifting trash automatically through cranes to whisk them away. Then again, the old trash bins were solid metal that were replaced by cheap plastic garbage ones, signs of modernity yes, but not necessarily a good change. 

I find it fascinating how Baudelaire’s concepts and ideas of modernity and modernization can be seen in Yerevan today. When I visited Lisbon in 2018, I cannot see anywhere near as much resemblance, because it is has been mostly modernized and amalgamated with its past.

Yerevan is very much learning and adapting to how modernization can be achieved. The city still bears its Soviet roots. Much has been modernized from fashion to buildings to transportation, but large parts of the city still remain symbols of its Soviet past. Perhaps this article’s image reveals more than words can express. But to me, Yerevan is still in a transitory period toward modernization like that of Baudelaire’s Paris and its inhabitants.

Photo by Artak Petrosyan on Unsplash