(1933) After 1930, R-26's membership steadily grew. Architect
Le Corbusier was presented to the salon by his brother, musician
Albert Jeanneret (with whom the young Marie-Jacques Perrier began her musical career). Le Corbusier soon set to work modernizing the interior of R-26, designing the salon's
Cubist staircase. During this time, Robert Perrier began to hone his talents as a songwriter, publishing with Les Publications Francis Day and acquiring a second grand piano to add to the festivities at R-26. The year 1935 saw the arrival at R-26 of numerous musicians who would prove quintessential to the salon's development.
Pierre Dudan, having arrived on foot from
Lausanne, immediately took up residence with the Perrier family. His song "Clopin-clopant", originally composed for a soirée at R-26 and dedicated to the Perrier family, soon proved a staple of the salon's repertory. Following Dudan came
Jean Tranchant and
Michel Warlop, the latter of whom introduced to R-26 violinist
Stéphane Grappelli, soon one of the salon's most dedicated members. In his memoir
My Violin As My Only Baggage, Grappelli wrote: Then there was Robert and Madeleine Perrier…These naturalized Montmartrois residing on the Rue Norvins entertained many: writers, musicians, painters and poets alike gathered at their home. They invited me often; the soirées were brilliant…It was there that I met all of Montmartre. By 1937, Grappelli was regularly holding rehearsals at R-26 with guitarist
Django Reinhardt, another devoted contributor to the salon. Early on, Reinhardt was impressed by the budding musical talents of Marie-Jacques Perrier, with whom he decided to record several staples of the R-26 repertory, including "Les salades de l'oncle François" (written by Tranchant) and "Ric et Pussy" (written by Robert and Madeleine Perrier). Speaking of Reinhardt at R-26, Tranchant wrote in his memoir
The Big Wheel: Between Django and me there was but one common denominator: music, that which was found, far from the theater's preoccupations, at the fabled salon of Madeleine and Robert Perrier, an ideal refuge at which to kick up one's heels. ==After World War II==