On the eve of the First World War the French musical press enjoyed a freedom of expression which allowed it to put works and composers into clear-cut categories. This same freedom of expression authorized it to denounce explicitly the state's stranglehold over the organization of its grand theatres through the implementation of the cahiers des charges. This study is based on the articles which Jean Chantavoine published in l'Année musicale in 1911, 1912 and 1913. He writes annual statements which were more organizationally – rather than musically – orientated, and it is this feature which forms the basis of this article. In fact, Chantavoine (1877–1952), critic for the Journal des débats, Excelsior, etc., had no hesitation in criticizing state interference in the cultural dynamic of the Opéra and the Opéra-Comique, which he saw as leading to musical productions more abundant in quantity than quality. In order to appreciate his views more fully, an overview of three cahiers des charges is provided: those of 1908 and 1914 for the Opéra and of 1911 for the Opéra-Comique. For example, since subventions were distributed unequally between the two theatres, it is noticeable that the number of productions is greater for the Opéra-Comique, when, paradoxically, it was that theatre which received the smallest financial subsidy. In summarizing the years 1911–13 Chantavoine quite rightly takes these circumstances into account, and in reviews of the years’ principal productions he unintentionally provides a more accurate picture of himself as critic than the musical year as whole. In the course of his reviews, therefore, one can observe the emergence of certain traits of his aesthetic personality. He appears a complex character, for instance, interested in folk idioms, but only if they have obvious or immediate relevance. Finally, however, he illustrates the decisive position Paris occupied in the European musical panorama, and offers readers a valuable survey of the musical years before the war.