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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_528638203
    Format: 415 S. , Ill. , 22 cm
    ISBN: 3827007089 , 9783827007087
    Content: Verlagsinfo: Schon im 12. Jahrhundert tat ein Ritter Hartnied von Butiler am Hofe Dienst. Einer seiner Nachfahren war dabei, als man Martin Luther auf die Wartburg brachte, und ein anderer kämpfte gegen die Türken vor den Toren Wiens. Bis heute ist die Geschichte der Familie von Butler geprägt von einer soldatischen Tradition, einer Tradition, die Joachim Käppner in seinem Buch eindrücklich schildert, erklärt und hinterfragt. Vor allem drei von Butlers, in deren Leben sich in besonderer Weise deutsche Zeitgeschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts widerspiegelt, stehen im Mittelpunkt. Sie bekleideten hohe Offiziersränge in den Armeen der Weimarer Republik, des „Dritten Reiches" oder der Bundesrepublik. So erlebte etwa Oberstleutnant Peter von Butler gespenstische Szenen in Hitlers Berliner Bunker und gehörte schließlich zur rebellischen Armee Wenck, die einen „Führerbefehl" verweigerte. Sein jüngerer Bruder Ruprecht wurde an der Ostfront schwer verwundet. Von 1955 an bauten beide die Bundeswehr mit auf. Ruprechts Sohn Carl Hubertus war nach der deutschen Wiedervereinigung daran beteiligt, zwei bis dato feindliche Armeen zusammenzuführen und befehligte 2001 die erste Auslandsmission der Bundeswehr in Afghanistan. Was aber, fragt Joachim Käppner, bedeuten jene uns so fremd erscheinenden soldatischen Werte und Tugenden, wie sie die von Butlers exemplarisch verkörpern: Ehre, Treue, Kameradschaft, Vaterlandsliebe? Wie vertragen sie sich mit einer demokratisch-zivilen Grundhaltung? Was hieß und was heißt es für einen Soldaten, „ehrenvoll zu handeln" - erst recht in so unterschiedlichen politischen Systemen wie Nazidiktatur und bundesdeutscher Demokratie?
    Note: Quellen- u. Literaturverz. S. 407 - [410]
    Language: German
    Subjects: History
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    Keywords: Butler Familie, Thüringen ; Geschichte ; Biografie ; Biographischer Beitrag ; Historische Darstellung ; Biographischer Beitrag ; Historische Darstellung
    Author information: Käppner, Joachim 1961-
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_153971339
    Format: XXIV, 376 S , Ill
    ISBN: 9050631568
    Language: English
    Subjects: History
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    Keywords: Delos ; Handel ; Religion ; Geschichte 116-87 v. Chr.
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dublinii : Ex typographia I. Windsor
    UID:
    gbv_1734378212
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (8 p)
    Edition: Ann Arbor, Mich UMI 1999 Electronic reproduction; Digital version of: (Early English Books, 1641-1700 ; 2750:18)
    Series Statement: Early English Books Online / EEBO
    Content: eebo-0159
    Note: Reproduction of original in: Trinty College (Dublin, Ireland) Library , Wing (2nd ed.), B6289 , Electronic reproduction; Digital version of: (Early English Books, 1641-1700 ; 2750:18)
    Language: Latin
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1778608493
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (488 p.)
    Content: Written by experts from London’s renowned Royal Free hospital, Textbook of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery offers a comprehensive overview of the vast topic of reconstructive plastic surgery and its various subspecialties for introductory plastic surgery and surgical science courses. The book comprises five sections covering the fundamental principles of plastic surgery, cancer, burns and trauma, paediatric plastic surgery and aesthetic surgery. Additional coverage of areas in which reconstructive surgery techniques are called upon includes abdominal wall reconstruction, ear reconstruction and genital reconstruction. The broad scope of this volume makes this a unique contribution to the field. Heavily illustrated throughout, Textbook of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery is essential reading for anyone interested in furthering their knowledge of this exciting field
    Note: English
    Language: English
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Ovocny :Charles University in Prague, Karolinum Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9959229526602883
    Format: 1 online resource (252 p.)
    Edition: First edition.
    ISBN: 80-246-3457-0 , 80-246-2711-6
    Note: Description based upon print version of record.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 80-246-2571-7
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 6
    UID:
    almafu_9958061563802883
    Format: 1 online resource (xxix, 457 pages) : , illustrations (some colour), colour maps.
    Series Statement: Open Access e-Books
    Content: Written by experts from London’s renowned Royal Free hospital, Textbook of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery offers a comprehensive overview of the vast topic of reconstructive plastic surgery and its various subspecialties for introductory plastic surgery and surgical science courses. The book comprises five sections covering the fundamental principles of plastic surgery, cancer, burns and trauma, paediatric plastic surgery and aesthetic surgery. Additional coverage of areas in which reconstructive surgery techniques are called upon includes abdominal wall reconstruction, ear reconstruction and genital reconstruction. The broad scope of this volume makes this a unique contribution to the field. Heavily illustrated throughout, Textbook of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery is essential reading for anyone interested in furthering their knowledge of this exciting field.
    Note: Section 1: General -- 1. Principles of plastic surgery, wound healing, skin grafts and flaps / George Adigbli, Feras Alshomer, Jekaterina Maksimcuka, Shadi Ghali -- 2. Abdominal wall reconstruction / Ali Alhamdi, Shadi Ghali -- Section 2: Cancer -- 3. Skin cancer for the plastic surgeon / Sophia Opel, Shadi Ghali -- 4. Oral and oropharyngeal cancer / Jatinder T. Virdee, Nicholas Kalavrezos -- Section 3: Burns and trauma -- 5. Burns / Sebastian Salinas, Salman Mofti, Naime Moimen -- 6. Burn reconstructive surgery / Barinder Takhar, Ahmad B. Al-Ali, Naime Moimen -- 7. Soft tissue injuries of the hand / Hiba Khan, Bran Sivakumar -- 8. Lower limb trauma and reconstruction / Rebecca Nicholas, Ayyaz Quddus, Jon Simmons -- 9. Injuries of the facial skeleton / Tom W. Andrew, Nicholas Kalaverozos -- Section 4: Paediatric plastic surgery -- 10. Congenital hand abnormalities / Benjamin Way, Bran Sivakumar -- 11. Ear reconstruction / Aurora Almadori, Abdulaziz Khurshed, Ali Jafar, Ahmad B. Al-Ali, Peter E. Butler -- 12. Craniofacial surgery: craniosynostosis syndromes and cleft lip and palate / Ahmed Al-Hadad, Shafiq Rahman -- 13. Genital reconstruction / Shomari Zack-Williams, Debbie Hunt, Asif Muneer, Sarah Creighton -- 14. Vascular anomalies / Wenceslao M. Calonge, Juan Carlos López-Gutiérrez, Neil Bulstrode -- Section 5: Aesthetic surgery -- 15. Liposuction / Nina Oliver, Omar Khan Pathan, Ash Mosahebi -- 16. Facial aesthetic surgery / Muholan Kanapathy, Niall Kirkpatrick -- 17. Blepharoplasty - special focus on Asian blepharoplasty / Billy Ching Leung, Kimberley Lau, Hugo Henderson -- 18. Aesthetic breast surgery / Log Murugesan, Julia Ruston, Patrick Mallucci -- 19. Body contouring / Zain Bukamal, Ash Mosahebi -- 20. The evolution of hair transplant surgery / Farhana Akter, Greg Williams. , Also available in print form.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-910634-39-5
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Book
    Book
    Toronto [u.a.] : Univ. of Toronto Press
    UID:
    gbv_540110159
    Format: XV, 189 S. , Ill., graph. Darst
    ISBN: 9780802038999 , 9780802038197 , 0802038190
    Language: English
    Subjects: Political Science
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    Keywords: Öffentliche Meinung ; Umfrage
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Place of publication not identified] : Boston Symphony Orchestra & WGBH Educational Foundation under exclusive licence to International Classical Artists Ltd
    UID:
    gbv_1822217520
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 10 min., 10 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Three places in New England no. 4, op. 63 Götterdämmerung A minor
    Content: On 22 October 1969, Michael Tilson Thomas replaced William Steinberg midway through a Boston Symphony Orchestra concert at Philharmonic Hall in New York. Steinberg, the orchestra's newly appointed music director, fell ill while conducting Brahms's Second Symphony, and the twenty-four-year-old, newly appointed assistant conductor was asked to step in after the interval to lead a complicated new double concerto by Robert Starer and Strauss's Till Eulenspiegel. 'A tall, thin young man came on stage with an air of immense confidence and authority, and showed that his confidence was not misplaced, ' Harold C. Schonberg wrote in The New York Times the following day. It was 'his golden opportunity, ' Schonberg declared. 'Mr. Thomas knows his business, and we shall be hearing from him again.' There's no doubt that the publicity generated by such a high-profile, unscheduled New York debut gave a significant boost to Thomas's career. Yet, in a brief interview that appeared in the Times a few days later, Allen Hughes noted that Thomas was 'by no means a wide-eyed unknown getting his first big chance'. Indeed, even in New York, he had already established a reputation as 'a conductor of complicated avant-garde music' -- or at least that's how he was described in a review of a Town Hall recital he had given with cellist Laurence Lesser a few months earlier. Even at this relatively tender age, Thomas had worked closely with a diverse array of some of the brightest musical lights of the age, including Stravinsky, Copland, Boulez and Heifetz. Tilson Thomas's association with the Boston Symphony began in 1968 at Tanglewood, the orchestra's summer home, where he was awarded the prestigious Koussevitzky Prize. The following summer, he made his Boston debut as a guest conductor with the Boston Philharmonia, a cooperative ensemble connected with Harvard University. Steinberg attended that performance, and was impressed, appointing Thomas to be his assistant when he took the helm of the BSO that autumn. (The Boston Philharmonia was by all accounts a fine ensemble; Seiji Ozawa, Claudio Abbado and Alexander Schneider also guest conducted that orchestra around that time.) The performance presented here of Ives's Three Places in New England comes from a concert recorded at Symphony Hall in Boston on 13 January 1970, and was a repeat of a programme that had been presented in Boston the previous October, and then again at Carnegie Hall just a week after Thomas's surprise debut. Haydn's Symphony No. 98 in B flat opened the programme. A lengthy profile of Thomas in The Boston Globe from November 1969 noted that 'he is informed on matters of scholarship as they pertain to problems of performance practice far more than most of his colleagues' -- a comment that likely stems from the fact that he had very recently conducted the symphony from the harpsichord. Ives's work followed the Haydn; Variations (Aldous Huxley in memoriam), Stravinsky's final orchestral work, and Debussy's La Merf made up the second half. Ives's music has played a central role throughout Thomas's career, and features prominently in his large discography. In fact, the conductor's first Major-label orchestral recording -- a highly praised and much-prized coupling for Deutsche Grammophon of Three Places in New England and Carl Ruggles's Sun-treader (1970) -- was made soon after these BSO concerts. This live performance is marginally more free-flowing and looser-limbed than the studio recording, but both interpretations favour long-lined lyricism over syncopated raucousness. In his Times review of Thomas's Carnegie Hall concert, Allen Hughes succinctly sums up the conductor's approach to Ives's pieces: 'To Mr. Thomas they are not curios, nor novelties to be done tongue-in-cheek, but just beautiful music.' In that same review, Hughes also aptly describes Thomas's crystal-clear, conducting technique as 'businesslike'. Hughes continues: 'His gestures were precise and economical in most cases, he stayed pretty much in one place on the podium, he used a baton and he conducted from scores.' This live broadcast of Ives's Three Places vividly conveys Thomas's early enthusiasm for a composer that he has steadily championed for decades now, while the recordings of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony and 'Dawn and Siegfried's Rhine Journey' from Wagner's Götterdämmerung are valuable as they are entirely new to Thomas's discography and videography. Both come from the same 10 March 1970 concert. Sibelius's Symphony was preceded by Beethoven's Egmont Overture; the Wagner followed Schoenberg's Five Pieces for Orchestra Op. 16. Sibelius's Fourth Symphony has always been a tough sell. William Pierce notes in his pre-performance commentary that it had been thirty years since the BSO's previous performance (conducted by Koussevitzky). As in the Ives, Thomas's approach is primarily lyrical. The opening is brooding rather than taut, though the reading catches fire at the agitated climax of the first movement's central development section. Craig Smith, reviewing the first concert of the series in the Boston Globe, declared Thomas 'to be in every way equal to the demands of the difficult work'. Smith continued: 'If the performance was lacking the absolute rhythmic steadiness that can make a diffuse work like this coalesce completely, it had the virtues of extraordinary care in the clarification of the interesting textures that Sibelius devised.' Following study with Wagner's granddaughter, Friedelind, Thomas spent the summer of 1966 as assistant conductor at the Bayreuth Festival. Karl Böhm's controversially fast-paced performance of Tristan und Isolde was recorded by Deutsche Grammophon that year, and Thomas's expressively streamlined interpretation of 'Dawn and Siegfried's Rhine Journey' has similarly propulsive intensity. Indeed, Craig Smith in his Globe review praised the orchestra's 'brilliant brass playing' and the interpretation's 'rhythmic vitality [that] made "Siegfried's Rhine Journey" an exciting close to a fine concert'. Andrew Farach-Colton
    Note: Three places in New England (Orchestral set no. 1) / Charles Ives -- Symphony no. 4 in A minor, op. 63 / Jean Sibelius -- The Rhinegold. Dawn & Siegfried's Rhine journey / Richard Wagner.
    Language: Undetermined
    Keywords: Webcast
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Place of publication not identified] : BBC, under licence to International Classical Artists Ltd. Licensed courtesy of BBC Worldwide
    UID:
    gbv_1822217415
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 39 min., 9 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Variations on an original theme
    Content: The enigma of genius. Leonard Bernstein's only engagement with the BBC Symphony Orchestra took place in April 1982. It was a troubled time for Great Britain, with the long-running dispute over the Falkland Islands transformed into open war by the Argentinian invasion earlier in the month: the all-out military response ordered by Mrs Thatcher was still to come (a naval task force was on its way to the South Atlantic) when Bernstein conducted this concert at the Royal Festival Hall on 14 April. A few days later, he referred with withering sarcasm to the jingoist spirit of Elgar's patriotic music when (without preliminary rehearsal) he recorded two of the Pomp and Circumstance Marches as fillers to his CD recording of the 'Enigma' Variations, later issued on Deutsche Grammophon. An East Coast liberal, Bernstein was uneasy about England and its imperialist past. He loved Gilbert and Sullivan operettas and the Listener magazine's crossword puzzles but had hated his first visit to London in 1946. On that occasion (arranged by the music publisher Ralph Hawkes, a friend of his mentor Aaron Copland), Bernstein had conducted the London Philharmonic in six concerts and the newly formed Philharmonia for a recording of Ravel's G Major Piano Concerto that was sufficiently problematic to never be issued in the UK. Bernstein had been ill, lonely, depressed by bomb-ravaged London and unimpressed by the quality of its orchestral musicians. Over the next three decades his London concerts (apart from appearances with the New York Philharmonic on various tours) had all been given with the adventurous London Symphony Orchestra, including a memorable Mahler Eight at the Royal Albert Hall in 1966 and a Stravinsky memorial concert in 1972. For the BBC Symphony Orchestra it was therefore something of a scoop to lure the famous maestro away from the LSO; as a regular member of Bernstein's production team for the previous decade, I was happy to serve as a go-between in the negotiations, which were concluded shortly before I retired from BBC management to concentrate on work as a director. The rehearsal film (shot in BBC TV's Omnibus studio) was one of my first assignments in my new role. Bernstein, then sixty-three, was well aware of the historic importance of the BBC's flagship orchestra, which had been founded in 1930 under the leadership of Adrian Boult; Sir Adrian was knighted only seven years later for his achievement in establishing the orchestra as one of the UK's leading ensembles. In 1982 it was still admired as a superb instrument for the performance of contemporary music (Bernstein's new symphonic song cycle Songfest was also on the programme) but appeared much less in public than its rivals and no longer boasted such an array of distinguished solo players as in its pre-war glory days, when Arturo Toscanini and Bruno Walter had been among its guest conductors. Despite his own wealth of experience as a visiting maestro, Bernstein got off on the wrong foot with the BBC players by turning up spectacularly late for his first rehearsal, which was held in a television studio; he had done something similar with the LSO back in 1966 when he rehearsed Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony for a memorable Workshop programme. He claimed to have been driven to the wrong BBC studio but the truth was that he had underestimated the time it would take to get to White City from the Savoy ('it's just across the park') and to the despair of his assistant, he set off far too late for the traffic-clogged cross-town journey. To make matters worse, when he finally entered the studio he cut off the speech of welcome being delivered by the leader, Rodney Friend (whom he knew from Mr Friend's previous engagement as concertmaster of the NY Philharmonic), and then launched without apology for his late arrival, of which he seemed to be unaware, into a rambling discourse about his feeling of kinship for the composer whose music he was about to rehearse, Edward Elgar, whom he insisted on calling 'Eddy'. Their principal bond, it seemed, was that they shared a love of word puzzles and anagrams. Through the cameras I could see the orchestra becoming increasingly embarrassed and restless and matters did not improve when Bernstein finally began to make music: Elgar's theme was taken very slowly indeed. In his sixties, which proved to be the last full decade of his life, Bernstein tended to take slow movements slower and fast movements faster than heretofore. His Enigma interpretation was no exception: he had a virtuoso orchestra at his disposal and he put it through its paces. When Rodney Friend complains at rehearsal that Bernstein was setting 'an impossible tempo' for 'G.R.S.' (Variation XI) the conductor points out that Tempo di molto means very fast and Friend is jokingly urged to 'be a captain' and lead his troops into battle. In truth, the fast movements are actually not excessively fast and in the splendid finale Bernstein observes Elgar's many changes of tempo with the scrupulous devotion he also paid to Mahler's instructions. He reminded his players several times that Elgar's music was in the mainstream of the European tradition, influenced by Schumann and Tchaikovsky as well as Wagner and Elgar's admiring friend Richard Strauss. He drew some exquisite playing from the soloists, notably the first clarinet, Colin Bradbury, but there were several tense moments at the rehearsal, notably when he crossed swords with the trumpet section. There has been criticism that Bernstein makes some of the slower variations unnecessarily ponderous. In particular, his version of 'Nimrod' (Variation IX) has been held up to disbelief verging on ridicule because in performance it lasts five minutes and fifteen seconds, nearly twice as long as most conductors take it; at the first rehearsal it ran even longer, to almost seven minutes. All I can say by way of justification is that when you see the music as well as hearing it, when you watch on camera the intensity of Bernstein's beat and body language (particularly in the studio rehearsal where he implores the orchestra to 'keep it as pure and noble as you can') you are caught up in this wonderfully spiritual music: after all, Bernstein knew that Elgar aspired here to compose an adagio in the Beethoven tradition -- in honour of his best friend, August Jaeger. In a brief interview with the Omnibus presenter, Barry Norman, Bernstein is asked for his suggestion concerning the identity of the enigma of Elgar's title. At the piano he demonstrates how Elgar's theme can be combined, somewhat tortuously, with 'Auld Lang Syne'; another candidate, 'Rule Britannia', is dismissed as simply not workable as the underlying theme. For Leonard Bernstein, however, the real enigma is how a work which has echoes of so many earlier European composers should come out sounding so British, so personal to Edward Elgar: 'that is the Enigma of Genius'. Humphrey Burton
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_1822220092
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 24 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Symphonies no. 2, op. 63 E♭ major
    Content: The ICA Classics Legacy series presents a collection of historic performances by some of the world's greatest artists. These performances are released on DVD for the first time, incorporating rare archive footage that has been expertly and lovingly restored. This performance of Elgar's Enigma Variations forms an historic account of the first concert Sir Georg Solti conducted as Chief conductor of the LPO in 1975. It is also the first DVD release with Solti performing Elgar's Symphony No. 2. Solti, who prepared new works by listening to Elgar's own recordings, identified closely with his music. The virtuoso playing of the orchestra combined with his fresh, energetic approach make for an exciting, uplifting experience
    Note: Symphony no. 2 in E-flat major, op. 63 , Enigma variations, op. 36.
    Language: Undetermined
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