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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Berlin :Mayer & Müller,
    UID:
    almahu_BV006380315
    Format: VII, 151 S.
    Series Statement: Palaestra 27
    Language: German
    Subjects: German Studies , English Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Author information: Brie, Friedrich, 1880-1948.
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Berlin : Eulenspiegel Verlag
    UID:
    kobvindex_SBC1251087
    Format: 127 Seiten , 19 cm
    Edition: 1. Auflage
    ISBN: 9783359011965
    Content: Er war visionärer Landschaftsgestalter, Weltreisender, Dandy, Playboy, Skandal- und Reiseschriftsteller, meistverkaufter Autor seiner Zeit, Verschwender und Pleitier, Exzentriker, der weiße Hirsche vor seine Kutsche spannte, Abenteurer, der eine Ballonfahrt über Berlin und eine Tauchfahrt in die Themse unternahm, begnadeter Gesellschafter, befreundet mit den Geistesgrößen seines Jahrhunderts, Gourmet, Ananaszüchter und Genießer (nicht Erfinder) des farbig geschichteten Eises, das als Pückler-Eis berühmt wurde. Den reichen Erben und Parkgestalter von Muskau trieb die Größe seines Unterfangens in den Ruin, nicht weniger ehrgeizig war sein nächstes Projekt, der Umbau seines Erbschlosses und die Anlage des Landschaftsgartens in Branitz. Er heiratete die Tochter des preußischen Staatskanzlers Hardenberg und ließ sich pro forma scheiden, um mit einer Geldheirat in England seiner Probleme Herr zu werden, vergebens. Reisen führten ihn an die Höfe orientalischer Herrscher und in die Wildnis Afrikas. Auf einem Sklavenmarkt kaufte er sich ein minderjähriges Mädchen, Machbuba, nahm sie als Geliebte (und Verwalterin seiner Finanzen!) mit auf Reisen durch Ägypten, den Libanon, die Türkei und zurück auf sein Lausitzer Schloss. Und selbst seinen Tod inszenierte er mit großer Geste und ließ sich in einer eigens errichteten Pyramide in Branitz beisetzen.
    Note: Deutsch
    Language: German
    Keywords: Anthologie
    URL: Cover
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_BV020474416
    Format: (68 S.) 8".
    Note: [Erschien vollst. u.d.T.: 'Eulenspiegel in England' als: Palaestra, H. 27]. - Breslau, Phil. Diss. v. 13. Dez. 1902
    Language: German
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift
    Author information: Brie, Friedrich, 1880-1948.
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam :Rodopi,
    UID:
    almahu_9949701030402882
    Format: 1 online resource (vii, 217 pages) : , illustrations.
    ISBN: 9789004334090
    Series Statement: Yearbook of the Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies ; 4
    Note: 'A noteworthy contribution in the fight against Nazism': Hubertus Prinz zu Löwenstein im Exil / , 'A Wandering Scholar' in Britain and the USA, 1933-45: The Life and Work of Moritz Bonn / , ,England find ich gut !' Facetten aus Leben und Werk des Autors Robert Muller / , 'Es soll diese Spur doch bleiben...' Hans Jacobus: Exile, National Socialism and the Holocaust / , Eulenspiegel to Owlyglass:The Impact of the Work of the Exiled Illustrators Walter Trier and Fritz Wegner on British Children's Literature / , 'Although he is Jewish, he is M&S': Jewish Refugees from Nazism and Marks and Spencer from the 1930s to the 1960s / , Into Exile: Ernst Sommer in London / , Exil in Großbritannien: Die Keramikerin Grete Loebenstein-Marks / , Selma Kahn - A Provincial Exile / , AJR Information in the Context of German-language Exile Journal Publication, 1933-1945 / , Listening to Refugee Voices:The Association of Jewish Refugees Information and Research on the Refugees from Hitler in Britain / , Articles in English or German.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Refugees from the Third Reich in Britain Leiden, Boston : Brill | Rodopi, 2002, ISBN 9789042011045
    Language: English
    URL: DOI:
    URL: DOI
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  • 5
    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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  • 6
    Book
    Book
    Berlin : Eulenspiegel-Verl.
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB12534528
    Format: 347 Seiten
    Edition: 1
    Language: German
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  • 7
    Book
    Book
    Berlin : Eulenspiegel-Verl.
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB12402315
    Format: 125 Seiten , Ill. , 8 x 6 cm
    Edition: 1. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3359008626
    Series Statement: Eule Quickies 009
    Language: German
    Author information: Kusche, Lothar
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  • 8
    Book
    Book
    Berlin : Eulenspiegel
    UID:
    kobvindex_VBRD-i97833590172570012
    Format: [12] Seiten : Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9783359017257
    Content: "Bruder Jakob", der schläft und schläft und selbst vom Ding-ding-dong der Glocken nicht erwachen will, kennt man in aller Welt. In Frankreich singt man vom "Frère Jacques", in Italien vom "Fra Martino", in England vom "Brother John" und in der Türkei vom "Tembel çocuk". In diesen fünf Sprachen wird das einfache, einstrophige Lied im Buch abgedruckt.
    Language: German
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  • 9
    Image
    Image
    Berlin : Eulenspiegel Kinderbuchverlag
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB16074809
    Format: 12 ungezählte Seiten , 16 cm x 22 cm
    Edition: 1
    ISBN: 9783359017257 , 3359017250
    Content: 'Bruder Jakob', der schläft und schläft und selbst vom Ding-ding-dong der Glocken nicht erwachen will, kennt man in aller Welt. In Frankreich singt man vom 'Frère Jacques', in Italien vom 'Fra Martino', in England vom 'Brother John' und in der Türkei vom 'Tembel çocuk'. In diesen fünf Sprachen wird das einfache, einstrophige Lied im Buch abgedruckt. (Verlag)
    Note: Ab 2 Jahre , Text und Melodie überliefert
    Language: Multiple languages
    Author information: Zimmermann, Anna
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  • 10
    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_1822217539
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 32 min., 2 sec.) , sound, color
    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
    Language: English
    Keywords: Webcast ; Biography
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