Archive for October 8, 2010


This is a set of historical recordings from the 1920s and 1930s on two CDs.
Friedrich Hollaender, who composed some of Marlene Dietrich’s best-known songs, wrote 17 of the 44 selections in the set. Hollaender (later emigrated to Hollywood), also performs on piano. Other performances include some of the first names in German cabaret: Trude Hesterberg (founder of “Die Wilde Bühne”), Ernst Busch (Germany’s greatest politically engaged singer), Blandine Ebinger (USA, 1937-1947)), Kate Kühl (“Lucy” in the premiere of “Die Dreigroschen-oper”, 1928), Margo Lion (one of the best German chanson parodists), and many others.
Despite the word “cabaret” in the title, many of the numbers included come from so-called “Revues” (perhaps best translated as “follies”-as in Ziegfield Follies). If cabaret offered humor, irony, wit, and “Zeitkritik”, the “Revues” offered both wit and humor, but were less politically oriented; additionally, they featured Girls . Yet the songs from these entertainments, because they are either personal statements or expressions of universal emotions, remain fresh.
The set includes “literary” texts by Joachim Ringelnatz, Theobald Tiger (i.e., Tucholsky), Walter Mehring, and Bertolt Brecht. Friedrich Hollaender wrote many of the lyrics as well, particularly those from early “talkies” such as “Ich bin von Kopf bis Fuss” from “Der blaue Engel”.
The set justly showcases La Dietrich and her vocal talents. Her earlier, somewhat rougher versions of “Jonny” and “Wenn ich mir was wünschen dürfte” contrast interestingly with later, more polished-and more familiar-recordings of them. Several numbers feature her in duet or trio with other singers.
To your great delight you can discover several songs by the immortal Claire Waldoff which do not appear on her album “Wer schmeisst denn da mit Lehm… ” (Odeon). Her rendition of “Raus mit den Männern aus dem Reichstag,” with its strongly trilled R’s, rings as true today as it did when first sung.

The singers typically speak-sing with conscious disregard for actual musical pitch in a way that seems to typify popular music from this period. Much of the music on this set sounds like Lotte Lenja’s version of “Seeräuber Jenny” and indeed provides a context for the Brecht/Weill style of vocalizing.

The original recordings, which were provided by various archives in Berlin and Frankfurt, have been digitally reworked to improve the sound quality. The digital version renders the voices more clearly and significantly reduces the surface noise. The cost, however, must be measured in loss of musicality. In the digital version the instruments seem less present and somewhat artificial; the rich interplay between voice and instruments tends to disappear. By the 1930s, however, recording techniques had evidently improved. The sound quality of the later pieces is much better with very little hiss or noise on either vinyl and CD.

Much of the material on this set remains fresh and interesting. The parody of the Wandervogel movement is quite amusing, as is Ringelnatz’s nonsense parody of “Wenn ich ein Vöglein wär” (sung by Die Drei Katakombe-Jungens). The last song on the set is Brecht’s “Der Marsch ins Dritte Reich,” sung by Ernst Busch to a version of “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary,” arranged by Hanns Eisler.

All of the artists and topics mentioned above can be researched in Klaus Budzinski and Reinhard Hippen’s Metzler Kabarett Lexikon (Stuttgart: Metzler, 1996 ISBN 3-476-01448-7). This well-illustrated handbook (b-w only) covers the entire range of German-language cabaret, from the earliest times (the 1890s) to West German television broadcasts.

Berlin Cabaret – Bei uns um die Gedächtniskriche rum… pt. 1
Berlin Cabaret – Bei uns um die Gedächtniskriche rum… pt. 2
Berlin Cabaret – Bei uns um die Gedächtniskirche rum… pt. 3
(192 kbps, 83 MB & 54 MB & 71 MB)

“La Marseillaise”, “Internationale”, “Brüder zur Sonne, zur Freiheit” – everybody knows some titels of this collection.

It collects 13 carefully restorated original recordings of labour movement songs, recorded in the 20s and 30s of the last century in the Weimar Republic.

Some of the interpreters are today forgotten, like the “Doppelquartett des Deutschen Freidenkerverbandes” with the song “Ein Sohn des Volkes…”, some are famous like Bertolt Brecht in “Die Maßnahme”.

Brüder, zur Sonne, zur Freiheit – Arbeitermusik der Weimarer Republik in Originalaufnahmen
(192 kbps, ca. 58 MB)

The German cabaret really began to blossom in the 1920s and 1930s, bringing forth all kinds of new cabaret artists such as Werner Finck at the Katakombe, Karl Valentin at the Wien-München, and Claire Waldorf.
Some of their texts were written by great literary figures such as Kurt Tucholsky, Erich Kästner, and Klaus Mann.

When the Nazi party came to power in 1933, they started to repress this intellectual criticism of the times. Cabaret in Germany was hit badly: In 1935 Werner Finck was briefly imprisoned and sent to a concentration camp; at the end of that year Kurt Tucholsky committed suicide; and nearly all German-speaking cabaret artists fled into exile in Switzerland, France, Scandinavia, or the USA. What remained in Germany was a state-controlled cabaret where jokes were told or the people were encouraged to keep their chins up.

Paul O’Montis was a Berlin cabaret celebrity, featured in several major revues and on dozens of recordings.
As a homosexual and a Jew, however, his career was ended after the Nazis came to power.
In 1933 he emigrated to Vienna, Austria. He fled to Prague after the “Anschluss” in 1938 (the German annexation of Austria).
When the Germans occupied western Czechoslovakia in 1939, O’Montis was arrested and sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp, near the Berlin theaters where he formerly starred. He died there perhaps by his own hand in July 1940, at age 46.
This collection features his song “Ramona Zündloch” besides other great cabaret tracks by Curt Bois, Trude Hesterberg, Ernst Busch, Kurt Gerron and Claire Waldoff.
The cover shows us “Stilleben mit Maske und Fisch” by the great George Grosz from 1931.

Ramona Zündloch – Musikalisches Kabarett 1921 – 1933
(192 kbps, cover included, ca. 88 MB)

“La Marseillaise”, “Internationale”, “Brüder zur Sonne, zur Freiheit” – everybody knows some titels of this collection.

It collects 13 carefully restorated original recordings of labour movement songs, recorded in the 20s and 30s of the last century in the Weimar Republic.

Some of the interpreters are today forgotten, like the “Doppelquartett des Deutschen Freidenkerverbandes” with the song “Ein Sohn des Volkes…”, some are famous like Bertolt Brecht in “Die Maßnahme”.

Brüder, zur Sonne, zur Freiheit – Arbeitermusik der Weimarer Republik in Originalaufnahmen
(192 kbps, ca. 58 MB)

This is another fine release by the UK based experimental reggae/dub label “On-U Sound” run by Adrian Sherwood.

On-U Sound’s following in Japan has been strong for many years, helped considerably by the success of Sherwood’s early 1990’s production work for the then recently-formed “Audio Active”.
Here then is the story of the ‘Japan connection’:
Tokyo-based “Audio Active”, led by shinehead Masa, got together through a mutual appreciation of reggae. These guys, however, got further than playing Bob Marley covers. That they were drawn towards dub and roots reggae, and later sometimes fusing it with hard techno beats and screaming guitars is something for which we should be truly grateful.
United by a shared love of dub, vocalist Masa and keyboardist / programmer 2DD (pronounced “nee dee dee”), who got their start in a 10-piece ska band called “Vital Connection”, formed “Audio Active” with drummer Shigemoto Nanao and bassist Takeshi Akimoto in 1991, naming themselves after an album by Jamaican reggae star Dennis Bovell. Guitarist Kasai joined later after the departure of Akimoto from the collective.

Their big break came when Adrian Sherwood took the band under his wing in the 1992 – 93, producing some of their earliest recordings and releasing them in Britain via On-U Sound. With Bim Sherman guesting on the subsequent single “Free The Marijuana” they were already in heady company indeed!
An occasional musician himself, Sherwood also took them with him on a tour of the United States. The band has also toured in Europe, as headliners and with “Asian Dub Foundation”. On their own Beat Records label in Japan they released several singles that maybe never were heard of in Europe. They are also quite big in Australia how many can claim this for themselves?!

Using a mix of programming and live instrumentation “Audio Active” create a dense, dub-inspired world of sound. References to outer space and time travel-interests fostered by sci-fi films and animated TV shows like Taimu Bokan abound in their English lyrics. But it’s their love of the ‘erb that is impossible to ignore and sets them apart on the Japanese music scene, where controversy is anathema. Titles such as “Weed Specialist”, “Kick The Bong Around”, “Psycho Buds”, and the “Hempire Strikes Back” are just some of the many tributes to their favourite medicine contained in their back catalogue.

“Audio Active” released the fantastic “Happy Shopper In Europe EP” in 1995.

No link.

This is another fine release by the UK based experimental reggae/dub label “On-U Sound” run by Adrian Sherwood.

On-U Sound’s following in Japan has been strong for many years, helped considerably by the success of Sherwood’s early 1990’s production work for the then recently-formed “Audio Active”.
Here then is the story of the ‘Japan connection’:
Tokyo-based “Audio Active”, led by shinehead Masa, got together through a mutual appreciation of reggae. These guys, however, got further than playing Bob Marley covers. That they were drawn towards dub and roots reggae, and later sometimes fusing it with hard techno beats and screaming guitars is something for which we should be truly grateful.
United by a shared love of dub, vocalist Masa and keyboardist / programmer 2DD (pronounced “nee dee dee”), who got their start in a 10-piece ska band called “Vital Connection”, formed “Audio Active” with drummer Shigemoto Nanao and bassist Takeshi Akimoto in 1991, naming themselves after an album by Jamaican reggae star Dennis Bovell. Guitarist Kasai joined later after the departure of Akimoto from the collective.

Their big break came when Adrian Sherwood took the band under his wing in the 1992 – 93, producing some of their earliest recordings and releasing them in Britain via On-U Sound. With Bim Sherman guesting on the subsequent single “Free The Marijuana” they were already in heady company indeed!
An occasional musician himself, Sherwood also took them with him on a tour of the United States. The band has also toured in Europe, as headliners and with “Asian Dub Foundation”. On their own Beat Records label in Japan they released several singles that maybe never were heard of in Europe. They are also quite big in Australia how many can claim this for themselves?!

Using a mix of programming and live instrumentation “Audio Active” create a dense, dub-inspired world of sound. References to outer space and time travel-interests fostered by sci-fi films and animated TV shows like Taimu Bokan abound in their English lyrics. But it’s their love of the ‘erb that is impossible to ignore and sets them apart on the Japanese music scene, where controversy is anathema. Titles such as “Weed Specialist”, “Kick The Bong Around”, “Psycho Buds”, and the “Hempire Strikes Back” are just some of the many tributes to their favourite medicine contained in their back catalogue.

“Audio Active” released the fantastic “Happy Shopper In Europe EP” in 1995.

No link.

“Replacing the cult of God by respect and love of humanity, we proclaim human reason as the only criterion of truth; human conscience as the basis of justice; individual and collective freedom as the only source of order in society.” – Michael Bakunin

Contents:
Aldred, Guy A. – Michel Bakunin, Communist.pdf
Bakunin – God and the State.pdf
Bakunin – Integral Education.pdf
Bakunin – Integral Education2.pdf
Bakunin – Marxism Freedom and the State.pdf
Bakunin – Power Corrupts The Best.pdf
Bakunin – Revolutionary Catechism.pdf
Bakunin – Rousseau’s Theory of the State.pdf
Bakunin – Selected writings.pdf
Bakunin – Stateless Socialism = Anarchism.pdf
Bakunin – THE CAPITALIST SYSTEM.pdf
Bakunin – The Commune, the Church & The State.pdf
Bakunin – The Immorality of the State.pdf
Bakunin – The Organization of the International.pdf
Bakunin – The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State.pdf
Bakunin – The Policy of The International.pdf
Bakunin – Where i stand.pdf
J. M. W. – Mikhail Bakunin (The Torch of Anarchy).pdf

Michael Bakunin – Selected Works (2 MB)

“Replacing the cult of God by respect and love of humanity, we proclaim human reason as the only criterion of truth; human conscience as the basis of justice; individual and collective freedom as the only source of order in society.” – Michael Bakunin

Contents:
Aldred, Guy A. – Michel Bakunin, Communist.pdf
Bakunin – God and the State.pdf
Bakunin – Integral Education.pdf
Bakunin – Integral Education2.pdf
Bakunin – Marxism Freedom and the State.pdf
Bakunin – Power Corrupts The Best.pdf
Bakunin – Revolutionary Catechism.pdf
Bakunin – Rousseau’s Theory of the State.pdf
Bakunin – Selected writings.pdf
Bakunin – Stateless Socialism = Anarchism.pdf
Bakunin – THE CAPITALIST SYSTEM.pdf
Bakunin – The Commune, the Church & The State.pdf
Bakunin – The Immorality of the State.pdf
Bakunin – The Organization of the International.pdf
Bakunin – The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State.pdf
Bakunin – The Policy of The International.pdf
Bakunin – Where i stand.pdf
J. M. W. – Mikhail Bakunin (The Torch of Anarchy).pdf

Michael Bakunin – Selected Works (2 MB)