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From Hamburg To Munich Germany Music Vinyl LP Record VG+ Shrink

Description: Yes we combine shipping for multiple purchases.Add multiple items to your cart and the combined shipping total will automatically be calculated. From Hamburg To Munich Germany Music Vinyl LP Record VG+ Shrink Record Grading: VG+ Shrink On this conducted musical tour of Germany youwill hear many old familiar melodies. Not onlygenuine folk-songs but also airs from operettasand sontj-hits, which have remained so much aliveand so typical, even today, that as soon as youhear one you smell the air of a particular town,recall the charm of a particular scene or conjureup a picture of certain faces.Let's start in Hamburg. Once as he stood on thestage there in 1912, that much loved actor, RalphArthur Roberts conceived an idea for a song withlocal colour. He was also a lyric writer and com-poser and the result was “Auf der Reeperbahnnachts urn halb eins,” a profession of love for SanktPauli, Hamburg’s “haven of delight.” That no othersong would ever succeed in ousting it—and therehave been many attempts—R. A. Roberts himselfwould probably have been the last to imagine.Berlin has had “its” song for 70 years now “Dasist die Berliner Luft,” written by Paul Lincke for hisgreat operetta, “Frau Luna,” which was first stagedon New Year’s Eve, 1899. Another song from “FrauLuna,” “Schlosser die im Monde liegen,” mayhave lost its Utopian appeal to the space-mindedpublic of today, but "Berliner Luft, Luft, Luft” is asup-to-date as ever, reflecting as it does the un-shakable vitality of the “Athenians by the RiverSpree.”Munich, too, Germany’s third city, has found “its”own song in a world-wide hit, “In Munchen stehtein Hofbrauhaus.” And so, for most tourists, themetropolis on the Isar, despite all its fine buildingsand art treasures, still remains the city of the “Ok-tober Fest” and brimming tankards.The university town of Heidelberg, the romanti-cally transfigured Heidelberg of bygone days, wasa famous place for love. And also for study, ofcourse. In the ’twenties Fred Raymond—a Vien-nese by birth, most of whose song and operettahits such as “Maske in Blau,” “Ball der Nationen,”and “Saison in Salzburg,” were successes inGermany—took all the memories of the good olddays of student jollity and distilled them into thesong, “Ich hab’ meir Herz in Heidelberg verloren.”Possibly fewer people will know that the comicsong, “Auf de schwabsche Eisebahne,” was firstsung, and perhaps even originated, in studentcircles. It was found in a student songbook inTubingen in 1853.The other songs, especially those about a par-ticular trade or job, are mostly of popular origin.If they are familiar, it’s because they have beensung and heard from generation to generation.That is the case with the miners’ song, “Gluckauf, der Steiger kommt,” for example, which is athome in every part of Germany where coal or oreis won. Or they were read on broadsheets, whichwere like today's newspapers for the man in thestreet but also spread ditties and melodramatictales among the people. It was on one of thesebroadsheets, as long ago as the late 18th century,that the song of the “Ein Jager aus Kurpfalz”first appeared.But not all that is thought to be so is, in fact, ofpopular origin. A good example is “Auf der Lune-burger Heide,” the words of which were written byHermann Lons (1866—1914), the regional poet?whose poems were often put to music and sungwith gusto. One of the most folk-like of Germansongs is the melody which Friedrich Silcher com-posed to the poem “Ich weiss nicht, was soil esbedeuten,” from Heinrich Heines “Buch derLieder,” and which still comes to the mind ofeveryone who passes the Lorele’ Rock on a Rhinesteamer. Here’s wishing you, too, much pleasureon your criss-cross journey upon German soil.Side 1:Auf der Reeperbahn nachts um half eins (R. A. Roberts)Carl Bay und grosses OrchesterDas ist die Berliner Luft (P. Lincke)Heeresmusikkorps 6, Ltg. Major Hans HerzbergIn Munchen steht ein Hofbrauhaus (W. Gabriel)Das Hofbrauhaus-Blasorchester, Ltg. Fritz HirschDie Lorelei (Ich weis nicht, was soil es bedeuten)(F. Silcher/H. Heine) Wolfsburger Chorgemeinschaft,Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie, Ltg. Heinz Meyer-KundtIch hab’ mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren(F. Raymond/Beda/E. Neubach)Werner Schmah, Orchester Steffen ThomasEin Jager aus Kurpfalz (arr. K. Amberg)Wolfsburger Chorgemeinschaft, NordwestdeutschePhilharmonie, Ltg. Heinz Meyer-KundtSide 2:Wo die Nordseewellen (Frisenlied)Strand (Friesenlied)(S. Krannig/M. Muller-Grahlert/F. Fischer-Friesenhausen)Peter Oldenburg, Spitzerdorf-Schulauer Mannergesangverein,kleine Rhythmusgruppe, Ltg. Hans FreeseAuf der Liineburger Heide (L. Rahlfs/H. Lons)Die WandervogelAn der Weser (Hier hab’ ich so manches liebe Mai)(G. Pressel)Berliner Lehrer-Gesangverein, Ltg. Martin HanselAuf de schwabsche Eisebahne (arr. K. Rehfeld)Albert Hofele, Kapelle Kurt RehfeldGluck auf, der Steiger kommt (T. Knobel/H. Mielenz)Heeresmusikkorps 1, Ltg. Oberst Wilhelm StephanDie lustigen Hannoveraner (H. Grote)Heeresmusikkorps 1, Ltg. Oberst Wilhelm Stephan LP14

Price: 11.96 USD

Location: Kingsport, Tennessee

End Time: 2024-12-28T11:32:11.000Z

Shipping Cost: 5.95 USD

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From Hamburg To Munich Germany Music Vinyl LP Record VG+ ShrinkFrom Hamburg To Munich Germany Music Vinyl LP Record VG+ ShrinkFrom Hamburg To Munich Germany Music Vinyl LP Record VG+ ShrinkFrom Hamburg To Munich Germany Music Vinyl LP Record VG+ Shrink

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Artist: Various

Custom Bundle: No

Style: Folk, Germany & Austria

Inlay Condition: Very Good Plus (VG+)

Record Grading: Very Good Plus (VG+)

Material: Vinyl

Speed: 33 RPM

Case Type: Cardboard Sleeve

Record Size: 12"

Format: Record

Type: LP

Features: Original Cover

Release Title: From Hamburg To Munich

Record Label: Philips

Edition: First Pressing

Genre: Folk, World Music

Sleeve Grading: Very Good Plus (VG+)

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