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tv   Arts.21  Deutsche Welle  August 19, 2019 12:30am-1:01am CEST

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welcome to the book is the gate here for details. we're going to talk about a. country that's no. please don't. go. i just discovered what i think is the ultimate summer experience swimming down the mighty rhine but the switzerland. certainly not understood.
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that. summer slump not on arts 21 while everyone is out we set out to and our reporters have made so many fascinating discoveries along the way we've made exciting being able. to rate talents. and great heroes. all the way from buy a boy to south africa. our grand tour of arts on water and land. and this is a 1st my 1st time swimming in a major waterway in the middle of the city i can't wait but 1st i want to find out a bit more about this. urban reverse swimming trend. the rhine in the lower father
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ryan as it's often called in german is the specially popular for urban swimming from its source high up in that flows through half of europe river swimming has a long tradition here but being more used to pools and lakes it's quite an adventure for me in this sweltering summer people are talking about the concept of urban swimming in all over europe and as a former swimmer myself of course i'm fascinated by this concept because i've never really done it. sure is here everyone seems to be doing locals wait fearlessly into the chilly 20 degree current even with kids in tow they kind of swim downstream to emerge from the water as if we born easy. you shouldn't underestimate it a river isn't like a lake. and the current can be pretty scary especially the. how do you feel before your 1st run swim. excited yeah
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a little. i decided to take a quick detour to architecture museum to see swim city the 1st ever exhibition on urban swimming. as you can see a lot of water all throughout the city and the swiss are very very proud of their tradition of urban river swimming so much so that they found it worthy of a museum exhibition. this is where i meet and be a curator abbott urban river swimmer and a champion of this burgeoning trend and no you actually have people from all walks of life who do this all generations all social strata and this becomes maybe the most inclusive public space of balsam it's a very interesting way to be in the city but actually to understand the city is. very dominated by of course the geography. so urban swimming is about. more
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than just cooling off and having fun in the current climate of city sell offs and speculative investments is actually a political act. it is really about reclaiming the city as your as your home as your environment this is we're living in this this time where international investment groups take possession of urban spaces and the center is the most this is the most attractive area so local people get gentrified in other areas and this is the backwash funding us movie shows me examples from switzerland and elsewhere that prove urban swimming is an international trend and where people are hopping into the water already they're planning river pools in new york brussels paris or london every city needs a good swimming hole. in my hometown of berlin the cost was launched a few years ago a competition in the name of a cleaner she has
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a 2025 the cleaned up water alongside the historic museum island will be freely accessible a swimmer's dream but 1st some tips for remembering from the house and 2 seen from the outside it looks like there's a lot of action on the river on hot summer days but if you're in the river it's like when you drive in the con traffic signs and be seen then you understand that they're going that way on that side and that's the bike lane then. there's an order to it 60 so despite shipping in tanker traffic everyone sticks to the rules high time for me to take the plunge so 1st i have to plan my strategy how i'm going to swim down the rhine is where i'm starting at the shrouds but with the in front of the tank to leave museum and then i'm supposed to stay in this green zone all the way around and this is of course what makes me a bit nervous this is the danger zone where all the shipping. traffic is.
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an essential part of river swimming in. a little bit extra sunscreen and now. my. fish. is a waterproof. down 7 times. let's. take your marks get set go into the waters of the rhine. it takes about 25 minutes to swim and float the 3 kilometers downstream you can catch the current rather than the. urban swimming is part of everyday life in switzerland and it's a truly democratic activity the strong current is
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a challenge on the ghetto but an exhilarating one and quickly i meet 3 kindred spirits. tell me where you're from and is this your 1st time swimming in the right that is 1st time for all the states. california. people around here in. the city shimmering in the heat looks like a film from here and i'm feeling like one of the rhine maidens from. a romance environmentally friendly an age old tradition and. several trips down the river i am really grateful for this because i'm actually frozen stiff. i can hardly speak but it's an absolutely wonderful experience and i think i've been bitten by this going to have to check off all the other. swimmable
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rivers in switzerland and possibly everywhere else on the globe the sea state you know. it's not easy to leave the rhine in basel behind to move to the easiest place where it's so easy to go with the flow and to sometimes simply leave the blur of the daily grind behind us for. something to move to kiss is something to. eat. eat eat. eat eat. eat eat eat eat eat eat eat eat eat eat. germany's oldest music festival since $876.00 it's been the dream of all wagner fans to visit the legendary hall greenhill. i've been coming here for 30 years and i'm still captivated by wagner's musical dramas this year my personal highlight was meeting
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the heroic tenor or helping terry's earth hello hello stephen stephen colbert he's one of the most sought after wagner singers in the world even after all these years by reut still remains a magical place for him. but gives me these magical moments when you discover something especially in wagner singing that you probably could never have discovered anywhere else. there'd be. this year he's singing a new production of tom hawes or. i was a little skeptic sometimes when a new concept is presented to me but i was forced really. i have to say within just one day of being here i was totally convinced. it's a multimedia production and very demanding for gold.
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toys it was the 1st role he sang and by a point in 2004 his warm voice and commanding presence immediately won over audiences and critics alike my 1st year here of course i was just terrified to be almost completely terrified no matter how much experience you have as a singer the 1st time you're here at this temple. you will have nervousness and things like that. the fact that gould performs about mary and heroes and by right at all is a small miracle those that are for years he toured the us in the musical phantom of the opera he was also using incorrect technique until a music teacher suggested he try the more taxing german works as a heldentenor yes. sir can you explain what is ahead of time in a dramatic verdi tenor has to have those beautiful just round holes bays
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cause sees that they can just hold for other helden tenor might need those notes but they're produced more with steel that cuts through the orchestra and then you put on top of that you have to have insurance. in 2006 gould was able to showcase his endurance when the late post on the wagner and his daughter katarina cast him as it played in a new production of the ring cycle. you. eat . too many singers today are pushed into their big wagnerian rolls in their twenties if you sing zee create at the age of 28 i can guarantee you one thing you won't be singing anything by the time you're 38. it's just wrong. problem today is everyone wants their
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their heroes to be young and vibrant and look like brad pitt in his early days but you have to give the voice time to develop. the tenor was over 40 the 1st time he sang as the meet and by white he initially underestimated the colossal role but this didn't seem to travel experience bestival director full time . for me wagner was really. one of the great influences of my life when i was doing was it treats you know i think he he saw one day that i looked like i was about to go under he patted my knee and he just started telling me stories stories of all the great tennis and that's when i realized this was his way of telling me every one of the great tenors were not was not a great treat the 1st time. it's
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a zig treat isn't and victor long. i you work for the grandson of the composer and the grand granddaughter of qatari no so how was your experience was she wanted me for for the tristan project and i was very adamant that i needed to do it the right way this time. to restore is the bag number opus 400 ton and received all the different manifestations of his relationship with ease although materialize on the stage for us. is some bucknor fans objected to the restrained psychological interpretation of the tragic love between tristan and isolde but this role became steven gould's greatest
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success. this year he's in the spotlight with the new toys a production that opened the 21000 by white festival. i. his favorite scene is when tom who is a goes to rome to ask forgiveness of the pope in vain. that's a dream moment to sing and to play because you can you can let all of the heartache all of the pain come out through that. in the current production tunnel as it is part of a wild anarchic group that celebrates sexual expression and demands complete freedom in the arts. it was clear right from the very beginning when we were doing the staging that i needed to rethink that and try to come up with something less.
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angry and completely defeated it's a way of looking at myself. as serious and yet i part of our christian group is i'm i'm i'm a cloud. i come out as a cloud. stephen gold stays curious even after hundreds of performances he keeps finding new ways to interpret classic characters it was wonderful meeting him and watching him on stage even more so hopefully they'll be back again next year.
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either back home to the high go music festival. this year south africa's butcher been a string orchestra performs use of haydn's missing. or mass for troubled times with a quiet from austria. this might be the 1st time many of the young musicians from south africa visit europe but they're already very familiar with the continent's classical music and it's a new pupil because i love the way the. european people just. i think it's. very very serious about the music and the beauty
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of music as well so i love it african music is. its find it has that rhythm where classical music is that you have to be your in control of the piece in expressing their emotions even more when you're playing and when you're playing a slow piece and lebanon thing you're saying for no reason or whatever. and then you play a small piece and floats as called music so that. brings out that frustration or whatever for me. rehearsal for their concert long walk to freedom it's program included antiapartheid songs. many are here today thanks to the mungo home string program. founded under the lead of peter guy in 1908 this initiative supports young aspiring musicians from
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historically disadvantaged backgrounds. the orchestra really just if i can say the public face of the program so i always associate the 2 sort of hand in glove as we would say. the future of the program meets the future of the orchestra of course. eat. eat eat was the long walk to freedom also pay tribute to south africa's 1st black president the anti-apartheid revolutionary nelson mandela who sought to bag a feat best the same title be the queen
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revive him in part because of the basic idea was to tell the story of apartheid being of a calm in a musical way. this is a beer i was thinking about the moving antiapartheid songs and thought that they would work extremely well with parts of haydn's mass. it's a myth of a bin. the talented youths are full of passion and exuberance no matter the genre they perform . the possibility string orchestra has to europe many times be full and they always bring along fun and familiar tunes as well. one of them is passed up it's been a huge international effort pop success ever since of african star marian mccabe stormed the charts with it and $967.00. aside from enjoying their travels the young musicians also see themselves as
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cultural ambassadors. to. different people learn a new language or do really fine and about experimental and a bit hard. i guess i can just say it's been a wonderful trip all rollercoaster. and at the center of it all nelson mandela and broome from time some 400 kilometers southwest of johannesburg a statue commemorates his life where. apartheid officially ended in south africa a quarter of a century ago and 994 get somewhere else have yet to be healed music projects like these can help overcome painful divides. the african national congress or a.n.c. was founded in the township of mongolian poverty and segregation are still an issue . differences in music on houses the mungo string program in the
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wealthiest city center. that. ok. c over 500 children have lent violin viola cello or double bass here since 998 the program receives funding from the state as well as private donations mainly from europe and the u.s. . pisa guy is very proud of the program's development and have the students have progressed so many more children now have access to learning a string instrument you know in the bad days of apartheid the government would tell you what you could learn then what and so much you could play and what your interests were so i mean just the fact that we could introduce string instruments
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to young people who've never had the chance that was obviously a big a big success. the children's families pan attendance fear of a 1000 runs some 60 euros a year this includes classes transportation and a borrowing fee for the instruments the rates are set low yet some families still struggle to afford them come home we're told he is a former music calm people now she's become a teacher that. the 19 year old is part of the born free generation the 1st to be born in the post apartheid era she thinks of africa today is not quite what mandela had worked for. i feel like i'm in between the sometimes when i feel like are. but they and sometimes i get so interested like ok i want to know this i mean if it wasn't for him i wouldn't be here i feel like nelson mandela wouldn't be proud of the south africa we are today crying and. standing
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and it's too much crime makes it unsafe for children to travel to so peace a guy has board buses for the project sometimes he drives them himself. transport is a is a big issue for us because unlike a lot of places in the rest the world the transport here there isn't a reliable safe and unsafe inexpensive public transport so i realized early on that if we can provide the transport that a lot of a lot more children will have access to music to with and so they either bring the children to us after school hours or we go to the children in their schools and where we where the schools will allow us to teach in the morning then obviously we travel to those places so it's so transport is a real key part. once a week some of the teaches travel north to canada for some 300 kilometers away the
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idea is to spread the concept to other regions and let directly with local schools . here on the outskirts of free to foot is where cutler. lives the viola player from the budget a string orchestra. he lives here with his mother sisters and his niece. they enjoy hearing playing he started learning 4 years ago and practices 4 hours a day to hone his toddler 2 2
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2 2. i've heard this outside on most days because i feel like for me. it doesn't strike me that much as when i'm hard to sing inside the house because you have a baby and then she'll be playing and sometimes you have relatives then you want to play tennis so it's me. and it's. coming from egypt into the side and inside of. course it's special but as long as people see this is something. unusual but i think we know we still live in an abnormal society. nelson mandela once said everyone can rise above their circumstances and achieve success if they are dedicated to and passionate about what they do. it and. this whole concept speaks to that sentiment quite well thank you.
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and that was march 21 i'm sure see you next time and by by.
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a missionary model you need to see a new addition. plain to see is. the 5th generation enough to explain. how being cast has been electrified. to shock you mock. up frantically is this a. good.
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s.o.s. europe the european nigeria is in crisis. if it's to have a future it will meet champions young champions. me for activists from more countries. they are finding themselves a train station church. do they stand a chance. can they save to european idea. my god i need to stand up for european values and contribute to something important to upset. the future of europe starts september 2nd on d. w. . this is
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a 15 year old girl. being gang raped. his teacher is beating a boy for talking back and class. but the rest of the class watches. and cheering toddlers being killed by his mother. breaking up lots. of child sleeps in the streets because her family through her. fear. all morning. pushes a teenager over their heads. just because you can see violence that comes through those memos and there are the invisible most of all. violence or comes children to secure.
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this is the deputy news live from berlin warnings of a humanitarian catastrophe aboard a migrant ship. that's known to be conditions growing desperate aboard the open arms 2 weeks after italy refused to let it answer but it offered to dock in spain has been rejected also coming up on kong streets filled with protesters but not so with tear gas massive rallies this weekend are relatively free of violence after a week marred by intense clashes so.

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