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tv   Check-in  Deutsche Welle  March 7, 2020 2:30am-3:01am CET

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that meet answering following the footsteps of the great beatle chickie and. next day w. . literature invites us to see people in particular that i like to see myself as the kids find strange grownup. might object to what is to share work and find beautiful. to do the books on you to.
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music plays a big role in the city music has brought here today. i'm in vienna the capital of austria historic old town is a unesco world heritage site. it's highlights include st stephen's cathedral and the imperial palace. i'm in vienna today for a very special reason. in 2020 music lovers around the world are celebrating the 250th anniversary of the from beatle vince birth. who was born and born but spent most of his life in vienna. he lived here for over 3 decades and wrote his masterpieces today i want to see how visible loopy from beethoven still is in vienna what makes the city so attractive
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to musicians and why was beethoven so restless i mean during his time here he moved on average once a year as you can see have a lot of questions that need answering one day in vienna following the footsteps of the great. off course we will give you an overview of the sights to see in vienna. and the kill in their respect for which the city is famous. in addition we will show you how big this being on earth in his native. one of the top addresses for music lovers in vienna is the sound museum housed there was eek it's all about sounds and noises and the exhibition starts in the stairwell. was
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a clunk that there are sound staircase which we call stair play can do more than make music. but i follow you. come on you play a song you hear you can play one of the vienna philharmonic museum is also located here the famous was founded in these rooms. and here in the instrument we look at groups of instruments and for areas of course we show people real instruments and want visitors to learn something about the groups they belong to. they can beat the big drum to. on its own so you hear something now and then give it a try with only. you can feel the sound waves which produce warmth to this is the world's largest animal hide drum by the way. here's
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a really great interactive installations of the walt dice game was also developed here in house. the concern is it will create their own waltz melody by rolling virtual dice that's something you don't see every day. so let's see how well you do play too fast and you grab it like this right and then you roll the dice. you'll see or rather hear that the waltz melody is nice ready. we did that. an entire floor of the sound museum is dedicated to the famous composers who worked in vienna. now are coming to the floor of the grand masters that is the masters of viennese classical music and here we have holograms of the composers yosef haydn
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comedy as mozart beethoven and france to bat. many important composers came to vienna over the centuries be too often also moved here when he was 22. why was he here in vienna why were so many musicians and composers attracted to vienna 50 to one of the beethoven composers like haydn and mozart were role models . because after realizing just how great they were you purposely chose to come to vienna. of course much more than just the metropolis for music so it's time for a brief overview of austria's capital. some $1900000.00 people live in vienna and each year the city welcomes around
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$7500000.00 visitors that makes the austrian capital one of the most popular destinations in europe. you get. to experience what vienna has to offer just follow that. it's famous ring road that's the recommendation from. as head concierge at the hotel imperial he knows what visitors want to see. just over 5 kilometers long and 60 metres wide the link is divided into 9 sections each with its own name. the ring road in circles the city is historical. it also runs past the vienna state opera one of the world's most prestigious opera houses. just because they did probably the most famous building on the. evening you can see the audience coming here not
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just in cars but also on foot it's nice to watch that even if you're not going to the opera it's a kind of theater in itself. for the. many buildings here speak of the past to her. book palace today it's the official residence of the austrian president. the old history museum is another important monument. built with austria was part of an empire it contains treasures from 7 different millennia. of ascending the staircase in the art history museum is a great experience every time the magnificence to the left and right of the stairs yobbish over here but the real treasure is up above when you turn around. you can take in these wonderful paintings by gustav clement i mean they're unique works of art and think i think it goes back to the original ring road was built with
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medieval military force you to cation this one stent bussin 857. ordered it to be given a complete make of the boulevard became biggest construction project so the i mean i think that the things tosser has changed a lot over the centuries aristocrats and the middle classes used to stroll about here then it became excessive bill to everyone. now there's lots of traffic but nice bike paths too and it's still a great place to walk so yeah. the vienna city park was the 1st of many public parks to be built along the things more than 150 years ago. the city park is my favorite part of the things. you can observe all kinds of people here. in the theatre when you can see everyone from top managers to punks to japanese tourists. everyone comes here.
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some say the city has made what it is today. following loopy from beethoven's footsteps in vienna as i've already mentioned the 2 of them was a rather restless guy he often moved in vienna and he even moved in and out of the apartment in the merc of us twice several times the house belonged to one of the talking patrons baron past. his landlord remained loyal to him even when be moved elsewhere the baron that not rent out the apartment but kept it so that the musician could return. since b. 2 of them suffered from gastric complaints as well as for. hearing loss he visited the spa town of heiling steps on the outskirts of vienna and hopeful for a cure he often went for a walk in this park. the
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building in the nearby houses vienna speed to have museum. shows me around the rooms they'd be to have lived in in the summer of 18 or 2. it was quite unsettled he often moved why was that. he wasn't an easy tenant as his deafness progressed he composed louder and louder slamming the piano with his hand as he banged on the walls to beat time and sang loudly. and if he got to composing he had a funny habit of taking a pail of water and dumping it over his head. open even with today's flooring that
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would be problematic back then the floor had even more cracks for the water to run down so his neighbors got moldy walls he. didn't word get around among landlords here in vienna. absolutely he always had problems finding lodgings. that's how he used to live in the compulsive forder is that it's an attempt to show what his apartment could have looked like when the harder of hearing he grew the more chaotic his life became. this valuable string instrument from a princely city is lying around. here or scraps of food and sheet music. and the music for instance while working on the mrs so that miss he couldn't find the kitty i believe. 4 days later he discovered that his cook had wrapped the butter with the sheet music for the kid. of course that was awful for him he needed
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those sheets by contrast his teacher and role model haydn was very orderly so his music lies neatly on the piano beethoven was slovenly when it came to how he dressed and how he kept his house listening to house on. testament became famous in it the composer describes his desperate situation he's furious about becoming deaf and his isolation. that is the maze highly constat a testament is also a justification he writes about the incurable state of his ears made worse by misguided doctors he came here hoping to be healed. he was also suffering from a broken heart. but in 80 no 2 he came to highly can start to be cured. so this letter is a justification of why he's so withdrawn doesn't socialize much anymore and has become such a loner it's because he's uncomfortable saying speak up i can't hear you as
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a musician he finds the sun bearable and he must also deal with jealous folks and enemies he's made due to his difficult temperament so this letter attempts to correct his image a bit so basically. by the way. born here in vienna but in germany that's where he lived 20 years and that's where he took his 1st steps as a musician and composer and of course the people of are also very proud of their brave. in december 17th 70 look extern beethoven was born into a musical family in poland his grandfather was the chord music director his father was a singer and music teacher. to mark the 250th anniversary of his birth a new permanent exhibition has opened in the house where literate from beethoven
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was born. just a few years before the french revolution the spirit of change was in the air. his family supported young beethoven's musical talent he lived various instruments and worked as an organist and p.l.o. teacher and he took an interest in the ideas of the ad litum and. the various already apparent how the french revolution men packed on beethoven's life. we have this view of the french marching in and occupying the rhineland. here a liberty pole is set up at the market square in bonn so beethoven was caught up in these changing times from the. other fast with the base of the house this is his can see the instruments that compose a play. portraits testified to the fact that beethoven was already an icon in his lifetime yet the differing portrayals underline the composer's multi-faceted nature
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. this is a portrait of a young beethoven circa 1900 he was around 30 years old it's a completely different image than the one we normally have if we think of beethoven as an old deaf misanthrope who withdrew from society. but here he looks at us quite openly and unlike composers who came before him he doesn't wear a wig at some of his republican hairstyle signals a new era in this portrayed by horniman is well suited to helping us find a new understanding a new approach to beethoven. in. one room in the bass heavily house is devoted to the compose this every day life and work. permanent exhibition relies on a few items that speak volumes. it was important for us to show off that is historic house which is mainly in its original condition
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to its best advantage in c. a small selection of everyday objects though important ones like the desk he worked at. or his walking stick or i would listen to their staged in such a way that you realize how vital they are to beethoven's life. you can really see that in this vitrine which only contains a goose quill and. it helps us realize that all the music that beethoven wrote went through a goose quill. and is now preserved in one of eternity. you can also follow in bass heaven's footsteps and done by taking a walking tour organized by the citizens for bass heaven's association. as many buildings from beethoven's day no longer exist they've set up in 5 pages.
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this pillar shows where the attack often once stood it was a beethoven's favorite and a center for discussion about the enlightenment. this was before the french revolution and american independence. here there was a circle of musicians who were very involved in these political discussions and that said gotten was their meeting place. at the front there was. it was run by a widow widow koch who also had a very attractive daughter called bet that back then all the men in bonn were attracted to her like moths to a flame. that. dove into. their eyes 16 stops on the base have into it in and around. for stefan i say uttering the composer's lavery is a neighbor of love. by those hordes a day there's almost no music that doesn't draw on beethoven that even includes rock music when you listen to someone like the great punk icon patti smith whenever
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she's in bonn she always goes to the beethoven house because she says my music would be inconceivable without beethoven but so beethoven's really contemporary. back in here braided his 1st great success as a composer for example in. symphony. was heard for the 1st time. the prince of luck of its was an important patron for beatles and for other composers today his palace houses the theatre museum. what's so special about this whole. it's simply part of musical history she.
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took place here so did debuts dress rehearsals in the presence of beethoven and operas. the prince of luck of its was crazy about music and theater so he knew what kind of people to bring here and just what needed to be done. with. sort would become why did be to have been performed here for the 1st time. for an opera by sally area was performed here and afterwards to rehearsals took place. and the triple concerto the bills prove that. they showed that in addition to the musicians for the sound the area opera 3rd french horn player was needed. and only one beethoven symphony features a 3rd french horn so that's the indication. that when people.
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went to you know how the people reacted to the are there any records from the time . there's evidence that the it was considered a revolutionary work. people must have been pretty astonished because in the symphony was something completely new in terms of its instrumentation power and vitality. for music theater art and. travel program about this. without it curtains. daughter. the feeder restaurant is one of the city's best known addresses. head chef. the secret to good lies in the preparation. of the 1st you can't the me to tenderize it carefully. feel is extremely delicate and
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holds a lot of water because it is a young calf. you have to be extremely careful not to destroy the fibers because otherwise the water will run out and then the schnitzel can't cook properly for things where you. farm fresh eggs and finely ground breadcrumbs are also key ingredients for wienerschnitzel. is likely salted coated in flour. next it's dipped in piece an egg covered with bread crumbs. to rest the mixture lightly onto the meat not too hard. they fry the veal in belted clarified but. keep it moving around the pan so the meat will brown evenly. once the deal is golden brown carefully remove it let the fact trade away and serve
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promptly. that's how they've been making here for over a century the family run business is now in its 4th generation. white wine is the perfect accompany of it to feed a schnitzel. those who still have room for dessert should head to the hotel's. famous tartar. the originals are taught it was created in 832 by. the father of hotel. many because of says try to under lock the cake secrets but the handwritten recipe remains a closely guarded secret. the cakes trademark is the thick layer of dark chocolate icing. greedy and sweet use for the softer torture i'm a tour own specifications from so you can buy the chocolate or apricots jam we use anywhere they are made just for us that's the big difference between ours and other
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stuff until. the originals are chocolate cake with chocolate icing and 2 layers of apricot jam sells like hotcakes. every tourist who visits vienna tries one or takes one home the hotel sells some $360000.00 cakes each year. check out some of our favorite travel perks on instagram. d.w. travel. to. my next stop is central symmetry it is one of the largest cemeteries in europe. i have arranged to meet up with. she knows her way around. even at night. as an egg on their. knees have
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a really unique relationship to deaf to symmetries. singers from the sun and that death must be nice. to have had his reasons you'll notice that the viennese don't just visit the central cemetery during the day but i'd like to. bust a new one it's the classic here what do visitors want to see. this is. where. people come from and which v.i.p.'s they know. clearly international guests are all familiar with. if. they get all straight and the german speaking world but also internationally. the grave of all it is also popular with german speaking visiting his. golf course i want to know where do fish from be to the streets he died at the age of 56 in 1827.
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becoming what would be to have his funeral have been like and i let you read it to be pompous some 20000 people are said to have come to his funeral and he was much loved at the time so 20000 people accompanied him on his final journey. at the end of my journey and be talking footsteps and i want to combine something that is typical of you and that's associated with beatles here in coffee home one of us oldest coffee houses both beatles at mozart gave small concerts there's no music today but i have a typical also during sweet ditch the guys are. going to. be talking certainly left his mark on piano you can follow his footsteps from his numerous apartments to the great concert halls where he was celebrated as
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a composer if you do so he will get an intimate look at who this man was as an artist but also as a person and of course you get a good impression office adopted home tom get up bye bye see you soon. coming. up.
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the food. is going to. come. to. your own daughter would prefer to join terrorists rather than stay with you and she thinks it's cool. that maybe i just wanted to rebel because of my agent and islamic was kind of trendy i guess i'm just not. them things it was knocked out because you can how a father lost his daughter to islamic state and that you're just helpless. little
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know. 15 minutes on g.w. . is the human race destroying itself. we are ruining the basic elements of our existence we're using too much water and we're cutting edge moderate pace of life. want. go longer supplies will last for ever but they won't. when the rain. starts march 20th on w. . they were forced into a nameless mass. their bodies near tools with. the history of the slave trade is africa's history books displayed for
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power in traffic plummeted an entire continent into chaos and violence took place this is the journey back into the history of slavery place i think will truly be making progress when we all accept the used to be of slavery as all of our history play our documentary series slavery routes starts march 9th on d w. you may write to me down in history and you know get a tourist and not you may turn to me in the very dirt but still night. did you want to see me broken back out here in a. soulless foaming down like. me in the back is still. there and there's. no need to give.
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it. up from a past rooted in. a blank ocean. let me comment in it. this is the deadly news and top stories. there have been clashes at the great turkish border as migrants try to integrate 3 border gods used tear gas and water can't drive back thousands of people the e.u. accuses ankara of using the migrants for political reasons. a suicide
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bombing outside the u.s. embassy in cheney's e.-s. killed a security guard for other gods and a severely wounded in the blast it's the most serious.

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