tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle August 29, 2022 12:30am-1:01am CEST
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foreign planet. in the 16th century, it meant being a captain and setting sail to discover a route. a race linked to military interests, a race linked to political and military, christie, but also linked to man, financial, and adventure full of hardships, dangers and death. magellan journey around the world, starting september 7th on d, w a . the system what you give to others remains what you keep for yourself that dies still ah, this is the, the not seems disjoint so much, but not means that they tried, but they couldn't. and then it got put, oh really have is it the end of the music is
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a beautiful thing. it's a religion to be, i believe in the god of music. ah, any others you know, but are burning with an art 21. this week we explore the many faces of jewish music music that was buried, forgotten, we discovered cherished music with connective power. and we start with the dish pub in them than cobra, the schneider from donna hall. and so this is daniel cans, version of leonard coons, classic tune. harlan move forward
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decker, his 1st solo album, he translated lyrically to manish tex, originally written by the likes of curt nicholson and bob dylan. jewish artillery, explain to him the issue. i saw dawn of them, unquote. by me. does the addition lead called you to think songs are so rich and so deep, just because of history and the changing of time, vandal that side? so me, i mentioned presser, was written in 1916 by solomon smallwood. it's a ballard about the polio outbreak that swept new york. o. as the corona virus pandemic regions,
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the lyric still ring true to day fella for stanley this proclamation. but in man, not many know the language that if you could make it understandable, it opens something up of that's a shot i originally from the u. s. con 1st learned yiddish after moving to germany in 25. to day he and his wife, russian artist, eva lisco, live in hamburg with their son, to the owner house boot. at home, they speak english, russian, german, and yiddish. daniel con, loves diversity in his music too. i realize the freedom. sometimes he plays alone. sometimes with his band, the painted bird, his music is steeped in melancholy and anger about all that's wrong in the world. my dear v. i saw you hope people are all over the world. are building up
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resistance. bowen, for justice of anti racism, antithesis real democracy. his child, her freedom of a verb that was inspired by these movements of freedom as a verb, is in still yet translation per vague woman. and he combines klezmerson punk blues and folk, and re interprets bold song, such as more decay. berty 19 thirties, him to the jewish workers movement with lyrics of a sarcastic edge that still sounds contemporary. ah, she again are to lead a d. m. i like to play old songs that work like new songs, old songs about war poverty and love. and i try to write new songs that can also grow old. i've been, oh, use it that will stand the test of time. just like that of mordechai could birth.
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who was murdered by the nazis in 1942. daniel con shows how closely linked the present is to the past. ah, can music save lives? we spoke to anita lucko, vall, fish, who survived the hail of oceans and bergen belsen. ah. it is very difficult to explain to your generation this generation as state of mind at that time. to day i am alive to morrow, i might not be. that's how it was. we didn't think much. we just lift from one hour to the next. ah, but music was a lifeline. i always wanted to play the cello tent. ask me why. but then the difficulties began when i was older and still wanted
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to play the cello. there wasn't any cello teaches impress low. today's thoughts left. he would teach a jewish child. ah, anita, alaska. val fish was born into a german jewish family in 1925. she was the youngest child. the nazis came to power in 1933. what happened then was that i was sent to been in where a jewish cello teacher taught me. it was not long before the 9th of november, everything changed at that moment. we knew we couldn't stay, but unfortunately it was already too late. the pope rome of november 9th 1938 revealed the extent of the nazi threat anti semitic persecution. gave way to genocide. anita lucko, val fish was deported to oce, fits in december 19. 43. we already knew what out of it's meant that we were going
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to be murdered the last station. but nothing turns out the way you expect. because she could play the cello, she became part of the women's orchestra of oceans. this saved her life. over a 1000000 people died in the camp between 19401945. most were gast, others were sheltered, beaten to death. many died of illness and starvation. we thought as long as they want music, they went put us in the gas chamber. that's all respite if they want music, they need us respite. that's all. ah! we were marched out early in the morning. we sat at the gate and played marches as thousands of prisoners were sent off to work in factories. the same happened in the evening when that was over, we were sent back to the block to learn notes. the repertoire by hot
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there were comes at some sunday. we sat somewhere in the camp. i can't remember how many places we played in. it was for the amusement of the gods, but the prisoners could also hear us. and the reactions were very different. for some, it was an insult. but i've also read about people who sent that it helped them to dream they were somewhere other than this hell. for a few minutes. ah, she survived not only the hell of oceans, but also all winter bergen belsen were many die because the terrible conditions she was still there when the campus liberated by british troops in april 1945. ah. you know, send me my life has 2 parts. one of them is hell. the other part is normal life.
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but not cease disjoint so much. but not music. pe tried, but they couldn't. ah, composer you're a mere vine burger managed to escape the nazis and emigrated to america. his works were largely forgotten, but they're now being rediscovered ah, fooling. stone spring storms was the last operator performed in the weimar republic, details of love and intrigue. during times of war, it disappeared from the stage after the nazis came to power. almost 90 years later, the artistic director of the commercial opera,
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berlin barry kosky decided to revive it. and we had to play sherlock holmes, a little history because your kestrel score had disappeared, but we reconstructed it younger mouth. oh yes, now that reconstructed version of spring storms, premier didn't berlin in january 2025. sharon ha. jewish check composer urinary vine burger became world famous in the 1920s. thanks to his opera, shronda the bagpiper. it was the most played opera on the german language stages in the 2nd half of the 1920s. it was also celebrated in london and new york. but the composer languished in obscurity, after escaping nazi germany for the u. s. will vine back as an interesting man, a month for a few years. he was one of the most famous composers in the world, but he had to leave after 1933 when they had a need,
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a terrible fate. like many others, he was in america, didn't write much jude and losses. enthusiasm had done. then he got brain cancer and committed suicide. in other circumstances, spring storms may well have become a world wide triumph. aah leaked easy but the works of jewish artists were labeled, degenerates and bond by the nazis. ah, these are, but i just need to be diesel. pereta is not like others and it's sort of a spy. drum won't dust. but the fact that premiered in 1933 and the shadow of the war and the sure i'd see she gives us a particular quality district and bizarre quality spring storm seems harmless enough. but for koski, the oppressive atmosphere at the time is palpable. this work which only had
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a short run before the nazis seized power. the strict gets about the love of a russian aristocrat, lydia pub, laska, for a japanese major e to my or the top, ah, uniform globe. and i think that in 1030. so you just had to turn the russian woman into a german and the japanese man into a jew, and it was clear what was meant, yoda, this is clovis district ogden is livable city, deb, hold any behead bah. lips with spiders. i work as a boat identity, who is who very nobody trusts and nobody out. not even the main characters in english. i think that was in the air. in 1930 threeish club does fight in the loft . lineberger is mainly church and music is shot through with melancholy toes set designer close. bloomberg. designed to dark transformer po box
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to illustrate the dark historical context. the it is acoustical. idea of this box came from the fact that none of the characters room in the french are all wistful in a foreign country come using, come to the surface and was it. but they're just highlight in like quarter memory as much women would i be toya? oh, come sure opa is now working on vine burgers. 1929 oper, sponder due to premier this year. my yes sir. your composers we discovery is long overdue. ah, celebrating the work of long forgotten artist. that's also close to the heart of violence. you don't creamer, he's one of the most unusual musicians of our times. he don kramer is a magnificent violinist with the intellectual depth of a philosopher ah,
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with. thus, with each other, i feel obligated to pass on what i have experienced what i can do, what i think, i think that's the source of my being the source of all my doing them of my thoughts and feelings towards my leg done for you. don cramer was born in 1947 in the latvian capital rica, his great grandfather, grandfather, and father were all violinist. he surpassed them all, but as never satisfied with his achievements, the family legacy weighs heavily on him. he looked run the smoke and lead man, his father the so to speak, my father's 2nd life. he suffered so much during the war. $35.00 of his relatives, including his wife and his one and
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a half year old daughter were murdered in the regal ghetto. long before he was able to escape and he met my mother in germany after the war. donaldson, those are the circumstances of my birth to 12 nuns organise, forbidden, strong. oh oh. 2 i see myself as my father's 2nd life. well, is there such a tragedy? he wanted to plant something good in me. i got me off. he also gave me the strength
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to believe that a lot can be achieved. if one is honest and true to oneself, then marielli spoke on women. so the so musty oh lou ah, his jewish heritage and the hopes and expectations of his father continue to preoccupy him to this day. ah, he's up and for a 1000000 to 5150 the from english, i have a family history. and because of it, i feel a duty to do something else for you. i do it for young people 1st and foremost to talk a soccer for them. a lot of that's why i founded the crime murata baltic orchestra 25 years ago with talented people from the 3 baltic states. estonia, latvia,
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unless you ain you you're hoping we're still together and then we're a family hands, and i am at home with the orchestra room a lot about the concert halls. i managed to plant something of myself in this next generation, so to speak, before of my attitude towards music, and towards life long. i am in lona hilton, so mazique in my little to leave him. ah, others when the 0 for one year this is from i recently said that i was driven by contradictions. oh her music and i actually seek them out. so cannon, it's important to recognize new things scornful to expand the spectrum of my work paper and my thought and to transmitted to the audience or the next generation with
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him. but because i don't want to sound sentimental, think your boss, i search every day lou. but i'm never satisfied with what i find so famous stood ah, is arguing with been paying for lucre on. i've said it over and over again. i'm not a politician. i won't ever be won by the mention of esther, but i am a defender of human rights in russia, in germany, in ukraine, in syria, with god knows where else all of that concerns me little, but i don't go out to answer the barricades over. but i do have an incredible amount of empathy for all those who suffer valves images in patty. i didn't the,
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the fun lab. whenever i with them was it did it. we tried to make the world a little bit better with music, anthony. and but the world is crazy when you country fight that with music and with them was there is little hope of doing so. i good dismissal from still of the glimmer of hope that exists is what i tried to transmit that with the chrome erotic baltic out about a couple middle, oh oh oh, making the world a little better with music and ambition shan't. by israeli singer songwriter and
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producer no guy ever ah, with no way to go, no future insight. that sort no get and i sings in her bleak and angry song, bad habits. i was born and angry person. the song was born from a feeling that the will she knew was on its way out. it struck a chord with many young people in israel. like you in just this was something that would, was always keeping my mind busy when i was a young girl. when it came to the smallest, to the largest things like how could it be that way?
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and i had a lot of energy to channel towards something and, and i think my parents realize that and just whatever it is that i wanted to do, they were there were like, okay, let her do that. i literally have visit the end of the rob. no guy, ever as is the musical voice of a new generation. one that is liberal, open minded, and self confident. ah, any i was young, but a burn in the sun never missed one. i'm sick when she things about celebrating life, as she does in end of the road. there's nothing cliched about it. she's from a country that cannot find peace. televi, where she lives is no stranger to terrorism. conflict is constantly present, but she doesn't want to be a protest. singer. every time playing music is defined as political music. while my instinct is to say, it's not political, it's just living here makes some incidents
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a part of life. things have happened to you, your parents, your grandparents, it's just, it's just a part of life. but you know, that creates some kind of a atmosphere and it makes people who they are. it designs the texture of humanity here. oh, i know it has isn't afraid john controversial seems to me in a provocative video for her song bulk header. she dresses like a jewish orthodox man. no. the members of the ultra orthodox community, tel aviv is a city of sin, as opposed to the holy city of jerusalem. i . i contrast feature heavenly in her songs, which she writes with her partner or he also way way now.
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we would have an open microphone and headphones, and one of us would be just improvising things and jibberish ng things. but even though it happens in such a intuitive way, eventually we build as we'll build songs around that after having conversations about what is important to us. and they are very intimate conversations because i well we have that ability, we're not just music partners, we're life partners and it's a big part of how i got to for him. my identity is an artist. ne, oh, we call the song at children a song for adults. i mean, mom, i cannot hear much when the pandemic stroke. it is untrue,
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so started imagining a different world. a world at a standstill. one without disasters, without bad news, i. i named but they soon concluded that people would find in such a world too boring. and so there's violence, there's, there's conflicts in racism and, and we're, that is life to us and i've, i've allowed myself to be very innocent and childish for a 2nd. and just imagine, you know, what, what would happen if, if that was in the case, the conclusion that i got to after, you know, thinking a little bit about what the world would be. i was like, we're not ready for this. we're not ready for the world to be right.
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her song fire kites was inspired by the attacks of protesting palestinians who flew fire kite bombs over the israel garza border in 2018. if you try to take a fair finger knocking in it, she talks about all being just as much part of growing up for young women as sex 7 . we don't need bombs, she sings. we got via kites. we got, i don't need bombs. we get like, ah, does she want to be an ambassador for peace? no, no, no need. will i make peace with my music? is christian. music doesn't have that power. music is a beautiful thing, as i said before, is a religion to be. i mean, i am,
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i believe in the god of music. music doesn't have the power to change reality. it has a power the way i see it, i think some people would be angry, but i think the way i see it that the one thing that music can do is to help other people realize that they're not alone with what they're going through. maybe i'm wrong. i don't think i'm wrong. i checked. oh that's it for this week. i see you next week for another addition of 21. ah ah, with
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already bringing new life to the place, a reb home in 30 minutes on d, w. d is only 10 years old, but all ready at the top of this deluge care seat is his talent on the piano has put him at the top of a list of the worlds 100 brightest child prodigies. the train, a great pianist fills concert halls most still managing to be just a kid 0 max 60 minutes d w with a has no limits. love is for everybody.
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love is live with love matters and that's my new podcast. i'm evelyn char, mom and i really think we need to talk about all the topics that north divides and denied this. i have invited many deer and well known guests, and i would like to invite you to an end people in trucks injured when trying to flee the city center. more and more refugees are being turned away at the border. families playing bomb attacks in syria to these credit donors with people lean extreme drought for us getting 200 people with around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. yes. why?
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because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. d w. made for mines. ah, ah ah, this is, do you have any news live from berlin? pakistan's government calls devastating flooding. a climate catastrophe. relentless monsoon range kill more than a 1000 people. critics, a poor planning and corruption are also to blame. and closing the door on russian tourists you foreign ministers are.
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