We use cookies to ensure the best possible browsing experience on our website. By clicking OK, you consent to our use of cookies. Click here to read more about our cookie policy. 

Keenen Sechser in der Tasche. Songs und Balladen

COMPOSER: Hans Eisler
PUBLISHER: Breitkopf und Härtel
PRODUCT TYPE: Book [Softcover]
INSTRUMENT GROUP: Vocal
Hanns Eislers songs and ballads of the late 1920s and early 1930s have long enjoyed cult status: compositions such as the Stempellied (Keenen Sechser in der Tasche), the Lied der Bergarbeiter or the Ballade von den Baumwollpflückern were once popularised by Ernst Busch and can today be heard on CD
€ 27,50
incl. tax
2 Low stock
Usually dispatched within 24 hours
This product cannot be ordered at the moment.
Not available in your region.
Specifications
Composer Hans Eisler
Editor Oliver
Publisher Breitkopf und Härtel
Instrumentation Vocal and Piano
Product Type Book [Softcover]
Instrument Group Vocal
Genre Classical
ISMN 9790200491166
No. Pages 64
No. BRKDV9073
Description
Hanns Eislers songs and ballads of the late 1920s and early 1930s have long enjoyed cult status: compositions such as the Stempellied (Keenen Sechser in der Tasche), the Lied der Bergarbeiter or the Ballade von den Baumwollpflückern were once popularised by Ernst Busch and can today be heard on CD in their historical gramophone recordings. The scores for voice and piano, however, have long been less easy to acquire. This new anthology of 20 songs (to texts by Arendt, Brecht, Gilbert, Tucholsky, Weinert and others) finally fills this gap: alongside classic Eisler songs long absent from the catalogue, the editors present new and revised editions including the well-known Tucholsky chanson Wenn die Igel in der Abendstunde (Anna-Luise) and the Kuppellied from Brechts Die Rundköpfe und die Spitzköpfe. The collection is completed with seven first editions, preeminent amongst them the highly melancholic Gruß an die Mark Brandenburg (text: Robert Gilbert) composed in exile. The oeuvre of the song composer Eisler once more proves itself inexhaustible.
    Loading
    Loading