990 resultados para Part songs, German.


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The verses by Albert, Simon, Dach, and others; German words.

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For cantus, quinta, altus, tenor, and bassus.

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The article looks at the figure of the traitor in 1950s’ West German films about World War II. It focuses on the representation of Wehrmacht soldiers who entertain relations with the Soviet enemy and are therefore seen to betray their nation. The discussion of three well-known films – 08/15, Der Arzt von Stalingrad, and Unruhige Nacht – shows these ‘traitors’ to have a highly ambivalent function: their narrative punishment is part of German post-war exculpation, yet they are also reminders of German guilt and ethical responsibility towards the ‘other’.

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English and German words with piano accompaniment.

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"Twelve of these songs are in English and four in French."

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Score: 3 to 8 voices, principally with piano reduction. German or Latin words.

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Contains works by Martinus Agricola, Anonymous (Georg Rhaw?), Huldricus Bretel, Arnoldus de Bruck, Sixtus Dieterich, Benedictus Ducis, Georg Förster, Vergilius Hauck, Wolff Heintz, Lupus Hellingk, Stephanus Mahu, Nicolaus P. (Piltz?), Baltasar Tesinarius, Ludovicus Senffel, Johannes Stahl, Thomas Stoltzer, Georgius Vogelhuber, and Johannes Weinmann.

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Contains polyphonic vocal works by various composers, including Heinrich Isaac, Ludwig Senfl, Thomas Stoltzer, Stephan Mahu, Mathias Eckel, Wilhelm Braytengrässer, Sixt Dieterich, Arnold von Bruck, Crecquillon, Gombert, Lupus, Richafort, and Verdelot.

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27. Motette: Unser keiner lebet ihm selber.--28. Dialog: Wer ist der, so von Edom kommet.--29. Ich hab's gewagt.--30. Fürchtet euch nicht.--31. Auf das fest der himmelfahrt.--32. Auf das fest des erzengels Michael.--33. Communion-andacht.--34. Von gnad' und recht. Ps. 101.--35. Cum Maria diluculo.--36. Wir glauben all' an einen Gott.--37. Magnificat.--38. Merk auf mein herz.--39. Zwingt die saiten in cithara.

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Publ. no.: 28a.

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Contains songs, partly from English operas, and instrumental music.

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Discourses of inclusion and exclusion were an integral part of German nation building after 1871. The paper shows that they were not confined to the metropole but were, in fact, reciprocated abroad. Selected instances of conflict within German migrant communities around the world are taken as a springboard to analyze public contestations of (trans-)national belonging. The sources abound with gossip, aggressive bickering, and official complaints to authorities. Contentious issues cover the areas of politics, religion, class, and language. The case studies engage critically with a number of wider issues. First, they question contemporaneous interpretations of an Imperial diaspora as a unified and Heimat-oriented block. Second, on a theoretical level the article argues that internal ruptures are constitutive elements of diaspora construction and should be considered in concomitant theorizations. Third, the case studies highlight the close connection between diaspora and nation building. Fourth, the discourses studied did not only take place within communities, but also between them, as well as with the metropole, all in multi-directional ways. Questions of belonging were discussed around the world with strikingly similar arguments and terminology. Globalization was at work at the discourse level.