[78-L] Eislers and Brecht
David Lennick
dlennick at sympatico.ca
Fri Jan 29 15:04:01 PST 2010
Look in your Bear Family box, comrades..oh, I'm sorry, downtrodden workers
cannot afford this exercise in capitalist exploitation. Anyway, onward. Eisler
and Brecht composed "In Praise of Learning" and "United Front", two of six
songs recorded by The New Singers and Mordecai Baumann on Timely records c.
1935. Marc Blitzstein is the pianist on 5 of the songs and Eisler tickles the
ivories on the sixth. It didn't occur to me that Gerhart Eisler was a real
name! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhart_Eisler
Hanns also composed the music for Laughton's ten-inch Decca of the "3 Wise Men"
story. I don't know if he connected with Schoenberg in Hollywod, but just about
every other composer did. See unproduced stage play "Everybody Comes to
Arnie's", recently optioned by John Travolta.
dl
Steve Shapiro wrote:
> I think Hans wanted to leave the U.S., but they blocked him for a while. Brother Gerhardt wanted to stay, but they deported him.
>
> When they both were in the U.S., did Hans and Brecht do any collaborations? Recording?
>
> How did Hans come to link up with Charles Laughton for the Decca Christmas Pickwick Papers album? Was this also performed on radio?
>
> Did Hans ever do anything with his old teacher Schoenberg when both were in California?
>
> Hans eventually got back to Germany - East Berlin - where according to the film Solidarity Song he fell into depression after the Stalinists took over from the more liberal Reds who first took power in the East. I find music from his last years a tough, unpleasant listen./steve
> ____________________________________
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