TOTTIE said:Anyone else out there, then, or is it just us two? Strange I think, because for me it's so quintessentially part of this era.
TOTTIE said:More the songs, that I love. I've seen Ute Lemper and Dagmar Krause sing them... as well as productions of Mahagony, Threepenny opera.
Harp said:Do you have any interest in Samuel Beckett or Eugene Ionesco?
Beckett's Cartesian scribbling appeals as does his existentialism
and absurdity. Ionesco seems lost amidst agnostic limbo and his literary
work lacks adequate conviction.
Any favorite Russian 20th Century composers?
TOTTIE said:hmm, to the former, no. To the latter, sorry to be a bit cliched, but I like Stravinsky.
TOTTIE said:hmm, to the former, no.
Harp said:Brecht seems to have a bit of Hardy's spirit, I'm thinking of
Jude the Obscure as influence.
What say you, Pendle-witch descendant?
Senator Jack said:Wrote about this mess before your arrival here, Tottie. You may be interested to read about what they did to Threepenny.
http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?t=9371&highlight=threepenny
Regards,
Senator Jack
Harp said:And no Shostakovich? Adagio Lady Macbeth?
Fletch said:Had Brecht fed to me as part of the Residential College program at Michigan. I found him tendentious and shrill as a playwright, compared to Weill, who was a master of subtle moodiness as a composer.