Thursday, May 8, 2014
BORIS BLACHTER - ABSTRAKTE OPER
Boris Blacher (19 January [O.S. 6 January] 1903 – 30 January 1975) was a German composer.
Blacher was born when his parents were living within a Russian-speaking community in the Manchurian town of Niuzhuang (Chinese: 牛庄镇) (hence the use of the Julian calendar on his birth record). He spent his first years in China and in the Asian parts of Russia, and in 1919, he eventually came to live in Harbin. In 1922, after finishing school, he went to Berlin where he began to study architecture and mathematics. Two years later, he turned to music and studied composition with Friedrich Ernst Koch.
His career was interrupted by National Socialism. He was accused of writing degenerate music and lost his teaching post at the Dresden Conservatory.
His career resumed after 1945, and he later became director of the Music Academy of Berlin, and is today regarded as one of the most influential music figures of his time. His students include Aribert Reimann, Isang Yun, Maki Ishii, Fritz Geißler, Giselher Klebe, Heimo Erbse, Klaus Huber, Francis Burt, Gottfried von Einem, Karl Rucht, Kalevi Aho and Richard Wernick.
Blacher was married to the pianist Gerty Blacher-Herzog. They had four children including the German actress Tatjana Blacher and the international violinist Kolja Blacher. He died in Berlin at the age of 72.
GET IT HERE
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ReplyDeleteNo, just way too busy with other things for the time being....
ReplyDeleteOK Mr Henk. God bless you.
ReplyDeleteI get separation anxiety when you disappear.
ReplyDeletewell, i'll be posting again, but things probably will be crazy busy for quiet a while i think, might even go to malaysia for a couple of months soon :)
ReplyDeleteAnything any of us can do; moral support, advice, drugs... Whatever, just say the word.
ReplyDeleteno that's ok :) wrong country for drugs i'm afraid, the only ones who can do that safe here are the cops, army and the rich, the rest gets tortured, raped, murdered and blackmailed in police stations by pigs on meth.... shrooms are legal though but haven't touched those in.... pfff.... almost 20 years i think....
ReplyDeleteThat's right, they hang people! I completely forgot. Well, don't get tortured, raped, murdered and blackmailed, please.
ReplyDeleteThere's this retired cop in Bali, who advertises on Craigslist, for this beautiful little house all the time, for an incredibly low rent. But he does live on the premises, in a guest house a few yards off. I've been considering taking the place, as it's always for rent (I think he rents mostly to tourists), because it's so beautiful I think about actually living there. But being reminded about the abuses, I'm a bit concerned.
But I don't use anything anymore anyway, so I guess it'd be okay, even though I've got kind of a subversive face, or used to.
Just be well and come back soon, okay?
actually they shoot them, but usually only the ones from afrika, bad politics to execute white folks i guess although they've got a whole bunch of them on deathrow...
ReplyDeleteif you can find it, read the books hotel k and it's snowing in bali written by kathryn bonella, hotel k stands for the kerobokan jail, in kuta....
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Hotel-Shocking-Inside-Story-Notorious/dp/0857382691
in our little hotel i warn each and every tourist, don't freaking buy weed in this country, it isn't worth it, it's almost always a set up and in bali (and everywhere else) it'll cost you A LOT to get out of the problem.... one of my best friends, tim, a beautiful man from nairobi, they caught him with 0.2 grams of weed, extorted him, and extorted him till his money ran out. then, in front of his wife and 3 months old baby they put a bottle on the table, and with a gun to his head ordered him to drink, then left. he got sick, then went blind, then became paralyzed. on the 3th day in the hospital his parents came just in time to see him die, a tear rolled out of his eye and he was gone. his dad build nairobi airport, his mom had a catering company that does the catering for the UN for the whole of afrika. de doctors refused to speak to them, a nurse came and told us rudely to get that body out, a body they shot up so full with formaldehyde that an autopsy was impossible.... I helped putting my friend in his coffin and i will never forget it. tim was 29 years old when he was murdered and a beautiful man and a dear friend....
i've got plenty stories like this but this was the worst one and i won't even start about the friends i've lost because of wrong diagnosis, operations that afterwards turned out to be not needed and ended fatally, wrong or unnecessary medications....
i am a survivor of a very rare disease called tropical sprue, i was told i had two years to live if i would stay in the tropics. that was 12 years ago....
i won't tell you what i beautiful city bandung was when i first came here, almost 18 years ago, now all broken down, polluted, dirty, full of garbage and not a road that is not potholed....
i've done voluntary work for bhakti luhur, for handicapped kids, i've seen things that nobody should see, in jakarta, bekasi, tanggeran and in malang....
there are still very nice places in bali but please be careful there. they will put stuff in your bag and arrest you, watch out with drinking alcohol, quiet a few tourists die or go blind every year from drinking these self made potions, don't trust nobody....
this is for you to read and i will remove this comment soon ok....
oh, i forgot. you know, in the hospital they handed tim's parents a death certificate. it said "died of aids".
ReplyDeleteWow, sounds like an "exciting" place to live...respect to you for soldiering though it. Here in Japan, they have generally less "personal" extortion and just do it on a nationwide level, like in the U.S., with bank scams, political scams, etc.
ReplyDeleteRegarding this album, thank you very much for uploading this--more Blacher I never knew about. Very colorful and interesting composer!
I would like to point out that the track division is somewhat garbled, however:
Tracks 1 & 2 are fine as given, but Tracks 3 & 4 are actually both parts of the same Piano Sonata. Unfortunately, there is also a slight period of silence between the 2 parts which is not reflected in the MP3 files, so it is not so easy to combine them accurately (maybe adding a couple of seconds of silence would suffice...).
So track 5 of the MP3s actually combines tracks 4 & 5 of the LP; it starts with Apreslude, and the final "Mr. Clementi" LP track starts from 4'54" of the MP3 track.
Anyway, I discovered these tracks are now also available on YouTube, so no worries. Best regards, and thanks again for the many gems here.