Sandwiched between Germany’s 1918 defeat at the end of World War I and the rise of Nazism in 1933, Weimar Germany was a period of vibrant artistic, cultural, social, and political experimentation.
Jazz flowed freely through the nightclubs of Weimar Germany. It's what people danced to, drank to, and partied to. But it wasn't, exactly, what we'd call jazz today, or even jazz as we understand it ...
The haunting sound of Weimar Germany comes to the Balboa Theatre on Friday when Berlin-based Max Raabe & Palast Orchester return to San Diego. Presented by the La Jolla Music Society, the concert at 8 ...
The Komische Oper has reconstructed Jaromir Weinberger’s “Frühlingsstürme,” a show that was virtually erased by Nazi rule in Germany. By Joshua Barone BERLIN — It was an evening in late January 1933, ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook Carnegie’s intermittently illuminating festival “Fall of the Weimar Republic” has suffered from interjections of too much standard ...
25th extraordinary session of the Bureau (Chapter III.161-162) Main issues: Road construction proposal close to Tiefurt Castle and its Park in Weimar. The report of the ICOMOS expert mission to Weimar ...
Franz Welser-Möst leads the renowned Vienna Philharmonic in three distinct programs featuring music by Hindemith, R. Strauss, Schoenberg, Ravel, Berg, Bruckner, and Gustav Mahler on Mar. 1, Mar. 2, ...