Bye bye… or Berlin for ever? Throughout the 1920s all eyes were turned
towards Berlin. Driven by a collective energy, artists of all persuasions (writers,
painters, architects, filmmakers and composers) there established the principles
of ‘New Objectivity’, which saw the city become the very epitome
of modernity, at the same time as following in the footsteps of other great
cities worldwide, not least New York, the birthplace of jazz.
Life in Berlin was not the stuff of romance however: strikes, poverty, repression,
the rise of Nazism… The post-war social context contributed to the craze
that swept the capital for cabaret, a kind of safety valve that allowed for
a moral and social release.
It is this ephemeral, underground world of ‘Great Berlin’ as depicted
in ‘The Blue Angel’ that Marion Rampal and the Quatuor Manfred invite
us to rediscover here, in collaboration with saxophonist Raphaël Imbert:
a liberal burst of freedom and humanity delivered with passion.
thank you, sounds interesting. -a.v.
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