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Ute Lemper - Berlin Cabaret Songs (1997)

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Ute Lemper - Berlin Cabaret Songs (1997)

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01. It’s A Swindle
02. Sex Appeal
03. Peter, Peter
04. The Smart Set
05. When The Special Girlfriend
06. I Am A Wamp!
07. L’heure Bleue
08. Take It Off Petronella!
09. Chuck Out The Men
10. The Washed-up Lover
11. O Just Suppose
12. I Don’t Know Who IBelong To
13. The Lavender Song
14. Maskulinum – Femininum
15. A Little Attila
16. A Little Yearning
17. Oh, How We Wish That We Were Kids Again
18. Munchhausen

Ute Lemper, vocals
Matrix Ensemble
Jeff Cohen, piano
Robert Ziegler, arranger

 

"Entartete Musik," of which 18 examples in English adaptation are provided here, includes, in the definition of producer Michael Haas, among other things, "important works lost, destroyed or banned by the political disruptions of the twentieth century," in particular, the Third Reich of Nazi Germany. Specifically, these are cabaret songs of the years of the Weimar Republic (1918-1933), written by such composers as Friedrich Hollaender (who became Frederick Hollander when he followed Marlene Dietrich to Hollywood) and Mischa Spoliansky. They reflect the decadence and unfulfilled hopes of a temporary oasis in German history marked by runaway inflation and agitations of the Left and Right, matters treated in the lyrics. The album contains material that provides the perhaps unrealized source of later re-creations like the score for the Broadway musical Cabaret. Ute Lemper (who has performed extensively in that show) gives bravura readings of songs that treat corruption, homosexuality, and a doomed social idealism with music, provided by the Matrix Ensemble, that recalls Kurt Weill and hot jazz. The looming Nazi era is inescapable in such Hollaender songs as "Oh, How We Wish That We Were Kids Again" and especially "Münchhausen." The latter bears some similarity to the folk song "Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream," except that we know what happened in Germany instead of the dream of peace and social justice Hollaender proposes. More than a mere history lesson, Berlin Cabaret Songs reawakens a lost era that engages issues of tolerance, sexual confusion, and political uncertainty that continue to affect listeners. It also contains some extremely funny numbers. Jeremy Lawrence's English lyrics, based on translations by Alan Lareau, Kathleen L. Komar, and Haas, are amazingly deft, retaining the German flavor but singing well in their adoptive language. --- William Ruhlmann, Rovi

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