Show results for
Deals
- 4K Ultra HD Sale
- Action Sale
- Alternative Rock Sale
- Anime sale
- Award Winners Sale
- Bear Family Sale
- Blu ray Sale
- Blu ray Special Editions
- Blues on Sale
- British Sale
- Classical Music Sale
- Comedy Music Sale
- Comedy Sale
- Country Sale
- Criterion Sale
- Electronic Music sale
- Hard Rock and Metal Sale
- Horror Sci fi Sale
- Kids and Family Sale
- Metal Sale
- Music Video Sale
- Musicals on Sale
- Mystery Sale
- Naxos Label Sale
- Page to Screen Sale
- Rap and Hip Hop Sale
- Reggae Sale
- Rock
- Rock and Pop Sale
- Rock Legends
- Soul Music Sale
- TV Sale
- Vinyl on Sale
- War Films and Westerns on Sale

Bremer Freiheit
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 1/27/2009

Bremer Freiheit
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 1/27/2009
- Label: Wergo Germany
- UPC: 4010228651126
- Item #: 531424X
- Genre: Classical
- Release Date: 1/27/2009

Product Notes
In Adriana Hölszky's opera "Bremer Freiheit", Geesche leads her fellows with cheerful nonchalance to their doom. The murders follow in regular succession, with no more passion or sentimentality than "Ten Little Indians". What Hölszky wanted to create was anything but a neo-veristic shocker, a psychoanalytic character study or the melodrama of a victimized woman. Instead, she has given us an almost playful alienation, a sort of Grand Guignol operetta. Connoisseurs of Fassbinder's plays know that they are generally neither realistic nor "naturalistic" but instead find their raison d'être in stylization, albeit not on the sublime classical sense. Only on the surface do they seem to deal with real human beings of flesh and blood. In reality they deal with character masks, like the generalized figures of comedy. In "Bremer Freiheit", then, all the characters apart from Geesche are "marionettes of suppression". It is precisely because of these admittedly horrifying goings-on that Hölszky has succeeded in giving all her characters and stage actions a lite-rally "tactile" plasticity. Yet at the same time she has remained playful, pre-serving Fassbinder's rondo structure, for example, and introducing a number of buffo elements.
(from the liner notes by Gerhard R. Koch)