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Postcard Skövde (Sweden) 1914: Order Kollo-Noten At 3 Masks Publisher "
$ 6.17
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Description
Postcard Skövde (Sweden) 1914: Order Kollo-Noten At 3 Masks Publisher "The description of this item has been automatically translated. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.
You are bidding on one
German
postcard
of
1914
out
Skövde (Sweden)
; here written "Sköfde".
Skövde is a city in the Swedish province of Västra Götalands län and the historic province of Västergötland.
Posted by
"Musikfanjunkare" (music sergeant major) Sundström
; addressed to those founded in 1910
"3 Masken Verlag" in Berlin,
one of the oldest theater publishers in Germany that still exists today.
Affects
Ordering sheet music
"for a small orchestra with piano" for
Songs by Walter Kollo (1878-1940):
"The men are all criminals" // What do you have the beene for, little mouse "//" When a girl has a master ", which are to be sent to the Hotel Billingen in Skövde.
Postmark from 14. June 1914.
Format:
9 x 14 cm (10 ore postal stationery).
Status:
Paper browned and somewhat stained; with small corner creases.
B.
please note
also the pictures!
Internal note: EVS 2106-04
About Walter Kollo (source: wikipedia):
Walter Elimar Kollo (eigtl. Walter Elimar Kollodzieyski; * 28. January 1878 in Neidenburg, East Prussia; † 30. September 1940 in Berlin) was a German composer. He mainly wrote operettas and other pieces by the light muse.
Life and work: The merchant's son was originally supposed to take up his father's profession, but then, with the help of his mother, was able to devote himself to studying music in the Sondershausen and Königsberg conservatories and, after a brief activity as a theater conductor in Königsberg, came to Berlin in 1899. Here Kollo turned to light music, had been writing works for popular music theater since 1908 and had his first great success in 1910 with the posse Große Raisins, composed together with Willy Bredschneider.
This was followed by more Singspiele, antics and operettas, including Wie once in May (1913; in it: It was in Schöneberg, in the month of May; The men are all criminals), The Juxbaron (1916), Drei alten Schachteln (1917) and Die Woman without a Kiss (1924). He married Marie Preuss, who appears as a dance soubrette with the stage name Mizzi Josetti.
Kollo also emerged as a composer of revues and sound films, was one of the founders of GEMA in 1915 and owned his own music publisher. He later went on successful concert tours as a conductor of his own works. Alongside Jean Gilbert and Paul Lincke, Kollo is considered to be the founder of the Berlin operetta.
Walter Kollo is the father of the composer and lyricist Willi Kollo and the grandfather of the opera singer René Kollo and the agent for music theater and stage and music publisher Marguerite Kollo.
Honors
Grave site: The grave of Walter Kollos is located in Berlin in the district of Berlin-Mitte on Sophienfriedhof II near the cemetery entrance on Ackerstraße. A memorial stone reminds of his most famous evergreens. His grave is dedicated to the city of Berlin as an honor grave. His wife was also buried there in 1954.
On the 30th September 2010 (70. Anniversary of the death of Walter Kollo) a memorial plaque for Walter and Willi Kollo was unveiled at the Berlin Admiralspalast, which refers, among other things, to the collaboration with Herman Haller on the occasion of the Haller revues from 1923 to 1928. From the revue Drunter und Drüber (1923) comes the Berlin anthem As long as the old trees are still in Unter Linden, nothing can overcome us, Berlin remains Berlin (text: Rideamus).
Evergreens
Oh Jott, what are the men stupid (from the operetta Three Old Boxes)
All the angels laugh (from the operetta When two marry)
The eyes of a beautiful woman (duet from the revue Always firm druff)
This is the spring of Berlin (from the operetta Die Frau ohne Kuss)
That sounds like a fairy tale (from the Singspiel Jettchen Gebert)
Yours forever (from the operetta The Great Countess)
Just think how beautiful the reunion will be (from the operetta As once in May)
You, only you (from the operetta of the same name)
You can also do without a car (from the operetta Lieber rich, but happy)
It was in Schöneberg (from the operetta As once in May)
Grandmama (From the operetta As once in May)
Haven't we met before (from the operetta Wie once in May)
Home, you epitome of love (song from the Derflinger Singspiel)
Elderflower and May Night (song from the Derflinger Singspiel)
Always along the wall
The small bank at the "Big Star" (From Berlin as it cries, Berlin as it laughs)
The little finch-cock sang
Little girls have to go to sleep (from the operetta Der Juxbaron)
Come on, help me turn the roll
I would like to go fishing with you on Sunday
Girl freed young
The men are all criminals1 (From the operetta As once in May)
Max, you have the pushing out (insert in the Singspiel Jettchen Gebert)
My parrot won't eat hard eggs
Berlin is crazy about my beene
Pauline goes dancing
The Schmackeduzchen
As long as Unter Linden (from the operetta Three Old Boxes)
Unter Linden (from the farce with singing Filmzauber)
The forget-me-not
Wait, wait just a little while (From the Marietta operetta)
What a woman dreams in spring (from the operetta Marietta)
When a girl has a master
When two are getting married
Two red roses, a tender kiss
The men are all criminals was rewritten in 1915 - like other entertainment songs of the time - by an unknown lyricist as a propaganda song in The Serbs Are All Criminals and recorded by the lecture artist Hermann Wehling (1873–1922), among others.
Film music
1925: The flight around the globe
1927: The most beautiful legs in Berlin
1930: Chacun sa chance
1931: The office manager
1931: The rejuvenated Adolar
1931: Upside down into happiness
1934: The black whale
1937: Ball in the Metropol
1937: Rooster in the basket
1938: The man who can't say no
1938: The day after the divorce
1941: Light muse
1958: Solang 'noch unter Linden (film about his life by Willi Kollo)
Life and work: The merchant's son was originally supposed to take up his father's profession, but then, with the help of his mother, was able to devote himself to studying music in the Sondershausen and Königsberg conservatories and, after a brief activity as a theater conductor in Königsberg, came to Berlin in 1899. Here Kollo turned to light music, had been writing works for popular music theater since 1908 and had his first great success in 1910 with the posse Große Raisins, composed together with Willy Bredschneider. On the 30th September 2010 (70. Anniversary of the death of Walter Kollo) a memorial plaque for Walter and Willi Kollo was unveiled at the Berlin Admiralspalast, which refers, among other things, to the collaboration with Herman Haller on the occasion of the Haller revues
Erscheinungsort
Skövde
Region
Europa
Material
Papier
Sprache
Deutsch
Autor
Sundström
Original/Faksimile
Original
Genre
Kunst & Fotografie
Eigenschaften
Erstausgabe
Eigenschaften
Signiert
Erscheinungsjahr
1914
Produktart
Handgeschriebenes Manuskript