by BenG » Sun Mar 18, 2001 3:00 pm
Brahmsian,<P>As you know, 'A German Requiem" was one of Brahms' earliest and most successful masterpieces. (Unlike his first piano concerto which was hissed off the stage). I have Otto Klemperer's version. Otto resisted the Nazis and his son carried on the tradition. Otto Klemperer's son was "Colonel Klink" in 'Hogan's Heros,' and he enjoyed portraying the Nazis as witless buffoons...but that's another story.<P>Like you, I also enjoy "Denn alles Fleisch es ist wie Gras." (Flesh is like grass--ready to be cut down...in other words, we're here for a brief moment, then gone). The biography I mentioned delves into this work in depth and it was very interesting.<P>BTW, I also like Mozart's Requiem very much. <P>--BenG