SPIEGEL Interview With Daniel Barenboim: ‘The Germans Are Prisoners Of Their Past’

SPIEGEL Interview with Daniel Barenboim: ‘The Germans Are Prisoners of Their Past’ (Der Spiegel, June 22, 2012):

World-famous Argentine-Israeli conductor Daniel Barenboim is noted for his strong views on the Middle East peace process and for performing Wagner’s music in Israel. In a SPIEGEL interview, he explains why the Israeli antipathy toward Wagner is grotesque and argues that Israel shouldn’t depend too much on Germany and the US for support.

Part 1: ‘The Germans Are Prisoners of Their Past’

SPIEGEL: Mr. Barenboim, why are you fighting to perform the music of Richard Wagner in Israel? No other composer is as hated there as this anti-Semitic German composer.

Barenboim: It saddens me that official Israel so doggedly refuses to allow Wagner to be performed — as was the case, once again, at the University of Tel Aviv two weeks ago — because I see it as a symptom of a disease. The words I’m about to use are harsh, but I choose them deliberately: There is a politicization of the remembrance of the Holocaust in Israel, and that’s terrible.

SPIEGEL: Please explain what you mean.

Barenboim: When I came to Israel from Argentina in 1952, as a 10-year-old, no one talked about the Holocaust. The catastrophe was still much too close for the survivors, and young Israelis wanted to create a new Judaism. They wanted to show that Jews were not only able to be artists and bankers, but could also pursue farming and sports. They looked forward and didn’t want to talk about the suffering of their parents.

SPIEGEL: When did that change?

Read moreSPIEGEL Interview With Daniel Barenboim: ‘The Germans Are Prisoners Of Their Past’

Johann Strauss: Kaiser-Walzer, Op. 437 (Video)

Your (healthy) heart is ‘dancing’ waltz every moment of your life.



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Waltz dancing in patients with chronic heart failure: new form of exercise training (PubMed – NCBI):

CONCLUSIONS:

In patients with stable chronic heart failure, waltz dancing is safe and able to improve functional capacity and endothelium-dependent dilation similar to traditional aerobic exercise training. Waltz dancing may be considered in clinical practice in combination with aerobic exercise training or as an alternative to it.

Dancing waltz can help your heart, new study finds (Rapid Citry Journal, March 18, 2012):

Dr. Romualdo Belardinelli, study author and director of cardiac rehabilitation at Lancisi Heart Institute in Ancona, Italy, presented results of a new study that finds that dancing the waltz can help your heart at an American Heart Association meeting in Chicago.

He studied 110 patients with stable congestive heart failure with a mean age of 59. Forty-four subjects were randomly selected to participate in “waltz training” three times per week for eight weeks.

The waltz was selected because it is known internationally, plus the same research team previously found that waltzing helped heart patients regain strength.

Forty-four subjects performed traditional treadmill and cycle exercises, and another group of 22 served as controls.

Results revealed that both the waltzers and standard cardiac exercise group showed improvements in cardiopulmonary function.

However, the waltz group scored better than the standard group on functional and quality-of-life measures as assessed by the Minnesota Heart Failure Living questionnaire.

Read moreJohann Strauss: Kaiser-Walzer, Op. 437 (Video)

Johann Strauss: An Der Schönen Blauen Donau, Op. 314 (Video)

Your (healthy) heart is ‘dancing’ waltz every moment of your life.



YouTube


YouTube


YouTube

Waltz dancing in patients with chronic heart failure: new form of exercise training (PubMed – NCBI):

CONCLUSIONS:

In patients with stable chronic heart failure, waltz dancing is safe and able to improve functional capacity and endothelium-dependent dilation similar to traditional aerobic exercise training. Waltz dancing may be considered in clinical practice in combination with aerobic exercise training or as an alternative to it.

Dancing waltz can help your heart, new study finds (Rapid Citry Journal, March 18, 2012):

Dr. Romualdo Belardinelli, study author and director of cardiac rehabilitation at Lancisi Heart Institute in Ancona, Italy, presented results of a new study that finds that dancing the waltz can help your heart at an American Heart Association meeting in Chicago.

He studied 110 patients with stable congestive heart failure with a mean age of 59. Forty-four subjects were randomly selected to participate in “waltz training” three times per week for eight weeks.

Read moreJohann Strauss: An Der Schönen Blauen Donau, Op. 314 (Video)

Lost Beethoven Classic Played For First Time In 200 years (Video)

UK expert reconstructs “missing” Beethoven movement which gets its first performance in more than 200 years.



Lost Beethoven classic played for first time in 200 years (Telegraph, Sep. 29, 2011):

A movement from a Beethoven composition for a string quartet which was discarded by the composer and replaced by a new version has been reconstructed by a musical expert in Manchester.

The piece got its first ever public performance in more than 200 years, possibly ever, at Manchester University.

Read moreLost Beethoven Classic Played For First Time In 200 years (Video)