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Neugier4711
9 months ago

The most famous relatively recent song about the historical date 1632 is Metal by Sabaton https://youtu.be/6bMX20ka7kQ

There is actually a folk ballad with the name 6. November 1632, where this event is sung https://youtu.be/vlW2Unhxt78

There is also a German-language Synth-Pop-Rap song from the band Sturm Café about the event in Lützen 1632 https://youtu.be/3t7e37xEWMM There was something like that 20-30 years ago in special discos. As a single song to dance, I liked this musical direction.

There is also a piano piece, that is 1632 song, but is without singing https://youtu.be/E06C-aLyInw

An unsuccessful rap is also called 1632 https://youtu.be/gFHyJQEJFFs

1632 is also the name of a tenor trombone https://youtu.be/x6FCgaRu7bg

Fontanefan
9 months ago

“Busch-Ginster grows over the bridge here,

10

We go mad, we miss the way,

We swapped left and right, –

Do you hear the Dal-Elf?”

“This is not the Dal-Elf[3]the Dal-Elf is wide,

It does not stand out from us and not to the side,

15

It sounds like trab,

Like Rider, it weighs up and down.

Mood, narrative, dialogue –> Ballade

Fontane has written famous ballads to historical fabrics: Archibald Douglas …

Even though it was more often about Prussian generals than about Swedish kings. There was more of that.

And we did it with “Save yourself Wallenstein!“?

Fontanefan
9 months ago
Reply to  Alex2000426

The poem is a ballad. But pure answer to the question doesn’t help you if you don’t know what a ballad is, narration, dramatic dialogue in the form of poems, i.e. a connection of the seal genera: Epik, Dramatic and Lyric acid. And the question forum is no longer useful if the ones who give answers here simply pretend and destroy the meaning of questions (that one learns something). Because here, pupils who do not want to learn but just want to pretend that they have learned something.

I spend a lot of time on this forum because I noticed that many students are overwhelmed by their tasks and that without help they cannot understand the answers given by Wikipedia. And because teachers are not able to answer their questions in the learning process individually step by step during today’s stress. But when I write students, I mean all learners of all sexes and all levels of learning. Significant artists have always understood themselves as students. Guy de Maupassant as a student Flauber and Bach, perhaps the most important European musician of all time, as a pupil of buxtehude.

But I can’t explain this every time someone asks a request and I’m now busy with something completely different.

But now I have time and I want to catch it. I myself have as a teacher with 34 years of professional experience when I started working on Wikipedia, Wikiversity and the Wiktionarys, need to learn from 17-year-olds and 12-year-olds and have not always been treated kindly because experienced people do not always have patience with beginners. But I know this is part of learning.

Meanwhile, I learn from computer programs (artificial intelligences) that have even less understanding for beginners, and I depend on people with empathy to help me.

In this respect, it is appropriate that I apologize and explain myself to you because of my lack of empathy. If you stopped right after the first two sentences, then at least I explained to other readers what I’m trying to do.

Fontanefan
9 months ago
Reply to  Alex2000426

If you don’t get that, I can’t help you.

NackterGerd
9 months ago
Reply to  Fontanefan

🤣😂

And what does that have to do with the question?

NackterGerd
9 months ago

the 6. November 1632 is a date

priesterlein
9 months ago
Reply to  NackterGerd

He means the poem by Theodor Fontane. He is only unable to write the word “compression”. and always writes “goethe”, very strange.

NackterGerd
9 months ago
Reply to  priesterlein

What does this have to do with Goethe?

The question is nothing about Goethe😜

priesterlein
9 months ago

What does this have to do with Goethe? The question is nothing about Goethe

In Topics was originally registered by the questioner Goethe and Goethe etc.

NackterGerd
9 months ago

Exactly

And then I answered this question accordingly.

Nix with Goethe and nix with Fontane.

Now, of course, it is a completely different question.

priesterlein
9 months ago

In the meantime, it is clear because someone worked. You just asked if a date was a ballad. Original: “the 6 november 1632 is a ballad”. Please be aware that you also mention the context.

MrBlackAdder
9 months ago

No, it was a Saturday.

Hope you helped.