Hans Albert Ebbecke

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Hans Albert Ebbecke (born March 8, 1893 in Gengenbach , † May 15, 1973 in Wiesloch ) was a German musician .

Life

Hans Albert Ebbecke was born as the son of Albert Ebbecke, who was pastor in Gengenbach from 1887 to 1897, and his wife Anna, née. Born Vollbrecht. He studied literature in Heidelberg and was already performing as a singer in concerts in various major cities in Germany. During the First World War he suffered a serious injury to his face from shrapnel near Verdun , which led to his blindness. Shortly afterwards he was awarded the Iron Cross, First Class . In 1921 he received his doctorate on "The Beginning Verses in Folksong" at the Philosophical Faculty of Heidelberg University on the typical and formulaic elements in the beginnings of songs. Due to his blindness, he decided to become a musician and acquired a large repertoire of songs, which he presented with his own lute accompaniment on his concert tours through Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Alsace after completing his doctorate .

For Beka -Etikett of Lindström Group, he took in Berlin on 28 November 1922 ten disk sides with songs for lute. He also sang his songs in front of the microphone of the young entertainment broadcaster.

One of the most popular songs he performed was “Der Brusler Dorscht”, which Otto Oppenheimer had composed in 1901 to the tune of the “Kreuzfidelen Coppersmith” and which was retouched in some places where Ebbecke performed, for example in Wolfach and Petershausen . He also distributed song books he had published himself. In Heidelberg he ran the state lottery income. For twelve years he was chairman of the Association of Freelance Blind Artists.

Publications

  • Hans Ebbecke (Hrsg.): Songs to the lute with word and manner and lute sentence. Stuttgart 1921.

Audio documents

10 titles with Beka, recorded in Berlin on November 28, 1922.

  • B.3719 (mx. 31 936) I have my guitar to do. Musicians song
  • B. 3720 (mx. 31 937) I have my darling. Love song
  • B. 3720 (mx. 31 938) three on each side (Dr. Hans Ebbecke)
  • B. 3719 (mx. 31 939) elder shrub. Swabian folk song
  • B. 3721 (mx. 31 940) girl, marry me. Journeyman Wanderlied
  • B. 3721 (mx. 31 941) Maiteli hürot mi. Swiss song
  • B. 3722 (mx. 31 942) About water and wine. Joking battle song 1530
  • B. 3722 (mx. 31 943) Brusler Dorscht (O. Oppenheimer)
  • B.3723 (mx. 31 944) The Bavarian artillery. Soldiers song (A. De Nora)
  • B.3723 (mx. 31 945) The battle near Sankt Privat. Mocking song from Saxony.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Thomas Adam: The poet and his singer. Otto Oppenheimer and Hans Albert Ebbecke or: how the song about the “Brusler Dorscht” found its way into the world . In: Kurpfälzer Winzerfestanzeiger 2013, pp. 56–59; as well as Thomas Adam, Thomas Moos, Rolf Schmitt (eds.): Oppenheimer - A Jewish family from Bruchsal: traces - stories - encounters . Ubstadt-Weiher 2012, passim
  2. cf. Christian Zwarg, PDF on line Diskographie PARLOPHON Matrix Numbers - 30173 to 34999: German, pp. 227-29
  3. cf. Stadtarchiv Heilbronn 1933–1938, Volume 4 of Chronicle of the City of Heilbronn, Publisher: Stadtarchiv, 1995, p. 284: “... the blind lute singer Dr. Hans Ebbecke (Heidelberg) "
  4. Text reproduced at feigenbutz.de
  5. label shown. at bruchsal.org ( Memento of the original from February 20, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / archiv.bruchsal.org