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The "German question" was a debate in the 19th century, especially during the Revolutions of 1848, over the best way to achieve a unification of all or most lands inhabited by Germans. [ citation needed ] From 1815 to 1866, about 37 independent German-speaking states existed within the German Confederation .
The "counter parallel" or "contrast chord" is terminology used in German theory derived mainly from Hugo Riemann to refer to (US:) relative (German: parallel) diatonic functions and is abbreviated Tcp in major and tCp in minor (Tkp respectively tKp in Riemann's diction). The chord can be seen as the "tonic parallel reversed" and is in a major ...
That is the German’s fatherland, Where oaths are sworn with curled hand, Where loyalty blazes brightly from the eye And love sits warmly in the heart. That shall it be, That, brave German, shall it be! That is the German’s fatherland, Where rage wipes out the foreign junk, Where every Frenchman is called enemy, Where every German is called ...
"Muss i denn" (German for "must I, then") is a German folk-style song in the Swabian German dialect that has passed into tradition. The present form dates back to 1827, when it was written and made public by Friedrich Silcher.
A much-needed film funding reform in Germany has become critical for the local industry and for Berlin’s Studio Babelsberg in particular, as it welcomes new management and bids farewell to ...
More recent German theorists have abandoned the most complex aspect of Riemann's theory, the dualist conception of major and minor, and consider that the dominant is the fifth degree above the tonic, the subdominant the fourth degree, both in minor and in major. [15] Tonic and its relative (German Parallel, Tp) in C major: CM and Am chords Play
A tesseract. The diminished seventh chords occupy points on two diagonally opposite corners. Starting with a diminished seventh chord, lower any factor by a semitone. The result is equivalently to a German sixth chord. From the German sixth chord, lower any factor by a semitone so that the result is ancohemitonic (i.e
Nazi German sociologist and anthropologist Karl Valentin Müller asserted that at least half (50%) of the Czech nation was "racially Nordic" and could be Germanized. This was in stark contrast to Germany's Final Solution to the Jewish question, which called for the total extermination of the Jews save for a select "honorary Aryans". Müller ...