Alte Oper Frankfurt 1 October 2022 - Max Raabe & Palast Orchester | GoComGo.com

Max Raabe & Palast Orchester

Alte Oper Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Saturday 1 October 2022

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Important Info
Type: Concert
City: Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Starts at: 20:00
Overview

Max Raabe & Palast Orchester are on the road with a new tour: "Good afternoon, dear happiness". The opening line "Today is a good day to be happy" will delight the hearts and ears of the audience as well as other text poems from the pen of Max Raabe – such as "Instead of Cannes and Nice / I sit with pizza / much rather hand in hand with you" from "Côte dAzur". These and other titles of the accompanying album "Max Raabe & Palast Orchester MTV Unplugged" are cleverly interwoven with old-loved and newly discovered songs from the 20s/30s for the concert tour "Guten Tag, liebes Glück".

Venue Info

Alte Oper Frankfurt - Frankfurt am Main
Location   Opernplatz 1

The original opera house in Frankfurt is now the Alte Oper (Old Opera), a concert hall and former opera house in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. It was inaugurated in 1880 but destroyed by bombs in 1944. It was rebuilt, slowly, in the 1970s, opening again in 1981. Many important operas were performed for the first time in Frankfurt, including Carl Orff's Carmina Burana in 1937.

The square in front of the building is known as Opernplatz (Opera Square). The Alte Oper is located in the inner city district, Innenstadt, within the banking district Bankenviertel.

The Oper Frankfurt now plays in the Opern- und Schauspielhaus Frankfurt, completed in 1951, which it shares with the Schauspiel Frankfurt theatre company.

The building was designed by the Berlin architect Richard Lucae, financed by the citizens of Frankfurt and built by Philipp Holzmann. Construction began in 1873. It opened on October 20, 1880. 

The Alte Oper was almost completely destroyed by bombs during World War II in 1944 (only some of the outside walls and façades survived). In the 1960s the city magistrate planned to build a modern office building on the site. The then Minister of Economy in Hessen Rudi Arndt, earned the nickname "Dynamit-Rudi" (Dynamite Rudi) when he proposed to blow up "Germany's most beautiful ruin" with "a little dynamite". Arndt later said that this was not meant seriously.

A citizen's initiative campaigned for reconstruction funds after 1953 and collected 15 million DM. It ended costing c. DM160, and the building was reopened on August 28, 1981, to the sounds of Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 8, the "Symphony of a Thousand". A live recording of that concert conducted by Michael Gielen is available on CD.

Important Info
Type: Concert
City: Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Starts at: 20:00
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