"Es Leuchten Die Sterne" - Luigi Bernauer/Oskar Joost (1938)

Описание к видео "Es Leuchten Die Sterne" - Luigi Bernauer/Oskar Joost (1938)

Luigi Bernauer (vocal) with Oskar Joost and His Dance Orchestra. Recorded in Berlin, Lützowstraße on February 2nd 1938.
The song was written by Leo Leux (music) and Bruno Balz (lyrics) for the 1938 German Tobis Musical Picture "Es Leuchten Die Sterne", starring La Jana, Ernst Fritz Fürbringer and a lot of German movie stars playing themselves. The song soon became a hit, recorded by popular artists like Rosita Serrano (see my upload:    • "Es Leuchten Die Sterne" - Rosita Ser...  , Eric Helgar, Herbert Ernst Groh, Adalbert Luther or Eugen Wolff.
Luigi Bernauer (originally: Ludwig Bernhuber, 1899 - 1945) was an Austrian (born in Vienna) singer, composer and actor. He began his career at cabarets in Vienna, where he often sang humorous songs. Soon rather successful his songs were broadcasted in the radio and sold as records - the start of his impressive career as a recording artist. During World War II he entertained soldiers at the front - on tour in Norway he died in Oslo in January 1945, only 45 years old.
"Oskar Joost (9 June 1898 – 29 May 1941) was a German musician, who played violin, tenor saxophone and clarinet, as well as directing a dance orchestra.
Joost was born into a musical family in Wissembourg, Alsace on 9 June 1898. His father, Albert Joost, was a cellist in the military. Oskar attended high school in Leipzig and participated in the First World War as a volunteer.
In 1924, Oskar and his brother Ali formed the Oscar Joost Dance Orchestra, with Oskar spelling his name with a 'c' instead of a 'k'. Oscar played first violin, and his brother percussion. From 1930, the Orchestra began playing in the Berlin Eden hotel, which led to a recording contract with Electrola, followed by subsequent contracts with other record labels: Pallas (1931), Crystal (1931–1934), Ultraphon/Telefunken (1932), Grammophon/Polydor (1934–1941). In this time, he was also involved in film work." Wikipedia
This POLYDOR record is played on an Electrola table top Gramophone, model 130 from ca. 1930!
The first foto in the video shows Luigi Bernauer in the 1930s, the second shows Oskar Joost in the 1920s!

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