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How China s Long Reach of Repression Undermines Academic Freedom at Australia s Universities
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Transgender debate a free speech stress test for Melbourne University
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Canberra International Music Festival / Concert 22, “Song of the Earth”, Fitters’ Workshop, Saturday, May 8. Reviewed by
ROB KENNEDY.
FITTINGLY, to end the 2021 Canberra International Music Festival, Gustav Mahler’s “Song of the Earth”, which according to Leonard Bernstein was Mahler’s greatest work, was on the bill.
Following the most painful period in his life, Gustav Mahler wrote his “Das Lied von der Erde”. This work performed was arranged by Arnold Schoenberg. The artists were Sally-Anne Russell, mezzo soprano, Andrew Goodwin, tenor, and the Festival Ensemble, directed by Roland Peelman.
The massively bright opening to this seminal work created a stunning beginning for the final 2021 Canberra International Music Festival concert.
For several days in early March 1859, rains fell violently on the Ten Broeck race track in what is now west Savannah. During that time more than 400 enslaved people were sold to pay off the debts of plantation owner Pierce Mease Butler.
The rains only stopped after the last slave was sold. The auction would thereafter be known as The Weeping Time.
“As the last family stepped down from the block, the rain ceased, for the first time in four days, the clouds broke away, and the soft sunlight fell on the scene. The unhappy slaves had [sic] many of them been already removed, and others were now departing with their new masters,” New York Tribune journalist Mortimer Q. Thomson wrote of the auction, which took place on March 2 and March 3, 1859.
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