It Don't Mean a Thing, If It Ain't Got That Swing

Versions of this FilmLanguage (Type)
It Don't Mean a Thing, If It Ain't Got That SwingEnglish (original)zum Film
It Don't Mean a Thing, If It Ain't Got That SwingGerman (subtitled)zum Film
Synopsis
It Don´t Mean a Thing, If It Ain´t Got That Swing, named after the legendary Duke Ellington song from the 30s, shows what "swing" really meant in the post-war years.
When songs like Meine gute alte Tante or Put´n on the Ritz are played, Alfred Erblich, an active dandy at the Hot
Club Hanover, knows that music has more to do with the heart than with the mind. Together with Heinz Both, the "Mr. Swing" of the British occupied zone, Alfred Erblich, another still active swing-veteran, experienced how fingers were snapped and feet flew in Hanover, Berlin and Paris to old role-models like Louis Armstrong. Swing was like a language that everyone understood; it brought people together and was part of a lifestyle between ruins and a new beginning. Swing popularized jazz, the music of the liberators, and post-war Germany experienced the liberation from dictators and chamber music with a new form of music that caused goose-bumps then just as much as it does today.
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Swing
Music
Genre
Art
Singer
Swinging
Runtime (in min.):90
Color:color
Format:35mm
Aspect Ratio:1:1.85
Soundformat:Dolby Stereo
Year Of Production:1999
People featured in the FilmTypeComment
Wilhelm Baumeisterinterviewee 
Heinz Bothinterviewee 
Alfred Erblichinterviewee 
Gerhard Evertzinterviewee 
Stefan Hayesinterviewee 
Mowgli Jospininterviewee 
Hubertus Krohneinterviewee 
Konstantin Krohneinterviewee 
Gerhard Lehnerinterviewee 
Claude Luterinterviewee 
Robin Merillinterviewee 
Marko Paysaninterviewee 
Horst Wagnerinterviewee 
Stefan Wahrmutinterviewee 
Kurt Wiegemanninterviewee 
Sebastian Wittstockinterviewee 
Keywords
Swing; Music; Genre; Art; Singer; Swinging; Singing; Dancing; Dance; Thirties
Categories
Music, Other Music Genres, Bands & Orchestras, History of Music