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BRILLIANT BRECHT

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Legends die hard, but the myth that Lotte Lenya is the only legitimate interpreter of the music of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill was convincingly interred Friday at McCabe’s by a brilliant young German singer named Dagmar Krause.

Small, pale and deceptively waif-like, Krause sang an hourlong program of precisely-honed interpretations of Brecht’s Kurt Weill and Hans Eisler songs that contrasted dramatically, and convincingly, with the broader, more theatrical versions by Lenya.

Without sacrificing the classic, between-the-wars Angst of the Weill material, Krause invested it with a bristling, contemporary energy, passionate on “Surabaya Johnny,” sardonic on the “Moritat” from “Three Penny Opera,” disillusioned on “The Alabama Song” and the “Matrosen Tango.”

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The Eisler songs, inherently more political, emerged as stark, shadowed readings, as gripping and disturbing as Max Beckmann paintings.

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