The music for this song came from the "Lied der Legion Condor" ("Song of the Condor Legion"), which was written by Wolfram Philipps and Christian Jährig, two Condor Legion pilots with the rank of Oberleutnant. "SS marschiert in Feindesland" ("SS marches in enemy territory") also known as "Teufelslied" ("The Devil's Song") was a marching song of the Waffen-SS during the German-Soviet War. "Heil Hitler Dir!" ("Deutschland Erwache") This is not to be confused with "Die Hitlerleute", more commonly referred to as "Kameraden Laßt Erschallen", which is a completely different song. That song had the same tune of the Italian fascist anthem " Giovinezza". Unfortunately, no recorded version of the song survives today, only the lyrics.
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īajer’s account proves once more that song played a central role in the battle for control of the streets. Police promptly moved in to prevent serious trouble. Realizing quickly that Nazis were trying to appropriate the melody of their revolutionary anthem, the socialist residents countered by singing the refrain from the original text ‘Völker hört die Signale! Auf zum letzten Gefecht’ (‘Comrades, listen to the Signal! Onward, to the final battle!’), while others pelted the storm troopers with bits of debris. When the storm troopers broke into song, singing the ‘Hitlernationale’, residents threw open their windows, misled momentarily by the familiar tune. By 1930, a Nazi version of this working-class standard was in circulation, entitled the Hitlernationale: Īppropriating working-class songs such as the Internationale for their own political ends had a direct effect on the streets, as the Nazi composer Hans Bajer noted when giving this account of a march by the SA into working-class district of north Berlin one Sunday afternoon in 1930: The Nazis were not reticent in employing songs and melodies previously associated wholly with socialists and communists in their quest to broaden their appeal to the working class, and the Internationale was a prime target. "Auf, Hitlerleute, schließt die Reihen" (Hitlernationale) The first recording of the song was published by the company Electrola around the early 1930s. The author of the lyrics of Die Hitlerleute was Horst Wessel himself and the song originated from his unit, the Sturm 67/5(Sturm 67, Standarte 5) of the Berlin Sturmabteilung, also known as the Sturm "Horst Wessel", named in honor of Horst Wessel, also known by its old name before Horst Wessel's death, "The Hitlerleute". "Kameraden Laßt Erschallen" ("Comrades Let it Resound") was a Sturmabteilung arrangement of the Kaiserjägerlied written by Karl Mühlberger in 1924. "Die Hitlerleute” (Kameraden Laßt Erschallen) During the Nazi era, the song was performed by Carl Woitschach's orchestra in its full version, incorporating both melodies, as "Kampflied der Nationalsozialisten/Herbei zum Kampf". Das Berliner Jungarbeiterlied was set to the melody of the Air March (the official march of the Soviet Air Force), which was composed in 1921 by Yuliy Abramovich Khayt. Later on, the verses of Das Berliner Jungarbeiterlied (with the opening line Herbei zum Kampf, ihr Knechte der Maschinen) were added to the song. Its lyrics were written by Kleo Pleyer, while the melody was essentially based on that of the traditional German folk song Stimmt an mit hellem hohen klang, which was composed in 1811 by Albert Methfessel. "Kampflied der Nationalsozialisten" ("Battle Song of the National Socialists"), also known by its opening line "Wir Sind Das Heer Vom Hakenkreuz" ("We Are The Army Of The Swastika") was an early Nazi hymn. It can be punished with up to three years of imprisonment. In modern Germany, the public singing or performing of songs identified exclusively with Nazi Germany is illegal. It became the national anthem of the Weimar Republic in 1922, but during the Nazi era, only the first stanza was used, followed by the SA song " Horst-Wessel-Lied". This observation applies above all to Das Lied der Deutschen ("The song of the Germans"), written in 1841. There is often confusion between songs written specifically for the Nazi Party, and much older German patriotic songs (from before World War I) that were used extensively by the Nazis and have become associated with them.
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3 "Heil Hitler Dir!" ("Deutschland Erwache").
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2.5 "Auf, Hitlerleute, schließt die Reihen" (Hitlernationale).2.4 "Die Hitlerleute” (Kameraden Laßt Erschallen).