
WEIGHT: 46 kg
Bust: 3
1 HOUR:250$
NIGHT: +50$
Sex services: Hand Relief, Swinging, Striptease, Deep Throat, Oral
In the shadows of the death camp of Auschwitz, where more than one million people were murdered, haunting melodies once echoed across its barracks. Composed and performed by those who had been enslaved, the music was a desperate act of survival amidst unspeakable horrors.
Yet, for nearly 80 years, the compositions lay forgotten, buried under the weight of history. That is until British composer Leo Geyer stumbled upon them in an encounter that would ignite a decade-long quest to restore the lost music of Auschwitz. Touring the Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial museum in , he met an archivist who revealed a hidden treasure - a collection of musical scores written and performed by the camp's inmates.
Employing what he called 'musical detective work' on the lost compositions, he spent eight years painstakingly piecing together each fragment, restoring the music as closely as possible to its original form. The results, a minute documentary titled The Lost Music of Auschwitz, will air tonight on Sky Arts, ahead of the 80th anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation on January Mr Geyer said: 'I knew there were orchestras at the camp, which is something I'm personally interested in.
The first Auschwitz orchestra was formed in January on the order of the SS, with seven musicians playing on instruments seized from nearby towns. Above: An orchestra made up of inmates performs at Auschwitz.
One of the musical scores that Mr Geyer has brought back to life after 80 years. I couldn't believe something like this had gone unnoticed for almost 80 years.