After Fesl had tried his hand at various occupations (by his own word, he worked as a
furrier, a
film set builder, an
extra, a
locksmith, a
fashion jewellery seller, a bulky-waste collector, an
antique dealer and a beer lorry driver), he wanted to establish himself as an artist blacksmith, setting himself up a workshop in
Freising. According to Fesl himself, his career as a musician began when he found that he could get into cabaret theatres ("
Kleinkunstbühnen") in Munich free if he showed up with a guitar and told the staff that he was one of the musicians who were to appear. One evening, when the actual artistes failed to show up, Fesl was asked to get up on the stage himself and perform. With his funny, chatty manner, he quickly won the audience's favour. In 1976, at the
Theater im Fraunhofer in Munich, he made his first
record, entitled simply
Fredl Fesl. After its release, he got his own television programme,
Fredl und seine Gäste ("Fredl and his Guests"). before each number, which by his own admission were sometimes longer than the songs themselves. He ended his concerts by doing a
handstand on the chair on which he had been sitting and playing his songs. Fesl was often associated with the song
"Der Königsjodler" ("The King's
Yodeller"), which he had earlier regularly performed. Other well known songs in Fesl's repertoire were
"Der edle Rittersepp",
"Anlass-Jodler", the
"Taxilied" and the
"Fußball-Lied". In the media, he was sometimes called
"Bajubarde" ("Bayou Bard") or
"Bayerns bester Barde" ("Bavaria's Best Bard"). For a few years, Fesl could regularly be heard in radio advertisements for the beer brand
Veldensteiner. In 2008, there was a civil court case arising from the mention of
Jürgen Klinsmann in one advertisement, which the brewer,
Kaiser Bräu, lost. Klinsmann's actual complaint was that the
Denglisch word "clean" was being used in the advertisement to refer to the first syllable in his last name. The presiding judge in the case stressed that it was "certainly not the worst case of violating personal rights, but name rights have been fundamentally violated." The offending beer commercial was banned, as well. Fesl had this to say about the proceedings: "There are worse things, mushy
Semmelknödel for instance." ==Later years==