Modern popular music at the
Donauinselfest 2009 In the 1990s, German-language groups had only limited popularity, and only a few artists managed to be played on the radio, for example
Nena,
Herbert Grönemeyer,
Marius Müller-Westernhagen,
Die Ärzte,
Rammstein,
Rosenstolz or
Die Prinzen. In the mid-2000s the German band
Wir sind Helden found success with a new style of German-language
pop-rock. This success was followed by several other bands and artists that led to a new boom of German-language music and a broader acceptance of existing German-language recording artists.
Synthpop, Eurodance, Pop In the late 1980s (prior to
reunification) and the 1990s,
Synthpop and
Eurodance became popular throughout Germany. Often, different styles were mixed in between these to attract a broad variety of audiences.
Hip Hop Hip hop in Germany arrived in the early 1980s, and
graffiti and
breakdancing became well-known quickly, even in socialist
East Germany. German hip hop "started out as a transnational youth subculture. The commercial success started in 1992 with the hit "Die Da" from
Die Fantastischen Vier from
Stuttgart. The
Rödelheim Hartreim Projekt tried to establish a "gangster" rap. An early influential group was
Advanced Chemistry including
Torch. They sparked an interest in speaking out for the immigrants and used rap as a way to defend themselves.
Fettes Brot from Hamburg, has been successful since their beginning. They sing about funny topics, such as infidelity and boasting about their prowess with women. Whereas hip hop had a peak of success in the early first decade of the 21st century,
gangster rap became a controversial part of German music and youth culture just as late as 2004 with
Aggro Berlin.
Punk Punk music in Germany has a long and diverse history. When bands like the
Sex Pistols and
The Clash became popular in West Germany, a number of Punk bands were formed, which led to the creation of a German punk scene. Among the first wave of bands were Male, from
Düsseldorf, founded in 1976, PVC, from
West Berlin, and
Big Balls and the Great White Idiot, from
Hamburg. Early German punk groups were heavily influenced by UK bands, often writing their lyrics in English. The main difference is that German punk bands had not yet become political. Beginning in the late 1970s and early 1980s there were new movements within the German punk scene, led by labels like
ZickZack Records, from Hamburg. It was during this period that the term
Neue Deutsche Welle (New German Wave) was first coined by Alfred Hilsberg. Many of these bands played experimental
post-punk, often using synthesizers and computers. Among them were
The Nina Hagen Band, as well as
Fehlfarben and
Abwärts, from Hamburg. Both are still active, though they have changed their style several times. Other bands played a more aggressive style of punk rock with a clear leftist political direction influenced by earlier political rock bands like
Ton Steine Scherben - bands like
Slime,
Toxoplasma, or
Vorkriegsjugend are still relevant in the German punk scene. There is a still existing scene with many only locally known independent bands that confine themselves from the bigger and more popular groups (that are often branded as "Kommerzpunk"). Punkrock was outlawed in the GDR. Bands like Schleim-Keim or L'Attentat were observed and persecuted by the
Stasi and could not perform in the public. Music was produced in underground and exchanged on Tape, an attempt to release a split-vinyl of "Schleimkeim" and "Zwitschermaschine" failed since the latter was undercut by government agents. Nonpolitical punkrock that is also listened to by skinheads is termed as
Oi!. Thematically, Oi! songs are often about alcohol, relations, and/or violence. While some Oi! Bands like "Loikaemie" did antifascist songs, there are many cases with an affliction to
neonazis, with fluid borders toward right-extremist rockmusic ("Rechtsrock") within the Oi!-Scene. There are few German language bands who managed to be successful for a longer period. The best known are the punk bands
Die Ärzte and
Die Toten Hosen. Both were formed in the early 1980s but have very different approaches to punk. As successful as those two bands in number of sales and number one albums but much lesser accepted by the public and normally not played by German media because of their affiliation with right-wing politics but with a huge fan community were the Oi!-Band
Böhse Onkelz.
Heavy metal were the first German heavy metal band to be highly successful overseas, ultimately selling more than 100 million albums worldwide. Germany has a long and strong history with
heavy metal. It is considered by many to be one of Europe's heaviest contributors to the scene. The genre is quite popular and mainstream within the country. Early
hard rock/heavy metal was brought to German soil with the success of
Scorpions and
Accept. Germany is today known for its large metal festivals including
Wacken Open Air and
Summer Breeze Open Air. Germany has a strong tradition of
speed metal and
power metal, with
Helloween considered the “fathers of power metal”. Other early speed metal bands include
Running Wild,
Grave Digger,
Rage, and to some extent
Warlock and
Stormwitch. The European style of power metal, developed in Germany, was popularized by German bands like
Blind Guardian,
Gamma Ray,
Freedom Call,
Iron Savior,
Avantasia,
Edguy and
Primal Fear gained international recognition. In many cases these bands initially started out playing speed metal, but later switched to power metal. More recently, a new generation of power metal-influenced bands like
Masterplan,
Orden Ogan,
Kissin' Dynamite and
Powerwolf is becoming more and more popular in Germany and abroad. Running Wild are also considered a pioneer of the
pirate metal genre with the release of their 1987 album
Under Jolly Roger, which was one of the first pirate-themed heavy metal albums. Three local variants of metal subgenres exist in Germany. The
Teutonic thrash metal scene is represented by such groups as
Kreator,
Sodom,
Destruction,
Tankard and
Exumer.
Medieval metal, incorporates German traditional music with
industrial metal. Notable bands include
Subway to Sally,
In Extremo,
Corvus Corax,
Saltatio Mortis and
Schandmaul (the last is considered
folk rock in Germany).
Metalcore performing at the 2023
Full Force Festival in
Ferropolis Germany has been a major host of the post-hardcore and metalcore scene in which various festivals and tours were in which bands from all over the world played in. Many acts from Germany include
Our Mirage,
Annisokay,
Rising Insane,
Caliban,
From Fall to Spring, among others.
Rock am Ring is held at the
Nürburgring race track in
Nürburg,
Rhineland-Palatinate while its counterpart,
Rock im Park, is held at the
Zeppelinfeld in
Nuremberg,
Bavaria.
Full Force, another huge event, hosts shows between the end of June and at the start of July in
Löbnitz,
Saxony. In Hamburg, the
Elbriot is held annually while over in
Cuxhaven, the
Deichbrand takes place between July and August. During the summer, the
Summer Breeze Open Air festival takes place in
Dinkelsbühl, Bavaria. In
Wacken,
Schleswig-Holstein, the
Wacken Open Air festival is held during the first weekend of August. Germany is also the birthplace of the European-wide
Impericon Never Say Die! Tour that is held in the Spring all over Europe. Impericon also based their retail store in Leipzig.
Neue Deutsche Härte at
Madison Square Garden, New York City
Neue Deutsche Härte (engl. "New German Hardness") is a term for an extremely popular German variant of
Industrial metal. It combines the common sound of metal with elements of gothic and industrial music as well as electronic samples and is mostly sung in German. It is known for morbid and provocative lyrical themes and over-the-top stage shows often featuring fire, pyrotechnic, stunts and other special effects. It draws its audience from both the
metal and
goth scene. Some bands, especially
Rammstein and
Oomph! have gained mainstream success and, despite their lyrics being mostly in German, have also found success in non-German-speaking countries. Other famous artists include
Stahlhammer (from Austria),
Megaherz,
Unheilig,
Eisbrecher,
Tanzwut, and
Joachim Witt.
Medieval Metal Medieval metal or medieval rock is a subgenre of folk metal that blends hard rock or heavy metal music with medieval folk music. Medieval metal is mostly restricted to Germany where it is known as Mittelalter-Metal or Mittelalter-Rock. The genre emerged from the middle of the 1990s with contributions from
Subway to Sally,
In Extremo,
Schandmaul and
Wolgemut. The style is characterised by the prominent use of a wide variety of traditional folk and medieval instruments.
Goth Germany is the home of a vivid Goth scene, and has a large scene of musicians from the spectrum who are typically known as
Goth musicians. Most notable artists are
Lacrimosa,
Lacrimas Profundere,
Xmal Deutschland,
Das Ich,
Deine Lakaien,
Illuminate,
Untoten,
Erben der Schöpfung (from Liechtenstein),
No More,
Girls Under Glass or
Project Pitchfork.
Leipzig is home of the largest event of this
subculture worldwide called the
Wave-Gotik-Treffen, regularly hosting 25,000 attendants. The WGT is closely followed by the annual
M'era Luna festival in
Hildesheim.
Neue Deutsche Todeskunst (engl. "New German Death Art") is a German death-obsessed
Dark Wave style of music that blends
Death rock,
German Rock,
Gothic Rock, and
neo-classical music with German philosophical texts and a theatrical stage show. It is restricted to Germany where it emerged in the early 1990s from bands such as
Das Ich,
Lacrimosa,
Relatives Menschsein and
Goethes Erben. Many NDT artists are known for their use of
Classical Latin.
Electronic music and techno , "father of electronic music" , pioneers of electronic music Germany has the largest electronic music scene in the world and has a long tradition in and influence on almost all genres of electronic music. The band
Kraftwerk was one of the first bands in the world to make music entirely on electronic equipment, and the band
Tangerine Dream is often credited as being among the originators and primary influences of the "Berlin School" of electronic music, which would later influence
trance music. Some other bands like
Liaisons Dangereuses,
Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft and
Die Krupps created a style later called
Electronic body music. Recently a few electronica artists have become successful in the mainstream, such as
Monika Kruse,
Marusha,
Blümchen and
MIA. Artists on the cutting edge of German-language techno include
Klee. Both
Einstürzende Neubauten (collapsing new buildings, translated literally) and
KMFDM (no pity for the majority, translated literally) are considered by many industrial and electronic music fans as the godfathers of their genre. Their sounds developed the modern styles of groups such as NIN, Marilyn Manson, Rammstein, and New Order. Einstürzende Neubauten can be recognized by their Prince-esque logo, which has been subliminally fused into several mainstream American movies (such as a tattoo in the movie Bug, directed by William Friedkin, starring Harry Connick Jr.). KMFDM has released many songs in English, making them more accessible to their huge American and worldwide audience. In the 1990s, Germany was one of the most successful contributors to the
Eurodance genre, with notable German-based acts including
Real McCoy,
Snap!,
Culture Beat,
La Bouche,
Captain Jack,
Captain Hollywood Project,
Fun Factory,
Masterboy and
Haddaway.
Trance music is a style of electronic music that originated in Germany in the very late 1980s and early 1990s, upon German unification. Following the development of trance music in Germany, many
Trance genres stemmed from the original trance music and most trance genres developed in Germany, most notably "
Anthem trance" or also called "uplifting" or "epic" trance,
progressive trance, and "
Ambient trance".
Klezmer in Germany and Eastern Europe Klezmer is a musical Jewish genre that consists of mainly instrumental songs. In Germany, Klezmer expanded significantly after the fall of the Berlin Wall in the mid-1980s. As Klezmer was expanding, so was the Yiddish folk movement, and the two genres became intertwined to a certain extent. In the 1980s while Klezmer was seeing tremendous growth, many Jews in Eastern Europe turned to Klezmer as a means of understanding their communist backgrounds and showing their remembrance to those who experienced the
Holocaust. Once Klezmer groups started to tour outside of Europe in the 1980s, Americans gained immediate interest in the music genre.
Henry Sapoznik created the first American Klezmer band, known as Kapelye, which toured all around Europe. The spread of Americans playing Klezmer brought a new tone to the genre which captured large audiences. Most American groups who played Klezmer added a hint of American rock into their performances, which was different from the traditional sound of Klezmer in Eastern Europe. It was uncomfortable at first for many of the American Klezmer bands to play in Germany because of the trauma that had occurred there. Despite Germany's background, the American Klezmer groups knew Germany was a place they had to play because of Klezmer's popularity there. Over time, Klezmer's audience expanded in Germany and the American Klezmer bands were able to adjust.
Giora Feidman is arguably one of the most influential Klezmer musicians. Feidman created a new perspective for Klezmer, and shared a new ideology for how the music genre could be viewed and appreciated. Feidman gained a large amount of popularity from his work on the musical play,
Ghetto, which associated him and his style with the Holocaust. He brought a new theme to Klezmer music which focused on the remembrance of the Holocaust, and a way of "healing" the trauma caused by the Holocaust. Feidman turned Klezmer into a form of personal expression, in which he tried to unite all people (especially the Jews and Germans) and all things through Klezmer. He completely shifted the ideology of Klezmer and explained how Klezmer is in everything, it is even a way to get in touch with religion and communicate with God. However, some people believe Feidman took his ideology too far and turned Klezmer into something that it never intended to become. During the 1980s Klezmer underwent significant transformation, and by the middle-late 1990s Klezmer experienced a new wave of change. Klezmer became a name for many different trends far from where it originated. Klezmer was known as a political statement, a method of healing, amateur musicians getting together and playing music, a way to reconnect with lost traditions.
Jazz == Notes ==