Herwig Mitteregger, Bernhard Potschka and Manfred Praeker met in the political rock band Lokomotive Kreuzberg. Together with
Reinhold Heil, who was then active in the
jazz group
Bakmak, and
Nina Hagen, they became known as the
Nina Hagen Band and released two albums. After the separation from Nina Hagen, the four musicians, at the suggestion of manager
Jim Rakete, along with singer
Alf Klimek (“Klimax”), German-American
DJ Rik De Lisle, and singers Lisa Bialac and Lyma Russel, created the
rock opera Spliff Radio Show. It premiered live on May 24, 1980, at the Berliner Kant-Kino; it is described as “a bitter satire on the music business centered on the fictional rock star Rocko J. Fonzo,” focusing on his rise and fall. The English-language album was performed in
Paris,
Zurich,
Amsterdam,
Stockholm, and
London and was released in 1980 (by
CBS). Although the album cover does not explicitly label
Spliff as the band's name but rather as part of the album title, the
liner notes state “Spliff are” with the four band members listed; Alf Klimek appears under “starring,” while Lyma Russel, Lisa Bialac, and Rik De Lisle are listed under “featuring.” The background for this choice was that the Spliff members wanted to avoid repeating the ultimately negative experiences they had with Nina Hagen and therefore distanced themselves from “front performers.” At the beginning of 1982, their first German-language album
85555 was released under their new band name, Spliff. The band name refers to an alternative term for a hashish cigarette (
joint) and is based on the “Spliff” call in the Nina Hagen song
Heiß from the LP
Nina Hagen Band. The album was named after its catalog number (similar to the
Yes album
90125 a year later). It has a simple cover design with gray and red lettering on a white background. Spliff was subsequently associated with the so-called Neue Deutsche Welle, although the band “couldn’t do much with” this label. The album also came out in an English-language version as
85555 International Version. It has a different cover; it shows the band, with Reinhold Heil holding the LP cover of the German version in his hands. Their biggest hits from this period were
Heut’ Nacht and
Carbonara. The further singles
Déjà Vu (from
85555) and
Das Blech (from the also German-language album
Herzlichen Glückwunsch, released in late 1982) were also successful in the German charts. The video for
Herzlichen Glückwunsch was produced with the later
trance producer Paul Schmitz-Moormann. In 1984, the last regular Spliff album,
Schwarz auf Weiß, was released with the single
Radio, for which the group went on a comparatively unsuccessful tour with
Curt Cress on drums. In 1985, the band split up due to musical differences and various solo projects by the members. == Joint activities after the split ==