Having completed his contract with
Brain, Dinger left the label and signed to
Teldec, a major label in Germany at the time, which specialised in pop music, unlike the more eclectic Brain. Dinger would remain signed to Teldec until he was dramatically dropped in 1984. Dinger spent the summer of 1975 improving his guitar playing and writing lyrics, intending to turn La Düsseldorf into a viable pop group. It was also in this period that Dinger began to use his signature
Open-E tuning for the guitar, which would remain his tuning of favour for the rest of his career. Dinger's guitar playing, at first criticised as amateurish, developed in time to be as simplistic yet rhythmically advanced as his drumming, and Dinger never played a full drum kit on record again until 1998's
Year of the Tiger. In September 1975, La Düsseldorf entered the studio to begin recording their
debut album, retaining Conny Plank as producer and featuring the same line-up as played on ''Neu! '75'' (minus Rother) with the addition of ex-
Thirsty Moon bass player
Harald Konietzko for the album's B-side. The album took the longest to record of any Dinger album yet made, sessions lasting until December 1975, and this is reflected in a higher quality of production, with multiple overdubs of guitar, organ and synthesiser created. The music featured on
La Düsseldorf is far more commercial than the La Düsseldorf tracks that had appeared on
Neu! '75. Whilst the latter can be described as
proto-punk, tracks like
Düsseldorf and
Silver Cloud lean further towards the sound of
post-punk and is greatly influenced by
Kraftwerk's album
Autobahn which had achieved commercial success worldwide in 1974. Like
Autobahn, the album was very successful in Germany, but was unfortunately not marketed abroad.
La Düsseldorf's lead single —
Silver Cloud — reached number 2 on the German
hit parade on its release in early 1976, an achievement all the more striking given that the song was instrumental. The album itself was released by Teldec in the summer of 1976, with all tracks written by Dinger. The personnel listing also featured a "Nicolas van Rhein" on keyboards, a pseudonym that Dinger would continue to use (sometimes insincerely) for the rest of his career, although more commonly spelled using the
Dutch version "Niklaus van Rheijn" after Dinger's relocation to
The Netherlands.
La Düsseldorf's success turned the band members into celebrities with the band "logo sprayed all over Düsseldorf streets" by fans, and Thomas becoming "one of the most glamorous people in Düsseldorf." All three band members began wearing White Overalls, a uniform Dinger had kept since before the advent of Neu!: La Düsseldorf also maintained a feeling of unity and coherence as a band which had been visibly lacking in Neu!: "We didn't live together but we were always together and we felt the same." The commercial success of their debut album made the band wealthy enough for to be able to create their own studio in Düsseldorf, and from 1976 the band dispensed with Conny Plank, preferring to produce their own material, Hans being a trained studio engineer. Their new facilities were soon put to use, as the band began to record a follow-up to La Düsseldorf. The album
Viva took shape over a period of a year and a half, studio time no longer being an issue for the band. The album is markedly more commercial than its predecessor, and was specifically aimed at foreign markets—especially
Britain and
America—, most of the lyrics being in English (although French, Italian and German lyrics also featured). However, the international success Teldec anticipated never materialised, as the label's foreign distributor went bust just before
Viva's release. As a result, the promised release of both
Viva and
La Düsseldorf abroad only occurred in the UK (where the debut was released by
Decca and its follow-up by
Radar, and some foreign fans who had pre-ordered the albums were left un-refunded.
Viva sold well within Germany however (over 150,000 copies), and is considered by some to be La Düsseldorf's finest album. It was preceded by the release of the single
Rheinita, which although reached only number 3 on the hit parade, far outsold its predecessor
Silver Cloud. The single was voted "track of the year" by several German radio stations, and stayed at number one on some unofficial charts for over a year. Like
Silver Cloud, it was an instrumental, dominated by rhapsodic melodies played in diatonic thirds, which would become a familiar mode in Dinger's music from then on. The track's title alluded to Dinger's two great loves: the
Rhein and his departed
Lieber Honig Anita. The great commercial success of both the album and the single prompted La Düsseldorf to perform in concert, something which they had avoided up until then due to their music's heavily overdubbed nature and the fact that Klaus played all instruments except drums, making concerts a practical impossibility. Nevertheless, they made several TV appearances in which they mimed their performances. A recording of their "performance" of
Rheinita at a free concert in Düsseldorf in 1979 is widely available on the internet.
Viva also saw the first release of a song which would become a concert (and studio) staple for Dinger over the years:
Cha Cha 2000. The song—twenty minutes in length on
Viva, taking up the entire of side two—explores in its lyrics Dinger's vision of paradise "
where the air is clean / and the grass is green," although Dinger paradoxically implores his listeners to "
stop smoking and doping;" activities in which all three members of the band had engaged copiously since the early 70s. The central section of the song features a lengthy piano solo by
Andreas Schell; a new recruit to the band. Despite appearing on
Viva far less than Harald Konietzko, Schell seems to have been adopted as the band's fourth member, appearing in publicity shoots and many of the polariods that make up the
Viva gatefold photo-montage. In 1979 the "maxi-single" version of
Rheinita was released, attracting the attention of
EMI, who made the group a 1 million mark offer, which they subsequently refused. The increasing wealth the band was generating began to cause tensions amongst the band members: The recording sessions for a follow-up to
Viva:
Individuellos, were soured by arguments, and the band's popularity decreased in the wake of the
Neue Deutsche Welle phenomenon, with bands such as
Einstürzende Neubauten creating music that was drastically at odds with that of La Düsseldorf (although other bands such as
Rheingold actively imitated La Düsseldorf's style). These issues were compacted by the suicide of Andreas Schell (who was due to feature more prominently on the album) in 1980, midway through the sessions. Schell's loss was heavily mourned, and the sleeve of
Individuellos features a tribute to him. The album was never completed, partly as a consequence of Schell's death, and is far less professionally made as a result. As on
Neu! 2, Dinger opted to recycle various versions of the same song on the album, with the melody of "Menschen" featuring on "Menschen 1", "Menschen 2", "Lieber Honig 1981", and played backwards on both "Sentimental" and "Flashback". The latter two tracks are abstract tape collages, and given that much of the album's second side was given over to overtly humorous and playful faux-oompah pieces, the content of
Individuellos is often seen as slim. Despite this, the album has recently become critically popular, with Stephen Thrower commenting that: "[
Individuellos] is equally as good as
Viva, and it actually has a streak of experimentalism that takes it further out than the other two [La Düsseldorf albums]." Released in December 1980, the album sold poorly, and the single "Dampfriemen" failed to chart. The album was the first La Düsseldorf album to feature songs credited to others than Klaus Dinger, with the jam "Das Yvönchen" credited equally to the Dinger brothers, Lampe and Schell and Thomas Dinger receiving a co-credit with Klaus on "Dampfriemen" and a solo credit on "Tintarella Di...". The degree to which the other band members contributed to La Düsseldorf's output during the band's existence led Klaus to court several times in the 1980s. The production of
Individuellos was immediately followed by that of a Thomas Dinger solo album:
Für Mich.
Für Mich featured both Klaus and Hans Lampe as co-producers, and Hans on drums. Stylistically similar to the Thomas Dinger-written tracks on
Individuellos, it exhibits the electronic sound the band would adopt more and more in their final years. In 1983 the Dinger brothers moved their studio from Düsseldorf to
Zeeland, on the
Dutch coast. Their parents, Heinz and Renate, kept a holiday home just outside the village of
Kamperland, and the adjoining barn was converted into a studio. Dinger would keep a studio there for the rest of his life, first christening it
Langeweg Studios after the road on which it sat, and then
Zeeland Studios, which it was most commonly known as from the 1990s onwards. With the studio being built and preparations being made for a fourth La Düsseldorf album (which had been announced the previous year, in accordance with a renewal of the band's contract with Teldec) Hans Lampe began to take part less and less in sessions. Like the recording of
Individuellos, the period was marked by arguments between band members, and by the time of the band's next record, Hans Lampe had left the group. However, La Düsseldorf had not split up, and the Dinger brothers continued as a duo for several months, preparing the fourth album. To this end a single was released in 1983: "Ich Liebe Dich". More electronic in feel than the band's previous singles, but along the same lines as
Rheinita. It was written by Klaus alone, but the B-side, "Koksknödel", was composed instrumentally by Thomas (and is similar in sound to "Für Mich") with lyrics written by Klaus. This was to be the brothers' final collaboration until 1998's
Goldregen, as Thomas finally left the group in late 1983. The songs written for the proposed fourth album, including a reworked version of "Ich Liebe Dich", were to be included on Klaus's debut solo album
Néondian. The acrimony of the split was reflected in a series of legal battles fought between band members until a settlement was finally reached in 1997. ==1984–1987:
Néondian,
Neu! 4 and
Blue==