Neue Deutsche Welle | |
Cultural Origins: | Late 1970s, West Germany |
Instruments: | Electric guitar, drum kit, electric bass, keyboard |
Other Topics: | German rock, music of Germany, Neue Deutsche Härte |
Neue Deutsche Welle (NDW, pronounced as /de/, "New German Wave") is a genre of West German rock music originally derived from post-punk and new wave music with electronic influences.[1] The term was first coined by Dutch radio DJ Frits Spits on the popular nationwide radio station Hilversum 3, which was very popular among German listeners. Soon after that, the term was used in a record-shop advertisement by Burkhardt Seiler[2] in an August 1979 issue of the West German magazine Sounds. It was then used by journalist Alfred Hilsberg in an article about the movement titled German: Neue Deutsche Welle — Aus grauer Städte Mauern ("New German Wave - From Grey Cities' Walls") in Sounds in October 1979.[3] [4]
The history of the Neue Deutsche Welle consists of two major parts. From its beginnings to 1981, the genre was mostly an underground movement with roots in British punk and new wave music. It quickly developed into an original and distinct style, influenced in no small part by the different sound and rhythm of the German language, which many of the bands had adapted from early on. Whilst some of the lyrics of artists like German: [[Nena (band)|Nena]] and German: [[Ideal (German band)|Ideal]] epitomized the zeitgeist of urban West Germany during the Cold War, others used the language in a surreal way, merely playing with its sound or graphic quality rather than using it to express meaning, as done by bands and artists such as Uncoded languages: [[Spliff (band)|Spliff]], Joachim Witt and German: [[Trio (band)|Trio]].[5]
The main centers of the NDW movement during these years were West Berlin, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Hanover and Hagen, as well as, to a lesser extent, the Frankfurt Rhein-Main Region, Limburg an der Lahn and Vienna.
From about 1980 on, the music industry began noticing the German: Neue Deutsche Welle; however, because of the idiosyncratic nature of the music, focus shifted to creating new bands more compatible with the mainstream rather than promoting existing bands. Many one-hit wonders and short-lived bands appeared and were forgotten again in rapid succession. The overly broad application of the NDW label to these bands, as well as to almost any German musicians not using English lyrics, even if their music was apparently not influenced at all by the original NDW sound (including pure rock bands like German: [[BAP (German band)|BAP]] or even Udo Lindenberg), quickly led to the decay of the entire genre when many of the original musicians turned their backs in frustration.
A revival of interest in the style in the Anglophone world occurred in 2003, with the release of DJ Hell's compilation New Deutsch.[6] The NDW has come to be acknowledged as a forerunner to later developments in dance-punk, electronic body music and electroclash.
In the 2000s, the term was used by the Berlin-based rap label German: [[Aggro Berlin]] to describe a supposed new German rap movement of which they claimed to be a part. This was the subject of German: Aggro artist Fler's 2005 single German: NDW 2005. The band German: [[Wir sind Helden]] was also influenced by the German: Neue Deutsche Welle.