This page will contain discussion groups about Falco, as they become available.Falco (musician)Falco (Johann Hölzel), Austrian pop-star whose albums became #1 multiple times on the charts in both Europe and North America during the 1980sFalco (February 19, 1957 - February 6, 1998) was the stage name of the classical music prodigy turned Austrian rock star, Johann Hölzel (also Hans Hölzel). He was born in Vienna and studied at the Vienna Music Conservatory. Before becoming an international popstar, he was bass-player in the Austrian hard-rock band Drahdiwaberl. As a solo artist, Falco had taken an interest in the sounds and rhythms of rap music, and was one of the first Europeans to incorporate rap stylings into pop and rock music. He was best known internationally for the rap-styled Rock Me Amadeus (inspired in part by the Oscar-winning film Amadeus) from his album Falco 3, which became a worldwide hit in 1986 and reached Number 1 on the US charts, arguably the first rap song to achieve this feat. ("Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice from 1991 is usually cited as the first true rap record to top the Billboard Hot 100.) Other well-known international hits include Der Kommissar (a partial rap song about drug consumption) from the 1982 album Einzelhaft and Vienna Calling from Falco 3. An English cover version of Der Kommissar by After the Fire became a Top 5 hit in the United States. The song Jeanny became somewhat of a controversy when it was released in Germany and the Netherlands. Because it was told from the point of view of a rapist, several DJs and radio stations refused to play it. He died of severe head injuries received following his SUV's collision with a bus near the resort of Puerto Plata, in the Dominican Republic at age 40. Tributes to FalcoIn 2000, the musical Falco Meets Amadeus was produced and staged in Germany. In 2002, the American comic rock group, The Bloodhound Gang dedicated their song, "Mope" to him. The spoken intro jokingly refers to Falco as "a gang bangin' thug" and "money makin' playa". While the tribute may have been less than 100% sincere, there is no denying that Falco's combination of pop melody with rap-styled vocal delivery has proven highly influential in recent years. Albums/Discography
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An English cover version of Der Kommissar by After the Fire became a Top 5 hit in the United States. In 1999, the R&B world paid its respects to Gaye in a tribute album, Marvin Is 60. Other well-known international hits include Der Kommissar (a partial rap song about drug consumption) from the 1982 album Einzelhaft and Vienna Calling from Falco 3. Marvin Gaye was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. ("Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice from 1991 is usually cited as the first true rap record to top the Billboard Hot 100.). Former Motown alum Diana Ross also paid tribute with her Top 10 pop single "Missing You" around the same time. He was best known internationally for the rap-styled Rock Me Amadeus (inspired in part by the Oscar-winning film Amadeus) from his album Falco 3, which became a worldwide hit in 1986 and reached Number 1 on the US charts, arguably the first rap song to achieve this feat. A year after his death, The Commodores made reference to Gaye's death in their 1985 song "Night Shift". As a solo artist, Falco had taken an interest in the sounds and rhythms of rap music, and was one of the first Europeans to incorporate rap stylings into pop and rock music. In 1983, the British group Spandau Ballet recorded the single "True" as a partial tribute to both Gaye and the Motown sound he helped establish. Before becoming an international popstar, he was bass-player in the Austrian hard-rock band Drahdiwaberl. Even before Gaye died, there had already been tributes to the singer. He was born in Vienna and studied at the Vienna Music Conservatory. died of pneumonia in 1998. Falco (February 19, 1957 - February 6, 1998) was the stage name of the classical music prodigy turned Austrian rock star, Johann Hölzel (also Hans Hölzel). Marvin Gay, Sr. Verdammt wir leben noch (2000). After some posthumous releases cemented his memory in the popular consciousness, Gaye was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. Out Of The Dark (1998). kill him instead of having to commit suicide. Nachtflug (1992). On April 1, 1984, one day before his forty-fifth birthday, Gaye was shot and killed by his father in an argument, becoming a famous victim of filicide. Gaye's relatives claimed that he had purposely pushed his father to the edge so that he could have Marvin, Sr. The Remix Hit Collection (1991). He threatened to commit suicide several times after numerous bitter arguments with his father, Marvin, Sr. Data de Groove (1990). Gaye's refound fame pushed him even deeper into drug addiction and he attempted to isolate himself by moving into his parent's house. Wiener Blut (1988). Midnight Love included "Sexual Healing", one of Gaye's most famous songs, and his final big hit. Emotional(1986). He negotiated a release from the label and signed with Columbia Records in 1982 and released Midnight Love the same year. Falco 3 (1985). When Motown issued the album in 1981, Gaye was livid: he accused Motown of editing and remixing the album without his consent, altering the album art he requested, and removing the question mark from the title (rendering the intended irony imperceptable). Junge Römer (1984). In Europe, Gaye began working on In Our Lifetime?, a complex and deeply personal record. Einzelhaft (1982). Tax problems and drug addictions haunted him, and after failing to get Motown labelmate Smokey Robinson to loan him money to take care of the tax issues, Gaye was forced to move to Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1981. After a failed single and a rapidly failing new marriage to a teenage girl, Gaye moved to Hawaii. The result was 1978's Here, My Dear, a deeply personal album that so clearly detailed the sour points of Gaye's former marriage that Anna Gordy considered suing him for invading her privacy. As part of the divorce settlement, Gaye agreed to record a new album and remit a portion of the royalties to Anna as alimony. Gaye released I Want You by himself as his marriage finally ended in 1975. Gaye refused to sing if he couldn't smoke in the studio, and the duets album was recorded by overdubing Ross and Gaye at separate studio session dates. Gaye, a longtime marijuana user, refused to put out his joints out for the pregnant Ross, who immediately complained to Berry Gordy about the issue. Gaye teamed up with Diana Ross for Diana & Martin, an album of duets that began recording in 1971, while Ross was pregnant with her first child, Rhonda. 1973's Let's Get It On was a sexually and romantically charged album that was very successful on the charts and remains "a record unparalleled in its sheer sensuality and carnal energy." [2] (http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:4sj20r8ac48n). It has been called "the most important and passionate record to come out of soul music, delivered by one of its finest voices." [1] (http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:ui6xlfwe5cqu~T1). What's Going On became one of the most memorable soul albums of all time, and, based upon its themes, the concept album became the next new frontier for soul music. Gordy eventually gave in, certain that the record would flop; What's Going On ended up having three Top Ten singles. Gaye stood his ground; he wanted to be able to express himself, and not Gordy's or Motown's version of himself, on record. He considered the record far too political and unfamiliar in sound to be commercially successful. When Gaye delivered the album and single for release, Berry Gordy refused to release the album. The partygoers are portrayed by Mel Farr and Lem Barney of the Detroit Lions, whose acquantances Gaye had made during his short-lived football career. On the finished track, as Gaye musically ponders on the state of the world, a party can be heard going on in the background, from which Gaye's voice is purposefully detached. Four Tops member Renaldo "Obie" Benson and songwriter Al Clevland wrote an initial rough version of the song, which Gaye took and collaborated with them to finish. The album's first single, also titled "What's Going On", addressed the political and social troubles of the world in a soulful, introspective way, contrasting to the more dramatic socially concious records made by Sly & the Family Stone and The Temptations over the previous three years. Gaye was inspired to write about the war by his brother, Frankie Gay, who had just returned from the front lines. The record was among the first soul records to place emphasis on political and social concerns such as environmentalism, political corruption, drug abuse, and the Vietnam War. What's Going On was a politically-charged and deeply personal Motown album, notable for including elements of jazz and classical music. As a result, he began recording the tracks that would eventually comprise his best-known work, What's Going On, handling all of his own production and most of his own songwriting. He tried various spirit-lifting diversions, including a short-lived attempt at a football career with the Detroit Lions, but continued to feel pain with no form of self-expression. Gaye subsequently went into self-seclusion, and did not record or perform for nearly two years. Tammi Terrell died of brain cancer on March 17, 1970. Meanwhile, Gaye's marriage was crumbling and he continued to feel irrelevant, singing endlessly about love while popular music underwent a revolution and began addressing social and political issues. Terrell's illness began a depression in Gaye; when his Norman Whitfield-produced "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" hit #1 on the US pop charts for seven weeks in 1968/1969 and became the biggest seling single in Motown history to that point, he refused to acknowledge his success, feeling that it was undeserved. By the time on the final Gaye/Terrell album, Easy, in 1969, Terrell's vocals were performed mostly by Valerie Simpson. Half of the songs on You're All I Need were actual Gaye/Terrell duets, but the other half were Terrell solo songs with Gaye's vocals overdubbed onto them. Motown decided to try and carry on with the Gaye/Terrell recordings, issuing the You're All I Need album in 1968, which featured the hits "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing" and "You're All I Need to Get By". She was later diagnosed with a brain tumor, and her health continued to deterirate. On October 14, 1967, Terrell collapsed into Gaye's arms onstage while they were performing at the Hampden-Sydney College homecoming in Virginia. Real life couple Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson provided the writing and production for the Gaye/Terrell records; while Gaye and Terrell themselves were not lovers, they convincingly portrayed lovers on record. Terrell and Gaye in particular had a good rapport, and their first album together, 1967's United, birthed the massive hits "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" and "Your Precious Love". A number of Gaye's hit singles for Motown were duets with female artists such as Mary Wells, Kim Weston and Tammi Terrell; the first Gaye/Wells album, 1964's Together, was Gaye's first charting album. He wanted instead to be a pop singer in the vein of Nat King Cole or Frank Sinatra, but settled for a blend of the styles of those artists and performers such as Jackie Wilson and his role model Sam Cooke. "Pride and Joy" (1963) became a smash hit, but Gaye was discontented with the role he felt Motown Records kept him locked in, as a romantic balladeer and crooner, aiming always for chart success in the singles market. 1963's "Hitch Hike" and "Can I Get a Witness" were also minor hits. The single was written by Smokey Robinson, who created the title as a sly reference to the sometimes moody Gaye. Marvin Gaye's first three Motown singles were all unsuccessful; he fnally scored a minor hit with his fourth attempt, "Stubborn Kind of Fellow", in 1962. Not only part of the Motown family, he also became part of the Gordy family when he married Berry Gorsy's sister Anna in 1961. Popular and well-liked around Motown, Gaye already carried himself in a sophisiticated, gentleman-like manner, and had little need of training from Motown's in-house Artist Development director Miss Maxine Powell. 2", and co-wrote Marth & the Vandellas' 1964 hit "Dancing in the Street" and The Marvelettes' 1965 hit "Beechwood 4-5789". Most notably, he is the drummer on Little Stevie Wonder's 1963 #1 hit "Fingertips--Pt. As a session drummer and part-time songwriter, Gaye worked with The Miracles, The Contours, Martha & the Vandellas, and other Motown acts. of Motown Records. After a concert in Detroit, Michigan, Gaye was recruited for a solo career by Berry Gordy, Jr. "Mama Loocie", relased in 1959 on Chess Records, was Gaye's first single with the Moonglows. With Bo Diddley, The Rainbows released a single, "Wyatt Earp" in 1958 on Okeh, and were then recruited by Harvey Fuqua to become The Moonglows. After high school, Gaye joined the United States Air Force and then, after being discharged, joined several doo wop groups, settling on The Rainbows, a popular local group in D.C. Gaye got his start singing in the church choir, later learning to play the piano and drums to escape from his physically abusive father. The church has very strict codes of conduct and does not celebrate any holidays. Gaye was born Marvin Pentz Gay, Jr. (He later added the "e" to imitate Sam Cooke, who did the same) in Washington, D.C., the son of the Reverend Marvin Gay, Sr., an ordained minister in the House of God, a conservative Christian sect which takes some elements of Pentecostalism and Orthodox Judaism. Kelly. This achievement would pave the way for the successes of later self-sufficient singer-songwriter-producers in Black music, such as Michael Jackson, Luther Vandross, Babyface, and R. Subsequent releases proved that Gaye, who had been a part-time songwriter for Motown artists during his early years with the label, could write and produce his own singles without having to rely on the Motown system. Gaye forced Motown to release his 1971 album What's Going On, which is today hailed as one of the best soul albums of all time. Along with Stevie Wonder, Gaye is notable for fighting the hitmaking but creatively restrictive Motown record-making process, in which performers and songwriters/record producers were generally kept in separate camps. His best records are still highly regarded, and he is often cited as one of the finest singers of his era. Marvin Gaye (Marvin Pentz Gay, Jr.) (April 2, 1939 - April 1, 1984) was an African American pop, soul and R&B singer who gained international fame during the 1960s and 1970s as an artist on the Motown label. New York/Philadelphia: Basic Civitas. ISBN 0-465-01769-X. Mercy, Mercy Me: The Art, Loves, and Demons of Marvin Gaye. Dyson, Michael Eric (2004). New York: Harmony Books. The Top 100 Rock 'n' Roll Albums of All Time. Gambaccini, Paul (1987). ISBN 030681191X. Cambridge, Mass: Da Capo Press. Divided Soul: The Life of Marvin Gaye. Ritz, David (1986). ISBN 037-550062-6. New York: Random House. Motown : Music, Money, Sex, and Power. Posner, Gerald (2002). Detroit Free Press. Marvin Gaye: a life marked by complexity (http://www.freep.com/motownat40/archives/040884mo.htm). Kim (April 8, 1984). Heron, W. 1973: "Stop, Look, Listen (To Your Heart)". 1973: "You're a Special Part of Me". 1970: "The Onion Song" (actually performed by Gaye and Valerie Simpson). 1969: "Good Lovin' Ain't Easy to Coem By". 1968: "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing". 1968: "You're All I Need to Get By". 1967: "Your Precious Love". 1967: "Ain't No Mountain High Enough". 1966: "It Takes Two". 1982: "Sexual Healing". 1977: "Got To Give It Up". 1976: "I Want You". 1974: "Distant Lover". 1973: "Let's Get It On". 1972: "Trouble Man". 1971: "Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)". 1971: "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)". 1971: "What's Going On". 1969: "Too Busy Thinking About My Baby". 1968: "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (US #1). 1965: "Ain't That Peculiar". 1964: "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)". 1963: "Pride & Joy". 1963: "Can I Get a Witness". 1973: Diana & Marvin. 1969: Easy. 1968: You're All I Need. 1967: United. 1964: Together. 1982: Midnight Love. 1981: In Our Lifetime. 1978: Here, My Dear. 1977: Live at the London Palladium. 1976: I Want You. 1974: Marvin Gaye Live!. 1973: Let's Get It On. 1972: Trouble Man (soundtrack). 1971: What's Going On. 1970: That's The Way Love Is. 1969: Marvin Gaye & His Girls. 1969: M.P.G.. 1968: In the Groove (reissued in 1969 as I Heard It Through the Grapevine). 1966: The Moods of Marvin Gaye. 1965: A Tribute To The Great Nat "King" Cole. 1965: How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You. 1964: When I'm Alone I Cry. 1964: Hello Broadway. 1963: Recorded Live on Stage. 1963: That Stubborn Kinda Fellow. 1961: The Soulful Moods of Marvin Gaye. |