Nina Hagen

14 octobre 1980
05m 19s
Ref. 00102

Information

Summary :

Portrait of German singer Nina Hagen, in concert in Brussels. She talks at length about her views on religion.

Media type :
Broadcast date :
14 octobre 1980
Source :
TF1 (Collection: IT1 13H )
Themes :

Context

Born on 11 March 1955 in East Berlin to a family of intellectuals (her father-in-law was Wolf Biermannson, the dissident poet and singer), Nina Hagen left school at the age of 16 to join the Studio für Unterhaltungsmusik (studio of popular music), form her first band, Automobil, and record a song that has become legendary in East Berlin, Du Hast den Farbfilm Vergessen.

But it was in 1976, when her family was forced to move to West Berlin, that Nina Hagen's career took another dimension. She took trips to London, shared affinities with the rising Punk movement and released two records in quick succession, Nina Hagen Band (1978) and Unbegagen (1979) which transformed her into an icon of this new alternative and internationalist scene. African Reggae, a flamboyant song mixing English and German, demented singing of decadent opera, reggae rhythms and rock arrangements, durably stayed at the tops of hit parade charts all over Europe.

Settled in the USA, Nina tried, with mixed success, to keep pursuing this singular mix of punk, funk and opera (NunSexMarkRock in 1982, Angstlos in 1983, Street in 1991). The singer made a remarkable comeback on the front of the scene in 1999 by recording a version of Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera, followed by two albums (Big Band Explosion in 2003 and Nina Hagen & Capital Dance Orchestra in 2006), dedicated to the repertoire of jazz standards and popular German and international songs of the 1930s.

Stéphane Ollivier

Transcription

(Music)
Patrice Drevet
Brussels, 7.00 pm. Nina Hagen joins a few young Belgian punks waiting in the street in front of the entrance to the hall where her concert will take place in an hour. Few words are exchanged, but a family-like atmosphere reigns. It's quite an adventure, the youth of this singer born in East Berlin, the step daughter of a dissident singer that was deported from East Germany in 1976, because playing rock music on this side of the red curtain, is much easier. A huge persona whose excentricities are forgiven once you've heard this voice, which doesn't compare with anyone else's in the world.
Nina Hagen
I identify with many persons like Valesca Gad, Edith Piaf, Patti Smith, Ariana Foster, Rosa Luxemburg and Kalte Trutchkin.
(Silence)
Nina Hagen
What do you like in Edith Piaf? I think she was a freedom fighter too. She was singing love songs and true life reports she was making.
(Music)
Patrice Drevet
What do you think about people that you see in the street that look like you?
Nina Hagen
I think: Hey! Who are you? And then, you know...
Patrice Drevet
Are there any eccentricities that you've wanted to do but haven't? [English]
Nina Hagen
Yes, I would like to see an UFO. Now, I would like to go away for a couple of days.
Patrice Drevet
Is there a question you'd like me to ask you?
Nina Hagen
Yes, ask me if I believe in God.
Patrice Drevet
Do you believe in God?
Nina Hagen
Yes, I believe in God.
(Music)
Nina Hagen
I sing about the future and about the Bible and about the end of the world and the year '99 or '98. I sing about LSD and West Berlin. I sing about hachish and Africa. I sing against heroin and hard drugs, and I sing about the [?]. I sing about Einstein and I sing against black magic. And I sing... a couple of holy songs. Very wild, of course, because holy doesn't mean what they tell you. God is something very much different than what they can tell you, because, who has found him? I don't think that people who go to church have found him. I think a couple of Buddahs or holy gurus in India or in Jamaica, they found him. We should ask these people and not the people who go to church.
(Music)