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Flake releases his first solo album with cover versions of popular Christmas classics

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Flake releases his first solo album with cover versions of popular Christmas classics

Datum
20.11.2024
Autor
Frank

Flake celebrates Christmas! A truly different Christmas album.

Just the video for the second track "Weißer Winterwald" went online:

https://youtu.be/BAozFdxRQDs

Dad, can you sing a Christmas song?

Flake releases his first solo album with cover versions of popular Christmas classics!

Christmas is hell. A torturous ordeal that drags on for months, starting in late summer with shelves full of gingerbread, filled domino stones, and cookies of all kinds, continuing through civil-war-like conditions on shopping Sundays, and finally reaching its tragic, saccharine music-accompanied low point on Christmas Eve with deceitful talk of love and peace. In other words: An annually recurring horror show, where one constantly asks oneself why one puts up with all this. On his album "Flake celebrates Christmas," the Berlin musician and author interprets the most popular Christmas songs in his own unique way, ruthlessly confronting the strange sides of the holiday. Flake receives moral and musical support from high-profile Friends & Family guests such as Joey Kelly, Farin Urlaub, Käptn Peng, Doro Pesch, Micha Rhein!

"Christmas is an analogy for me to the GDR," says Flake in his usual dry manner. "Everyone wants the best, but no one knows exactly what it’s all about. So you look forward to the gifts and just go along with it because everyone else does. When the gifts were no longer that important to me, I cared even less about the fuss surrounding it. As a young punk, I definitely didn’t want to be like everyone else and tried to completely refuse Christmas. Today I am a father. Since my children understandably do not want to share my protest, I have made peace with Christmas for their sake." A relationship that is still somewhat strained today, which Flake channels on his solo debut in a wild ride through classical, minimal electro, jazz, German rock, pop, and singer-songwriter influences. Of course, he doesn’t shy away from decorating his remakes with plenty of dissonances, breaks, and other disturbing elements. The spirit of Christmas, viewed through Flake's lens.

Since the early 1980s, Flake has been one of the most idiosyncratic, quirky, and eccentric figures in the global rock circus - whether as the keyboardist of the East German cult band Feeling B, as a founding member of Rammstein since 1994, or as an author. After the musician recorded some piano pieces for a film at the end of last year, he used the remaining studio time to record a Christmas song, on which he also took over the vocals himself. Originally intended as a quirky Christmas gift for his wife, the demo soon landed online, where it was immediately celebrated enthusiastically. Enough motivation for Flake to sit down at the piano again to record more tracks. "Fortunately, I still had the songbook from the Christmas singing at Union, a Berlin football club. The lyrics were in there. When I listened to the result, I was a bit disappointed; my voice didn’t sound that appealing over time. So I asked some of my colleagues and friends if they would maybe sing a song for me. Of course, no one was waiting for this question, and most of them didn’t have time. Others understandably wanted nothing to do with Christmas. I actually find the songs terrible too."

With "Flake celebrates Christmas," the 58-year-old now releases undoubtedly the quirkiest and strangest Christmas album of all time. As strange as he is himself. Deconstructed classics reduced to a minimum of festivity, on which Flake is heard both solo (piano, vocals) and with the support of his close circle. "I asked the musicians to put themselves in the situation where they are sitting at home and a child comes in and says: Dad, can you sing a Christmas song?" the Berliner describes his plan. However, the child-friendliness was only partially implemented, as "Flake celebrates Christmas" already reveals itself on the first track, an almost sarcastic cover of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's peace evergreen "Happy Xmas (War is over)," as a collection of songs for convinced Christmas neurotics.

And by the time we get to the following "Ihr Kinderlein, kommet," it’s clear: This will not be a normal celebration. This year, everything is different. As Flake also shows with his minimal electro version of Wham's heavy rotation hit "Last Christmas," where the Spandau German rap duo Icke & Er recalls the disappointing "Last Christmas." "I’m just jealous of `Last Christmas`. A song that is played over and over, that everyone knows and associates something with; at least if they are as old as I am. The collaboration with Icke & Er was really fun. Without us discussing it, I let the music play. They just sang over it, recorded a few interjections, and were gone again after twenty minutes. That’s exactly how it sounds now."

"My wife whistled and I went into the kitchen to make coffee," Flake briefly describes the creation process of "Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht," on which he is joined by his better half, the visual artist Jenny Rosemeyer, before the album features perhaps the most extraordinary reinterpretation: To the original melody of one of the most famous German Christmas songs, speech samples from historical speeches by Erich Honecker, Günter Schabowski, and John F. Kennedy are mixed in, while Flake is accompanied on guitar by Die Ärzte frontman Farin Urlaub. "The idea with the samples came from Farin. I immediately had a picture in my mind of a couple that had been separated for decades sitting together under the Christmas tree, letting the past years pass by. Christmas existed before and after the founding of the GDR. I’ve always wanted a song like that: A song in which the most recent German history is told as a Christmas story without singing. You can still hear the original lyrics in your head. It’s a song that you have to construct in your brain yourself. Only Farin Urlaub could come up with something so brilliant."

Bizarre blossoms also emerge from the Käptn Peng collaboration "Schneeflöckchen Weißröckchen," where jazz elements mix with contemporary classical and distant booming flak noise into a strangely festive cacophony. Flake's comment on the state of the world. "We learned in school how on Christmas Eve during World War I, soldiers crawled out of the trenches and came to the enemy positions with cakes and gifts to celebrate Christmas together. They drank together, talked, and showed each other pictures of their girlfriends. The next day, they couldn’t shoot at each other anymore because they had gotten to know each other. Not even on the day after that. Eventually, the battalions had to be exchanged.

"Fortunately, I’m not responsible for the gifts; my wife takes care of that very proactively. When I see something nice, I always give it away right away, and then I have nothing left for Christmas. I also don’t want to cook for Christmas. Either everything gets devoured in five minutes, or the kids aren’t hungry or don’t want my food. Then it was all for nothing because I’m already full after cooking." For that, Knorkator frontman Stumpen conjures up another highlight of the absurd with the solemn piano ballad "Tausend Sterne sind ein Dom," before Flake puts the festive mood to a heavy test with the weighty "O du fröhliche" together with former East punk icon Andrea Hüber-Rhone. After a reduced goosebumps version of "Alle Jahre wieder," Flake and In Extremo singer Micha Rhein celebrate a true rogue Christmas with "Es ist ein Ros entsprungen," before he concludes fittingly with Joey Kelly and hard rock queen Doro Pesch telling the touching "Fairytale Of New York" to lively Irish folk sounds. A constellation that can probably only work in the wondrous Flake cosmos. "When I asked Joey if he wanted to record a song for the album, he suggested a duet with Doro Pesch. Maybe after this album, more colleagues will get in touch, and we’ll make a second part. And if anyone still has no idea for a Christmas gift for their loved ones and their enemies this year, here it is. Christmas comes around again. And so do I."

 All proceeds from “Flake celebrates Christmas” will be donated 100% to the Arche.

Tracklisting:

1. Happy Xmas (War is over) - Flake

2. Ihr Kinderlein, kommet - Flake

3. Letzte Weihnacht - Icke & Er

4. Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht - Flake feat. Jenny Rosemeyer

5. Süßer die Glocken nie klingen - Farin Urlaub

6. Guten Abend, schön Abend - Flake

7. Schneeflöckchen Weißröckchen - Käptn Peng

8. Freu' Dich (Leise rieselt der Schnee) - Tausend Tonnen Obst

9. Weißer Winterwald - Flake

10. Oh, es riecht gut - Flake

11. Tausend Sterne sind ein Dom - Stumpen (Knorkator)

12. O du fröhliche - Flake feat. Andrea Hüber-Rhone

13. Feliz Navidad - Flake

14. Es ist ein Ros entsprungen - Michael Robert Rhein (In Extremo)

15. Alle Jahre wieder - Flake

16. Fairytale of New York - Doro Pesch & Joey Kelly


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