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@@lamaglama6231 But the titles were already very adapted, so you couldn't call it techno. I don't know that real techno music would have ended up in the charts. At least ranked high...
Eurodance was so extremely popular that a lot of bands formed just for the money which was its downfall. Those songs are still popular today. I've been listening to them for 22 years now as they are positive and harmonic.
With a little bit looking up I found out how the list was made: There is a german site, for the yearly german charts, to look up, which have been the most famous songs in germany, for every year. After that he looked up each Artist/Band, if they have been german artists or been produced by germans. (Sometimes, with non german artists, but german production behind it.) And the Top 5 for each year made it onto the list.
Warum by Tic Tiac Toe is a very tragic song. A friend of one of the girls died of a drug overdose. The text can be translated to: "And ahy? Only for the kick, for the moment? And why? Only for a piece of the false luck? And why? Only for the kick, for the moment? And why? You will never come back, come back." Hope this gives you a little bit of an understanding, even if my translation is not so good. Greetings from Germany
What you call techno was Eurodance. Techno became very big very quickly in the early 1990s. For many years, the largest open air techno party in the world took place in Berlin every year, with many music trucks. Up to 2.5 million techno fans attend these events. (Raver) came. When the big open air event was over, the rest of the weekend continued in the techno clubs. The ravers celebrated most of the weekend without sleeping.
Tic Tac Toe broke up at one point and called themselves Tic Tac Two. Then a girl named Sara Brahms joined them. And dang shortly before that i dated her. But silly me broke up. lol
i would say this list is simply based on the charts like what songs stayed for the longest on top of the charts over the year. So, like how often these songs were sold. And then you sure have some genres that are so big like Schlagerr, which mostly older people listen to and have a lot of artists to choose that just one climbing up is rare. And then you have genres what the youth listens to and pushes mostly in the charts. Like tekkno which got really big at the end of the 80s and with the 90s. Nowadays it went morre niche, even if some artists like scooter and blümchen still exist. Some german hiphop started in the 90s like you saw here with Fanta 4. And then you have the german punk/rock/metal like Tote Hosen, Die Ärzte, Rammstein, Udo Lindenberg and Scorpions. Most of this can be described as beeing part of the "Neue Deutsche Welle", meaning New german wave. It started at the End of the 70s when people tried a lot of new stuff with synthesizers and other technological advances in a lot of diffrent genres. You had One Hit Wonders like Major Tom, Da Da, Da & other songs that were in this video. Or artists with a few more hits like the austrain Falco, Nena, etc. And then these songs got played in the radio, on MTV, on the new founded chanel ViVa that became a very succesfull german version of MTV for youths at the end off the 90s to the early 2000s. ViVa basicly controlled the charts and the german music industry later, what was shown there got big.
These were definitely best sold lists as you can see from the first song. It's "Volksmusik", the German equivalent to country music but worse. Only old people like my grandmother bought them, which also made them a guarantor for sales.
There are some minor mistakes in the video, but not so important. For example at 2:10 you don't hear Diether Krebs & Gundula with "Ich bin der Martin, ne" but the follow up song called "Santamarghuaritanobiledimôntepulciano - du kleines Fischerdorf". Twenty 4 Seven are dutch and not german, only Captain Hollywood as a part of this group is from Germany, but maybe that counts, don't know. Mo-Do is Fabio Frittelli from Italy, also their producers (Claudio Zennaro, Fulvio Zafret ...) are all from Italy, only the song is in german language.
6:18 Wir haben hier in Deutschland natürlich auch internationale Musik gehört, und die ganzen verschiedenen Musikrichtungen machen ja auch Sinn. Schließlich hört man ja in den Clubs oder „Disco’s“ auch alles Mögliche, soll ja nicht nur auf einen bestimmten Klientel abzielen.
Not fully right, since it contains german production, with non german singers. As an example: Snap! is a German Eurodance group formed in 1989 by producers Michael Münzing and Luca Anzilotti. The act has been through a number of lineup changes over the years, including American singers, songwriters, and rappers Thea Austin, Turbo B, Niki Haris, and Penny Ford. 1992 No. 1 "Rhythm is a dancer", has Thea Austin singing.
yeah, i find the original video lacking in lenght. this clips are way too short and often even miss the parts the song is known for, or get cut midsentence. if you dont know the songs its really hard to judge, i couldnt xD
This is not even a list of german charts, when you check the chart yearbook from Media Control (German Billboard Top 100) you can see that totally other songs make it in the annual Top5 it is only a fake german lover song video like so many others 😂
In der Einleitung des Urprungsvideo wird die Zusammenstellung erklärt... Deutsche Produktion (z.B. La Bouche - Frank Farian), Deutsch als Muttersprache (deshalb Falco & DJ Bobo) und Deutsch gesungen (Mo-Do sind Italiener)...noch was vergessen? Also es musste eben einen "Deutschen" Bezug haben um in diese "Charts" zu kommen. Alle anderen Internationale Titel wurden herausgenommen...
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Bro this was not Techno , this was Eurodance.... 🤟
I wouldn't consider Marusha or Members of Mayday Eurodance
@@lamaglama6231 But the titles were already very adapted, so you couldn't call it techno.
I don't know that real techno music would have ended up in the charts. At least ranked high...
@@tobiasmuth2372 Agree. Maybe Pop-Techno or just electronic music.
I love the music!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Tic tac toe were a popular girls band at that time. Warum? is one of their best song. It is about a friend who died of drugs.
Liquido fand ich am besten zu der zeit
A huge Tic Tac Toe fan here. It was a good "band".
3:01 This song is from the German film, “DAS BOOT” this film was nominated for 6 Oscars.
yes and no.
It's the techno remake of the original soundtrack,
Not the originalvsoundtrack itself.
Techno parties (raves) were very popular in Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, etc. at that time. Check out the Love Parade in Berlin in the 90s.
... or the Streetparade in Zurich.
Love Parade, the good old times ❤
ebm and european techno is pretty much a german invention, it started in Frankfurt germany in the early 80s
Eurodance was so extremely popular that a lot of bands formed just for the money which was its downfall. Those songs are still popular today. I've been listening to them for 22 years now as they are positive and harmonic.
With a little bit looking up I found out how the list was made:
There is a german site, for the yearly german charts, to look up, which have been the most famous songs in germany, for every year.
After that he looked up each Artist/Band, if they have been german artists or been produced by germans. (Sometimes, with non german artists, but german production behind it.)
And the Top 5 for each year made it onto the list.
Warum by Tic Tiac Toe is a very tragic song. A friend of one of the girls died of a drug overdose.
The text can be translated to:
"And ahy? Only for the kick, for the moment?
And why? Only for a piece of the false luck?
And why? Only for the kick, for the moment?
And why? You will never come back, come back."
Hope this gives you a little bit of an understanding, even if my translation is not so good.
Greetings from Germany
The song "tears dont lie" by Mark 'Oh use the melody of the 1974 hit "Tränen lügen nicht" (in english: tears don't lie) by Michael Holm
What you call techno was Eurodance. Techno became very big very quickly in the early 1990s. For many years, the largest open air techno party in the world took place in Berlin every year, with many music trucks. Up to 2.5 million techno fans attend these events. (Raver) came. When the big open air event was over, the rest of the weekend continued in the techno clubs. The ravers celebrated most of the weekend without sleeping.
"tears don't lie" is basically the textless , "techno-fied" version of a Schlager-song of the early seventies:
"Tränen lügen nicht" by Michael Holm
I mean Scooter the greatest Tec Band of all times was going big in the 90s
The German charts have been determined by Media Control since 1977. It's based on sold albums or singles and in more recent times on music streams.
Tic Tac Toe broke up at one point and called themselves Tic Tac Two. Then a girl named Sara Brahms joined them. And dang shortly before that i dated her. But silly me broke up. lol
i would say this list is simply based on the charts like what songs stayed for the longest on top of the charts over the year.
So, like how often these songs were sold. And then you sure have some genres that are so big like Schlagerr, which mostly older people listen to and have a lot of artists to choose that just one climbing up is rare.
And then you have genres what the youth listens to and pushes mostly in the charts. Like tekkno which got really big at the end of the 80s and with the 90s. Nowadays it went morre niche, even if some artists like scooter and blümchen still exist.
Some german hiphop started in the 90s like you saw here with Fanta 4.
And then you have the german punk/rock/metal like Tote Hosen, Die Ärzte, Rammstein, Udo Lindenberg and Scorpions.
Most of this can be described as beeing part of the "Neue Deutsche Welle", meaning New german wave. It started at the End of the 70s when people tried a lot of new stuff with synthesizers and other technological advances in a lot of diffrent genres.
You had One Hit Wonders like Major Tom, Da Da, Da & other songs that were in this video. Or artists with a few more hits like the austrain Falco, Nena, etc.
And then these songs got played in the radio, on MTV, on the new founded chanel ViVa that became a very succesfull german version of MTV for youths at the end off the 90s to the early 2000s.
ViVa basicly controlled the charts and the german music industry later, what was shown there got big.
These were definitely best sold lists as you can see from the first song. It's "Volksmusik", the German equivalent to country music but worse. Only old people like my grandmother bought them, which also made them a guarantor for sales.
Mark Oh have so many eurodance hits..
so why exactly did you not view the last song from 1999? It was Mambo Nr 5. Did i miss anything about that band?
There are some minor mistakes in the video, but not so important. For example at 2:10 you don't hear Diether Krebs & Gundula with "Ich bin der Martin, ne" but the follow up song called "Santamarghuaritanobiledimôntepulciano - du kleines Fischerdorf". Twenty 4 Seven are dutch and not german, only Captain Hollywood as a part of this group is from Germany, but maybe that counts, don't know. Mo-Do is Fabio Frittelli from Italy, also their producers (Claudio Zennaro, Fulvio Zafret ...) are all from Italy, only the song is in german language.
❤ Deutschland ❤
So facettenreich, so schön bunt 🎇
6:18 Wir haben hier in Deutschland natürlich auch internationale Musik gehört, und die ganzen verschiedenen Musikrichtungen machen ja auch Sinn. Schließlich hört man ja in den Clubs oder „Disco’s“ auch alles Mögliche, soll ja nicht nur auf einen bestimmten Klientel abzielen.
Purple Schulz - Sehnsucht
my favorit, or
Ich und Ich
Peter Fox - Haus am See
....
Blind Gardien Bart Song
Crematory - Fly
You should do 90's eurodance hits
The first are related to Bruce Willis!
Name of them: Wildecker Herzbuben from Germany
That's what we Germans are, once this and then that
Eurodance the best 🎉
You have to listen to the U96 theme its the best electro thingi song
Pretty please
Most English Song was made by German. There wasn’t singing any american in the songs if I’m not wrong.
Not fully right, since it contains german production, with non german singers. As an example:
Snap! is a German Eurodance group formed in 1989 by producers Michael Münzing and Luca Anzilotti. The act has been through a number of lineup changes over the years, including American singers, songwriters, and rappers Thea Austin, Turbo B, Niki Haris, and Penny Ford.
1992 No. 1 "Rhythm is a dancer", has Thea Austin singing.
Melanie Thornton was a US artist! She was the singer on La Bouche 1995 "Be my Lover"...
You are judging songs after hearing 5 seconds?
yeah, i find the original video lacking in lenght. this clips are way too short and often even miss the parts the song is known for, or get cut midsentence. if you dont know the songs its really hard to judge, i couldnt xD
This is not even a list of german charts, when you check the chart yearbook from Media Control (German Billboard Top 100) you can see that totally other songs make it in the annual Top5 it is only a fake german lover song video like so many others 😂
Also ich habe gerade spaßeshalber nachgeguckt. Wenn ich Sachen wie Phil Collins Rausfilter, kommen schon diese Stücke.
In der Einleitung des Urprungsvideo wird die Zusammenstellung erklärt... Deutsche Produktion (z.B. La Bouche - Frank Farian), Deutsch als Muttersprache (deshalb Falco & DJ Bobo) und Deutsch gesungen (Mo-Do sind Italiener)...noch was vergessen? Also es musste eben einen "Deutschen" Bezug haben um in diese "Charts" zu kommen. Alle anderen Internationale Titel wurden herausgenommen...