It's about what?! Vocal Coach analyses and reacts to Nena - 99 Luftballons

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  • Опубликовано: 17 апр 2024
  • 🎵 Book a Lesson with Beth email beth@bethroars.com
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    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Vocal Coach reacts to reaction to analyses analyzes analysis of breaks down Nena - 99 Luftballons (99 Red Balloons)
    Original Video without interruption: • NENA | 99 Luftballons ...
    Check out NENA here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nena_(band)
    NENA, the iconic West German band, skyrocketed to international fame in the 1980s with their catchy hit "99 Luftballons", a song that became a global anthem against the Cold War tensions. Fronted by the charismatic lead singer Nena Kerner, the band's unique blend of new wave and synth-pop elements captivated audiences worldwide, making them a staple in the music scene of the era. Known for their electrifying performances and distinctive sound, NENA's music continues to resonate with fans old and new. Their influence extends beyond just one hit; the band's extensive discography showcases a range of songs that encapsulate the spirit of the 80s while remaining timeless. Whether you're a long-time fan or discovering NENA for the first time, their music offers a nostalgic journey through a pivotal period in music history.
    "99 Luftballons" by NENA is an iconic anthem that transcended its West German origins to become a worldwide phenomenon in the 1980s. With its infectious melody and poignant anti-war message, the song captures the zeitgeist of the Cold War era, symbolizing the tension and the fragile peace of the time. Sung in German, its universal appeal broke language barriers, making it a staple on international charts and solidifying NENA's place in music history. The track's distinctive synth-pop sound, coupled with Nena Kerner's captivating vocals, continues to resonate with audiences across generations, making "99 Luftballons" not just a hit song, but a cultural milestone. Its enduring popularity is a testament to the song's ability to convey powerful messages through catchy, engaging music, making it a must-listen for fans of classic hits and music historians alike.
    Songwriter: Uwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen
    Lyricist: Carlo Karges, Kevin McAlea
    Producers: Reinhold Heil, Manfred Praeker
    Genre: Rock, new wave, synth pop, Neue deutsche well,
    Origin: West Berlin, West Germany
    Performed by NENA
    * Gabriele Susanne Kerner (Nena) - lead vocals
    * Carlo Karges (died 2002) - guitar, backing vocals
    * Jürgen Dehmel - bass, Chapman Stick, keyboards, synthesizer
    * Rolf Brendel - drums, percussion
    * Uwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen - keyboards, synthesizers, keytar, backing and lead vocals
    Date and Location
    1984 West Berlin
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Social Media
    Facebook: bethroars
    Twitter: @bethroars
    Insta: @bethroars
    #vocalcoach #nena #99luftballons #vocalanalysis #99redballoons #brianjohnson #germanmusic #berlinwall #musichistory #musicproduction #VocalMastery

Комментарии • 511

  • @BethRoars
    @BethRoars  16 дней назад +13

    🎵 Book a Lesson with Beth email beth@bethroars.com
    📖 Get your signed copy of my album Fable here: www.bethroars.com/shop
    ☀ Find me on Spotify: open.spotify.com/artist/1W0He1MTuQoG0Yt2ccmhyL?si=b5qm82DmSRip8L4abe2-nw
    🥁 Become a Patreon Supporter: www.patreon.com/bethroars

  • @bradyblackburn7877
    @bradyblackburn7877 12 дней назад +91

    This is why absolutely nothing scares us aging GenXers. Even our pop songs were about nuclear Armageddon.

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 11 дней назад +9

      Heck - I was _part_ of it; in the USAF on a nuclear bomber base. Random weekly drills... when the alarms went off if we weren't otherwise engaged, we'd all turn and look to the alert pad full of armed and ready aircraft, and wait to see what they did. If they ever rolled off the pad and towards the runway, we would know that we had mere minutes left before the sub-launched cruise missiles came howling in over the Eastern horizon. We had a plan for that, too - it involved bottles of champaign, plastic cups and cheap sunglasses. We would lift a toast to the incoming missiles, because we wouldn't have time for anything else...

    • @bradyblackburn7877
      @bradyblackburn7877 11 дней назад +5

      @@MrJest2 Respect.

    • @martinwillfor1416
      @martinwillfor1416 9 дней назад +8

      Yep, another good one is "Forever Young" by Alphaville.

    • @eatsmylifeYT
      @eatsmylifeYT 7 дней назад +5

      "Dancing With Tears in My Eyes" is also a good one. While it's not about nuclear war, it's about a nuclear disaster.

    • @robertfitzjohn4755
      @robertfitzjohn4755 5 дней назад +2

      Yup. Enola Gay (by ELO), Russians (by Sting) and so on.
      OK, youngsters - so global warming is bad, but since I was born there have been several incidents (especially the Cuban missile crisis) that almost led to nuclear war.
      Even my first Dungeons & Dragons campaign was set in a post-Armageddon world, near a monster-infested wilderness that had once been London.

  • @PaulBudge
    @PaulBudge 11 дней назад +54

    I was stationed in West Germany from '83 to '85. You couldn't turn on a radio, govt. run or AFN without hearing this every hour. The balloon reference struck a chord with service men and women because at the time, a common euphemism for the initiation of any hostilities was, "When the balloon goes up."

    • @davidmacey5422
      @davidmacey5422 9 дней назад +3

      I was at Wildenwrath in 84 and I know exactly what you mean (Not in forces, was touring playing Rugby)

    • @eatsmylifeYT
      @eatsmylifeYT 7 дней назад +1

      Oh, wow, that's interesting!

    • @Thisandthat8908
      @Thisandthat8908 4 дня назад

      a sort of Lili Marleen. Which has a fascinating story.

  • @izzsy
    @izzsy 13 дней назад +143

    I´m german and this song is still very popular in germany. I love your videos :) Your knowledge about this song/the time which it is about is great!

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 13 дней назад +5

      @@bantharider5879 I agree. So glad the wall fell in 89, and the East Germans could be free again and reunited with the West Germans.

    • @erik5374
      @erik5374 12 дней назад +8

      I’m Dutch and this song is also still popular in die Niederlände.
      There was quite a lot of great songs from Germany back then.
      And some of those songs (including this one) are very up to date.
      No matter how happy it sounds, it’s about a devistating war, caused by a misinterpretation because of 99 balloons. Could happen now in Ukraine or Israel, for real.
      This video was recorded in the Netherlands in the town where I work.

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 12 дней назад +2

      @@erik5374 That is very interesting. Good information. I liked the German Band Out of Focus.

    • @erik5374
      @erik5374 12 дней назад +1

      @@willieboy3011 Focus is Dutch.
      The singer is from very near the place the place where the video was shot.

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 12 дней назад +1

      @@erik5374 That is a different band. Out of Focus is a German band. They are on RUclips some.

  • @blue-fj9ky
    @blue-fj9ky 12 дней назад +54

    The story of the song had a happy ending. A few years later the wall came down, peacefully, and millions of people were liberated!
    May that happen again in troubled parts of our world.

    • @3DJapan
      @3DJapan 12 дней назад +2

      I remember seeing it on TV and how happy it was.

    • @olli1068
      @olli1068 11 дней назад +2

      Yes, those were times of hope that things were turning to the better. May those come back! 🙏

    • @anna-ranja4573
      @anna-ranja4573 10 дней назад +1

      And without use of weapons. The tanks waited around the demonstrating people. I was in front of my TV in these days and prayed that all would go well.

    • @Paul-ph7zb
      @Paul-ph7zb 10 дней назад +2

      the people in east Germany liberated themselfes, details matter.

    • @KevinPatrick-ov3ot
      @KevinPatrick-ov3ot 8 дней назад +2

      Fast forward 30 years and people are wanting USSR back in power

  • @zzekezzypt
    @zzekezzypt 10 дней назад +16

    She did a duet with Kim Wilde later on, "anyplace, anywhere, anytime" - in german, "irgendwie, irgendwo, irgendwann", well worth listening to. Nena sings in german and Kim in english.

    • @eisikater1584
      @eisikater1584 8 часов назад

      Will be looking for that. I like them both. Thanks for the information, didn't know about that.

  • @shanehebert396
    @shanehebert396 13 дней назад +49

    I (in USA) was a kid when this was released. It brings back tons of nostalgia. The song is great all around but for me, specifically, one of the main things I remember is that it was the first (that I can remember, at least) song in the 80s genres that I heard that was in German. Pretty much everything I had heard up until then had been in English (USA, UK, or other places but the songs lyrics I heard were in the English language) so I was pretty much oblivious that 80s music was literally 'happening' all over the world even in non-English speaking countries. It made me look for more German 80s music, in particular, which was fantastic.

    • @jimwiater2867
      @jimwiater2867 12 дней назад +3

      Der Kommissar by Falco came out 3 years before in 1981. English version came out in 1983.

    • @caligo7918
      @caligo7918 12 дней назад

      @@jimwiater2867 there was so much music translated and rewritten between German and English to reach a wider audience.

    • @svjaz
      @svjaz 4 дня назад

      In 1960, a song in German with the Austrian singer Lolita made it to number 5 in the US Billboard Hot 100: Seemann (deine Heimat ist das Meer) English: Sailor (Your Home is the Sea). See also English Wikipedia: Seemann (Lolita song).

  • @kunzworld2309
    @kunzworld2309 11 дней назад +28

    Every boy in my generation was in love with Nena

    • @mikesullivan3420
      @mikesullivan3420 8 дней назад

      Gabriella, not Nena. That was the bands name. Also her hairy pits put most boys of the generation off

    • @eatsmylifeYT
      @eatsmylifeYT 7 дней назад

      And her hairy armpits?

    • @pigpen5305
      @pigpen5305 7 дней назад +8

      @@eatsmylifeYT You might not be able to imagine, but there was a time when this was looked upon as incredibly sexy. After all, it meant she was a fully grown sexual being. Same with pubic hair. I’ve never understood what is sexy about looking like a child.

    • @eatsmylifeYT
      @eatsmylifeYT 7 дней назад

      @@pigpen5305 I've never understood why people like you have to shove their preferences down other people's throats.

    • @eatsmylifeYT
      @eatsmylifeYT 7 дней назад

      @@pigpen5305 You might not be able to imagine, but I don't give a rat's ass what you think. I've never understood why snowflakes like you have to cram their preferences down other people's throats.

  • @ralfklonowski3740
    @ralfklonowski3740 12 дней назад +23

    59yo German here. Thanks a lot for this reaction and analysis. This song is one of the best pop pieces ever to come out of Germany and was certainly a part of my youth. Peace marches and the like were very much a thing in early 1980s West Germany, so this struck a chord with many of us.
    The YT channel "Professor of Rock" has an in-depth episode on this song. It is the best comparison between the German and the English version that I know of.
    Before Gabriele Kern AKA Nena became a pro musician and moved to West-Berlin, she was an aprentice goldsmith for a short while and as such attended classes at the same vocational college in Dortmund where I am now teaching plumbers and pipe fitters.
    Keep up the good work! Greetings from Germany!

    • @erik5374
      @erik5374 12 дней назад +3

      This was a great era in German music.
      I liked Völlig losgelöst and skandal im sperrbezirk even better.

    • @ralfklonowski3740
      @ralfklonowski3740 12 дней назад

      @@erik5374 Yep. Lots of creativity and deliberate goofyness.

    • @maireweber
      @maireweber 12 дней назад +1

      I was born in 83 and still remember joining peace marches, that song was my childhood anthem!

    • @hh-kv6fh
      @hh-kv6fh 10 дней назад +1

      @@erik5374 "Völlig losgelöst" is "Major Tom" from Peter Schilling

    • @thierryf67
      @thierryf67 8 дней назад +2

      i'm french, and same age. in the 80's, i loved this song and its message.

  • @MartinMcMartin
    @MartinMcMartin 13 дней назад +35

    That thumbnail is pure gold.

  • @antivanti
    @antivanti 12 дней назад +55

    There's technically one more syllable in neunundneunzig than in ninety-nine but she sings those words over the same notes. Red is there to fill the space of luft in luftballons which is one syllable more than balloons 😊

    • @huawafabe
      @huawafabe 9 дней назад +1

      Didn't she just explain that? 😅

    • @antivanti
      @antivanti 9 дней назад +8

      @@huawafabe She said it was because 99 was longer in German and I said that it's actually because luftballons is longer. Pay attention

    • @davidwoolbright3675
      @davidwoolbright3675 9 дней назад

      She said the word balloons in German is longer than in English so they added the word Red. Pay attention.

    • @0okamino
      @0okamino 8 дней назад +2

      Yeah, I was just thinking that doesn’t actually even up the syllables, since it’s 7 syllables in German, and 6 syllables in English. Rather than just an extra word, it’s also maintained with a drawn out syllable, in the English version.

    • @aphextwin5712
      @aphextwin5712 8 дней назад +1

      @@davidwoolbright3675 She literally says at 2:52: “Well, it’s because the German word for 99 has one more syllable than the word ninety-nine. So adding that word red in adds that extra syllable, so it makes it fit the song better."
      She even shows in a box on the left:
      99
      German: Neunundneunzig
      English: Ninety-nine

  • @jelle_smid
    @jelle_smid 8 дней назад +6

    This clip is actually shot on an army practice range in The Netherlands.
    There was no clip for this song so when they came to The Netherlands for the TV show Toppop the program director desided they needed some b-roll to acompany the live performance in the show.
    They set-up on this gunrange, added some smoke and the rest is history. Fits great with the story of the song.

  • @ebrowne72
    @ebrowne72 12 дней назад +11

    The last line in English starts with "I think of you." In the original German version the lyrics are "Denk' an dich" where "dich" is the singular "you". When Nena performs the song she changes it to "euch", which is the plural "you".

    • @ldmax
      @ldmax 3 дня назад +1

      That's beautiful. I think of you - as in all of you.

  • @davidgrubbs4480
    @davidgrubbs4480 12 дней назад +13

    This song played an important role in my life as if came out just before I decided to take German (and may have played a role in that decision). I went on to become a German major and study in Germany and even got to see Nena in concert. Thanks to Beth for doing such a great analysis. I'm proud to say this one was requested by me and then voted in by the other Patrons.

    • @tomwalters3772
      @tomwalters3772 11 дней назад

      👍👍

    • @mikeg2306
      @mikeg2306 11 дней назад +1

      I also learned German because of this song.

  • @BIGLON-cf1ul
    @BIGLON-cf1ul 13 дней назад +15

    I love her voice so much! It's like no other! Very unique and distinct! It's awesome!

  • @xxJOKeR75xx
    @xxJOKeR75xx 12 дней назад +9

    99 in german and english are close enough actually. It was balloons vs luft-ballons (air-balloons) that didn't fit, so they made them red.

    • @darkjudge8786
      @darkjudge8786 2 дня назад

      Sorry this is bullshit. Ninety Nine is 3 syllables. neunundneunzig is 4 syllables. Balloon is 2 syllables. Luftballon is 3 syllables. Even adding red doesn't get it even its only because the zig is swallowed and not really a syllable that it works. Why do losers like you lie? How sad is your life?

  • @mikeg2306
    @mikeg2306 11 дней назад +7

    The German version IS better, but the amazing thing about the English version is that she didn’t speak any English and actually sang the song phonetically and you can’t tell!

    • @eisikater1584
      @eisikater1584 8 часов назад +1

      I don't think she didn't speak any English. That was in 1983 and every young person learned English in school, so maybe she wasn't good at English, but she must have spoken it a bit. Every young German learned it in school (except those in the East), some were eager to learn it (e.g. because of American rock songs on the radio), some less because they weren't interested.
      I am German and I can hear the German accent in Nena's English when I hear the "99 (red) balloons", but if you're not a German native speaker, you really can't hear it. And (in my opinion) the English (or U.S.) version has less more enthusiasm in it than the original. No wonder, the translation isn't even close to the original lyrics. I think it's untranslatable, as it's so much to the point with its specific German wording that some magazine writer back then even called it "The German Peace Movement's Anthem". And to some extent, it was.

  • @firedoc5
    @firedoc5 13 дней назад +17

    Here in the US, the German version seemed more popular than the English, or at least for me. It just sounded catchier in German. Same with Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus", which I humbly ask you react to.

    • @lhpl
      @lhpl 12 дней назад +3

      "Alles klar, Herr Kommissar!" Falco was so captivating with his Austrian accent and almost "staccato" singing.
      And then of course the classic _Major Tom_ by Peter Schilling.
      Trio, DÔF,...

    • @michaelmcfarland1716
      @michaelmcfarland1716 12 дней назад +1

      Loved them and Peter Schilling, who had Major Tom around that same time

    • @firedoc5
      @firedoc5 12 дней назад

      @@michaelmcfarland1716 Me too.

    • @johnafirth
      @johnafirth 12 дней назад +1

      ​@@lhplgenuinely pretty sure Falco was the first white rapper.

  • @ptrlxc
    @ptrlxc 12 дней назад +6

    As a new adult and newly on my own at the time when the song first came out, I caught the video on some music show (pre-MTV), I must say it was her looks that first attracted me, and her voicing that got me. As a Canadian I didn't know German at the time, and it did take some research to learn what the meaning was and that added to the allure of this band. Nena stayed true to their music and to German. At the time we were all still in deep cold war, it was there, it was in the movies (Bond and Bond-like movies), the us (west) vs them (east). Sadly now, we are back in the us vs them, but now we have leaders who never grew up in the cold war environment, never really educated themselves and are acting like children while lives and democracy are at stake. This song is again very relevant and I hope a reminder of the deadly seriousness of cold war. Thanks for the analysis of a favourite song of my young adult life.

  • @MyBohemianDreams
    @MyBohemianDreams 12 дней назад +7

    There is a great live version of this song on the Nena channel from a few years ago. She still has a beautiful voice and looks amazing.

  • @jackiebuttnor8410
    @jackiebuttnor8410 17 часов назад

    I was a teenager in Germany in the 89s when this came out. And I loved it! It played in all the Discotheken and Biergarten in our area for Baden.
    Then we came home to Canada and I heard the English disaster. So happy to hear the original again!

  • @SteveSmith-os5bs
    @SteveSmith-os5bs 10 дней назад +4

    85 to 87 I was stationed in northern Germany and I saw this music video for the first time and it instantly became one of my favorite songs, the song was very much a possibility reality for me because It was during the middle of Cold War, I was in a combat unit and if the balloon went up all of Germany would have become one big battle field. I used to spend most of my weekends with Germans so when I heard the song, I understood enough German to understand the lyrics.

  • @kristenmgr
    @kristenmgr 13 дней назад +6

    I didn't know that name of the artist nor the song.
    Thank you so much !
    Excellent video !

  • @JuanHughJorgan
    @JuanHughJorgan 12 дней назад +6

    lmfao, the title and the facial reaction got me HAHAHA. Welcome back to the 80's!

  • @TheMetalGBG
    @TheMetalGBG 13 дней назад +8

    Great song! Reminds me so much of the 80's

  • @renaissanceman8687
    @renaissanceman8687 12 дней назад +2

    One of the few singers who when singing almost accapella (like the beginning and the end where it’s just her voice and single long keyboard notes) gives me goosebumps/chills.
    Even though she is singing in a different language to my own, I still get the emotional connection through her voice.
    I was lucky enough to see her live last year and she has just as an amazing voice live as she does on record.

  • @vectorifix3218
    @vectorifix3218 4 дня назад +1

    Ah 80's, best time ever

  • @perrycleese5987
    @perrycleese5987 12 дней назад +3

    Oh this takes me back … I was 17 and working in Austria (scorching summer that year) this song always transports me back to that place (Grobming) and time … now listening to you from the West coast of Scotland ❤

  • @user-it2vz1xn4q
    @user-it2vz1xn4q 13 дней назад +10

    1984, I was a junior high school student in Japan. I was crazy for her, Nena. What a cute girl she was!!! 99 Luftballons is germany national song for me.

    • @jasonlaviolette2964
      @jasonlaviolette2964 12 дней назад +1

      I'm a litter younger, but was an MTV kid. Just turned five years old a few days before watching the Buggles air for the first time. So, I was still in the middle of grade school when this was released. I haven't seen this video in a long time, and I forgot just how absolutely gorgeous she was. A good pair of tight jeans and a little black leather certainly didn't hurt the overall aesthetic, either. What a beautiful voice, as well. Not an easy feat to make German sound so pretty, and she does it with ease.

  • @RealDiehl99
    @RealDiehl99 13 дней назад +5

    I remember the radio stations in Philadelphia used to play the English version as well as a version that combined English and German verses. Cover bands at bars used to cover this song still in the 2000's. They would use more distorted guitars to give it a more punk type of feel. This song was always one of my favorites from the 80's!

    • @paulanderson9650
      @paulanderson9650 12 дней назад +2

      Goldfinger did a kick ass cover of this. Matter of fact, that cover was the first time I had heard the song!

  • @zlionsfan
    @zlionsfan 8 дней назад +2

    I was in high school when this song came out, and I was taking German class that year. I was thrilled that we got to dissect the lyrics to an actual Popular Song instead of to something that clueless teenage me thought was a bore (although I also still remember bits of Erlkönig). At the time, I thought it was amazing that they managed to get pretty decent English lyrics to the same tune! With no internet (obviously) and not a lot of sources in the US for info about European music, I had no idea what the band thought of the translation.
    Today, I still like the original! And the English translation. (And covers!) Ja, ich habe etwas Zeit für dich.

  • @geoffreycat1763
    @geoffreycat1763 13 дней назад +5

    Chills then tears then heartache, massively powerful song indeed.

    • @jeffreypierce1440
      @jeffreypierce1440 13 дней назад

      Don't overstate it. It's just a cute song by some scared and naïve kids.

    • @LiaF-pr3yx
      @LiaF-pr3yx 17 часов назад +1

      Carlo was an inspired songwriter who wrote intelligent and thought provoking songs and aged 31 when he wrote the lyrics was far from being a scared and naive kid.

  • @katconley2995
    @katconley2995 11 дней назад +29

    A cold front is coming from Flowers After Rainfall!
    Freeze the Fall is the group she wants you to react to.
    She also suggests more of The Warning. New song is Automatic Sun.

    • @billholder1330
      @billholder1330 10 дней назад +2

      Hehe - I came here to say this too! But I've always loved this song, and a big Beth Roars fan too! So Beth please yeah Freeze the Fall, "Daughters of Witches", if you could?? :)

  • @thunderspike1892
    @thunderspike1892 12 дней назад +3

    My favorite from that album are Nur Geträumt. Keyboard player Jörn-Uwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen went on to record with Jean Beauvoir from Plasmatics in the band Voodoo X.

  • @cjstato
    @cjstato 5 дней назад +1

    Everyone thinks this song is about nuclear war, but as someone who was a 15yr old schoolboy when this came out, i can confidently say that it's actually all about leather trousers.

  • @Dragonesa07
    @Dragonesa07 13 дней назад +6

    I like this song so much!!! I listened it on radio, when I was young. I miss that time... It was a time with a future plenty of possibilities!!! I'm from Brazil and I would love more Brazilian musics, also...!!!

    • @LeperMessiah2
      @LeperMessiah2 11 дней назад

      Examples please.

    • @Dragonesa07
      @Dragonesa07 11 дней назад

      @@LeperMessiah2
      Oswaldo Montenegro: "Lua e Flor";
      Ney Matogrosso: "Bandolero";
      Kleiton & Kledir: "Vira-Virou";
      Alceu Valença, Geraldo Azevedo, Elba Ramalho & Zé Ramalho: "Disparada";
      Boca Livre: "Toada";
      Renato Teixeira: "Amora".

  • @CabinFever52
    @CabinFever52 6 часов назад

    I was so excited when this came out. I was studying German in college. Nena (I always thought that was HER name) and Falco (Austrian) made studying German even more exciting. There really is a lot of amazing German/Austrian music. Thanks for giving us the origin of the song, too.

    • @sebas0816
      @sebas0816 4 часа назад

      I remember Nena was the nickname her parents used when she was young.

  • @StanSwan
    @StanSwan 5 дней назад

    The lead singer could be my 1st wife's twin. Our first date we were both 15, got married about ten years later and divorced in 2003. Never had kids and we don't talk anymore. Kind of sad. She was a best friend and beautiful lady. This song being dark takes on more meaning to me. I am not stuck back there but like the Beatles song "In My Life" we can never forget the special people that were in our lives even when we have moved on.

  • @gregpeacock5497
    @gregpeacock5497 12 дней назад +2

    I bought the album when it came out in the US in '84. Side 1 had English songs and side 2 German. What was so weird at the time is the German version of this song actually hit #2 on the US charts behind Van Halen's Jump.

  • @troyshilanski380
    @troyshilanski380 3 дня назад +1

    I only grew up with the english version on mtv way back. Of course i get it decades later but your take on it is what matters here.

  • @stephanedaguet915
    @stephanedaguet915 12 дней назад

    Nostalgia... I am French and the year of this song I did my military service in the French Forces in Germany, discovering this country...
    It was still the Cold War and this song reminds me of this very particular atmosphere. So much memories 🤩

  • @warrennott6792
    @warrennott6792 11 дней назад

    LOVE YOUR PASSION AND YOUR EMOTION love listening to your comments keep it up FROM DOWN UNDER

  • @bernhardkrickl3567
    @bernhardkrickl3567 12 дней назад +3

    I think the "red" in the English title stands for the "Luft" in the German one. "Balloon" in German ist "Luftballon", literally meaning "air balloon". So the missing "air" had to be replaced.

  • @timmooney7528
    @timmooney7528 9 дней назад +1

    Back in the 80's I liked the German version better than the English translation. It sounded better. Also it sounded like the singer had learned how to sing the English lyrics phonetically, so some of the words sound like she had a speech impediment.
    I noticed several German bands these days do not re-release songs in English versions. Rammstein had English covers of "Du Hast" and "Engel", but that was nearly 25 years ago.

  • @40hup
    @40hup 12 дней назад +2

    A lot of 80s Hits were, mostly unbeknown to the listeners, about the nuclear apocalypse: E.g. 99 Luftballons (Nena), Vamos a la playa (Righeira), Red Skies Over Paradise (Fisher-Z), Forever Young (Alphaville), The final countdown (Europe / to some extend), ... and all had pretty dancable soundtracks, while no one really listened to the dystopic lyris - or even sang along the chorus without realizing what they were singing...

  • @anthonymiele4320
    @anthonymiele4320 12 дней назад +1

    I speak almost no German but I still have their self-titled album on the loop I listen to while sleeping (with like 6 other albums) because of her voice and the vibe.

  • @kirby1ist
    @kirby1ist 11 дней назад

    This song was released when I was 25. ( I do have the vinyl , German on one side, English on the other ) I too have heard the 2 versions you mention Beth. I have also found on RUclips a 2018 Live version, Gabriele sang the song, yet the whole arena sang along, it was fantastic. Today we woke up alive and breathing , as my friend ( R.I.P.) used to say. Have a good day :) Thanks for all you do.

  • @artursandwich1974
    @artursandwich1974 12 дней назад

    You're proud of your album... And with good reasons. Beautiful singing, interesting lyrics, varied melodies and instrumentations, adult, mature music... And beautifully published, too. I'm really happy to own a copy. I like chapter 12 especially.

  • @soundocean3765
    @soundocean3765 2 дня назад

    Really awesome to see you react to Neue Deutsche Welle! I'm a 90's kid from Germany so I've still grown up with songs like that, but it takes your reaction to learn a lot more about the song and the band, thank you! (I've known the overall meaning, but was lacking the details.) Now I'm in my 30's and 80's pop/rock including NDW is still one of my favourite music genres alongside symphonic metal and soundtracks.
    If you want to dive in deeper into NDW music, here are some recommendations with interesting music and/or meanings:
    Peter Schilling
    "Major Tom (Völlig losgelöst)": about a fictional astronaut, as hommage on David Bowie's "Space Oddity", losing contact with ground control and drifting off in space
    "Terra Titanic": about the sinking of the Titanic, the force of the ocean and how it is dealt with
    ...while Major Tom is one of the most popular NDW songs afaik, I think that for a vocal coach reaction Terra Titanic might be even more interesting. Still, both are absolutely worth checking out!!
    Hubert Kah
    "Sternenhimmel": about a young (in some theories: gay) romance, a mix of a bit faster music and a hint of melancholy in the vocals
    Gänsehaut
    "Karl der Käfer" (Karl the Bug): about the destruction of ecosystems from the perspective of nature, in the context of infrastructure (streets) building ...the lyrics are very simple and direct to get the meaning across, the music is also simple but very emotional, fitting the theme of the song very well.
    Joachim Witt
    "Goldener Reiter": about mental health issues of the protagonist (burnout etc.), caused by achievement-oriented society, and how it was (said to be) dealt with patients in psychiatric clinics; especially for the time back then, a remarkable piece of social criticism. (Since I was little, that has been one of my favourites, but of course it took decades for me to get the full meaning of the song... And maybe, a bit of personal experience to refer to.)
    ......or for some more Nena: "Leuchtturm" :)
    (Just FYI, even though I'm sure others have pointed it out already: Nowadays, especially since early in the pandemic, Nena sadly has become a very... politically controversial character, let's put it this way. For me personally, she's said and done quite some stuff in those last years that I couldn't morally support, ever. BUT that doesn't make her old music bad, and I can still enjoy watching analysis of her NDW songs!)

  • @matt8097
    @matt8097 11 дней назад +15

    Flowers after the rain has said their is a cold front forming. Reaction chain for the band freeze the fall and their song daughters of witches. Then tag a reactor to do the same.

  • @Jim_the_Hermit
    @Jim_the_Hermit 11 дней назад

    I love her voice! It's so sweet, feminine and mesmerizing.

  • @alexanderhaas3030
    @alexanderhaas3030 7 дней назад

    I was in elementary school when this song was released. It was the first song I could sing by heart.
    Greetings from Munich

  • @jasonstem9908
    @jasonstem9908 11 дней назад +2

    Loved the German Version when it was originally released, and still my favorite version of this song.

  • @berndalmstedt5060
    @berndalmstedt5060 6 дней назад

    Thanks for a great job! It's not just about the singing, you reminded me that I have all the old vinyl records and several CDs of this band. It took years to understand that their music is multi-layered in so many ways, almost like a kaleidoscope... - and much better and deeper than the joyful and easy surface is presenting. Now I'm off to dig out some of the old records, refreshing my memory.... :-)

  • @waynehampson9569
    @waynehampson9569 12 дней назад +4

    Some people make the mistake that she chose the name Nena in the 1980s. Actually it is a nickname that her parents gave her when she was three years old on a vacation in Mallorca. The people there called her "Nina", the Germanised version is Nena and the name stuck. Her real name is Gabriele Susanne Kerner.

    • @alexj9603
      @alexj9603 12 дней назад +4

      Actually... "nena" is just the Catalan/Mallorquin word for "girl", not a germanized firm of anything. This word stuck as her nickname since then.

  • @BubonicCure
    @BubonicCure 12 дней назад

    Thank you for educating people about this era. I was in 8th grade when the Berlin wall came down.

  • @rhphotocdn
    @rhphotocdn 12 дней назад

    Wow... High School circa 1980's all relived. Thank You!

  • @iankearns774
    @iankearns774 4 дня назад +1

    None of us back then cared much about the lyrics, if it was a good song so we bought the single and maybe the album. It was a very different time, I never paid much attentions to lyrics until the last 20 years or so.

  • @michaelherrera3548
    @michaelherrera3548 10 дней назад +10

    ❄️A COLD FRONT IS COMING❄️

  • @SausageFingers73
    @SausageFingers73 12 дней назад

    I had the English version on 45 inch single, and had a mega crush on Nena. Also loved it as a keys player, the Goldfinger versions is very good too

  • @PainInTheS
    @PainInTheS 12 дней назад +1

    Loved it when it came out and still do!
    After the first 3 albums Nena disappeared from my radar....and most people's I guess, maybe except for Germany of course. But in recent years I bought quite a few of her later work and also the band's 4th album.
    Then in the 00's she did the duet with Kim Wilde.....omfg now that was pure fire!!! I still bang my head for not going to a concert of them 2 back then....my 2 earliest female singer favorites....and both hot AF!!!

    • @gulliverthegullible6667
      @gulliverthegullible6667 8 дней назад

      after 3 Albums, I think Nena disappeared from anyone's radar but her hardcore fans. Still, she was the most successful of all the NDW people. I think no one else even caught the mainstream attention with three albums.

  • @willieboy3011
    @willieboy3011 13 дней назад +1

    Good song from a beautiful country. I remember this one. Glad that you did this one in German.

  • @paulmartin2348
    @paulmartin2348 12 дней назад +1

    I remember when this song came out. (the German version even in the US) One thing that no matter what language she is singing in her voice is just so beautiful in it's own way. (I love her sound)

  • @Nezzeraj
    @Nezzeraj 13 дней назад +2

    If you ever want to do a cover version, the band Goldfinger does an excellent version that combines the English and German lyrics.

  • @thedutchhuman
    @thedutchhuman 4 дня назад +1

    (the group) Nena has made beautiful songs, for myself I think the song ''Leuchtturm'' is great.

  • @Benjamin-xv9le
    @Benjamin-xv9le 7 дней назад

    You catch the emotional shifts really well. There is also a major one at the start when it goes from "bored lovesong" to dead serious with "und dass sowas von sowas kommt", which is hard to translate. Literally it means "something like that leads to something like this", but "your bad actions led to this bad outcome" catches the meaning better.
    It is quite harsh critique.

  • @oscararzate7956
    @oscararzate7956 13 дней назад

    Carita de sol me gusta tus reacciones cuando nos transportas a diferentes épocas y estilos de música 🎵 gracias mi H Prrj ❤ bien Beth 👏👏🍀🍀

  • @viewer8888
    @viewer8888 11 дней назад

    Thanks for the video and analysis. This song has been important to me for a long time as I've been a Nena fan since the 1980s. I took German in High School and this song and the other Neue Deutsche Welle songs that became popular were the only way to hear and practice German outside of class. In 1984, I traveled to Germany on a school trip and one of the areas we visited was the fenced/wired/mined Inter-German Border where we got to see US and East German observation posts watching each other. The last night of the trip was the start of the annual NATO REFORGER exercise and I remember US Army armored vehicle convoys going through the village I was staying in. That feeling of being on the edge of war was still very strong then. The end of the song strongly resonates with the German experience and memory of the end of WWII. "Ich seh' die Welt in Trümmern liegen" translates to "I see the world lying in ruins." Although also representing the destruction of Germany from the expected NATO-Soviet Third World War, "Trümmern" returns the image back to the ruins of German cities after WWII and the mythologized Trümmerfrauen (Rubble Women) who worked to clear the rubble after the war and during the rebuilding of Germany.

  • @jamesmcclain5005
    @jamesmcclain5005 12 дней назад

    I didn't hear this song until recently, and it smashes!

  • @geoffkeeys6946
    @geoffkeeys6946 7 дней назад

    I remember when this song came out and I was like... OMG, this sounds amazing. I didn't care that I couldn't speak German, it just sounded awesome. I've heard the English version and it is a pale imitation of the true German song. The song is still awesome and she still performs the song to this day and still sounds awesome.

  • @mikejvasquez76
    @mikejvasquez76 12 дней назад +2

    I'd always thought thought that it was cool that the German version was more popular here in the United States than the English version when it first came out back in the day.

  • @das_murks
    @das_murks 12 дней назад +1

    Ninety-nine and Neunundneundzig are pretty the same length wenn sung or spoken, but the German word for balloon is Ballon and like you know from the title specially Luftballons (Balloon filled with air) so there is the word they put in to fill which became "red".

  • @teemusid
    @teemusid 12 дней назад +1

    I speak a limited amount of German and the English lyrics were weak.
    On the subject of dancers not listening to the lyrics, I was sitting upstairs at a U2 concert on The Unforgettable Fire Tour, watching the people on the floor dance to "Pride," and dwelling on the lyrics. As third verse played, I thought they didn't care about the lyrics. When Bono finished the verse, "free at last, they took your life, they could not take your pride," the dancing crowd below erupted in a roar, that shook me. It is engraved in my memory.

  • @brothermaynardsbrother
    @brothermaynardsbrother 12 дней назад

    Bravo on selecting the German version of this gem from the Post-Punk/New Wave era. How I miss the Punk/Post-Punk/New Wave/"College Music"/Alternative days. So much sonic ebullience and sullen beauty was generated.
    Danke for another fun review, Brüllende Löwin!

  • @pillmuncher67
    @pillmuncher67 13 дней назад +5

    Beth, if you want more NDW, the band Ideal is one you should definitely look into. Their greatest hit, Blaue Augen (Blue Eyes) is just wonderful.

    • @uliwehner
      @uliwehner 12 дней назад +1

      i recommend it. the Humpe sisters.

    • @gulliverthegullible6667
      @gulliverthegullible6667 8 дней назад

      is that even NDW?

    • @pillmuncher67
      @pillmuncher67 8 дней назад

      @@gulliverthegullible6667 Yes. NDW was just a mix of Punk, New Wave, and Pop, in varying degrees, and with German lyrics. Ideal was one of the bands that had early success, but after around 1982 most of NDW became sad and lame.
      Annette Humpe had studied composition and piano at the Musikhochschule Köln for sex semesters, and the other members of Ideal were all Jazz cats. Their attitude, OTOH, was very Punk.

    • @gulliverthegullible6667
      @gulliverthegullible6667 8 дней назад

      @@pillmuncher67 Slime is punk.

    • @pillmuncher67
      @pillmuncher67 8 дней назад

      @@gulliverthegullible6667 Yes. But the history of Punk did not begin with Slime. It began around 1973 in New York's Lower East Side, with bands like Television, Suicide, the Patti Smith Group, and the Ramones. The name Punk came from a fanzine that promoted these bands, the Punk Magazine. The label Punk was also retroactively applied to bands that had come before, like The Velvet Underground, The New York Dolls, MC5, and The Stooges.
      The venue where these new bands played was Hilly Kristal's CBGB's on the Bowery, starting with Television in 1973. During the following years, more bands appeared on the scene, like The Dictators, The Voidoids, The Talking Heads, Blondie, The Heartbreakers, and many more. They were all called Punk bands at the time. The first British Punk bands started to appear in 1976, like the Sex Pistols and The Damned. Only after the breakup of the Sex Pistols many venues declined Punk bands, fearing their behavior, so the bands' managers started calling them New Wave. Over time, Punk and New Wave have diverted very much, but that is how it all started.
      The first German Punk band was probably PVC from West Berlin. They were founded in 1977. Slime from Hamburg were founded in 1979.
      In the end, Punk is not a style, but an attitude.

  • @ThursdayNext67
    @ThursdayNext67 12 дней назад +1

    I was in high school when this song came out. On Valentines Day, there was a fundraiser where you could buy red balloons for someone you liked. Several people, including my brother, bought 99 red balloons for their girlfriends.

  • @kowalsolosolo
    @kowalsolosolo 10 дней назад

    I saw Nena live in 2019,when she began singing this song-the audience went WILD! She is still an active artist,still singing,still looking smoking hot! I had a big crush on her when I was a teen and although I have always been a metalhead ,I am still in love.

  • @LeperMessiah2
    @LeperMessiah2 11 дней назад

    I probably hasn't heard this since release 😂 Nice throwback and im glad I haven't seen the music video before😂

  • @patrick86806
    @patrick86806 8 дней назад

    oh yeah! loved the English version as a kid! the video too! years later I noticed the original version and then knew they were Germans! never knew it was an anti-war song either! these explosions are crazy! her voice and looks were perfect for this song! thanks for teaching us about the lyrics!

  • @colingregory7464
    @colingregory7464 12 дней назад +1

    I love this version so much more than the English language version for so many reasons

  • @Wombatmetal
    @Wombatmetal 12 дней назад

    I was a young adult when this was released, and was a big fan of Nena. I would go to Newbury Comics in Boston and scour the imports to find any records they had of the band. Also got to see her in concert once and they were great. She had this big skull for a belt buckle. Now she performs with 2 or 3 of her children in her band. Good times.

  • @WestCoastChicano
    @WestCoastChicano 9 дней назад +1

    I was living in Germany when this song blew up. Loved it. I never cared for the English version. Gr8 analysis as usual. 🎶 🎸 🎶 🎹 🇩🇪

  • @shaneeslick
    @shaneeslick 12 дней назад +1

    G'day Beth,
    Still one of my favourite songs after all these years, I do like the English version too, There is a Cover by Goldfinger on the Eurotrip Soundtrack where they mix German & English.
    Ps I just found this version "NENA | 99 Luftballons (Live 2018) (HD)" on the NENA YT Channel with the actual English Translation of the German Lyrics as Subtitles

  • @iiwdpn
    @iiwdpn 11 дней назад

    remember seeing this on the video jukeboxes at the hard rock cafe in Aschaffenburg 84-86

  • @williamburkholder769
    @williamburkholder769 11 дней назад +6

    Wow, that's a blast from the 80s. Never thought I'd hear that one again. Good breakdown. Here's a lead, though. A cold front is coming from Canada. Another reactor, Flowers After Rainfall suggests you react to Freeze the Fall, a budding teen group with a new song, *Daughters of Witches.* No doubt The Warning Army is going to want you to hear the latest release from The Warning, which is *Automatic Sun.* Freeze the Fall broke their teeth in doing covers of The Warning's songs...

  • @joeldf6859
    @joeldf6859 7 дней назад

    I bought the vinyl as released in the US back in '84. As someone else already mentioned, "99 Red Balloons" starts off the album, being the English language version. Side 2 ends with the German language version of "99 Luftballons". The album was actually titled "99 Luftballons". Both versions were played on the radio here in the US, but the english version was played more near the end of the radio run. The LP had all of Side 1 with english language songs. Side 2 was all German.
    The real "debut" album from '83, just self-titled as "Nena", has a different photo on the cover (same basic layout though) and a tracklist with only about half of the songs that ended up on the US and international version of the LP. So, the '84 album is technically considered a "compilation". I've read that the UK LP version uses a 4+ minute "club mix" version of the english language "99 Red Balloons". The early CD release in the US (I have this too) swapped out the regular "99 Red Balloons" (which was the same as the German backing tracks with only the english vocals tracked in) with the club mix version, and I assume it's the same one the UK LP got.
    I do know that the English version is not quite the same story that the German version tells if you directly translate it.

  • @VictorPM1550
    @VictorPM1550 12 дней назад +1

    The video was shot for the Dutch program "Avro's Toppop". Kind of the Dutch version of the English Top Of The Pops. And yes, those fireworks got out of hand and frightened the bandmembers 🙂

  • @Jymm
    @Jymm День назад

    10 years before this song was written I was In the USArmy and stationed in West Berlin.
    Happily the city was large enough that East Germany felt far away (even though we were surrounded by it ) an island of freedom in the middle of that country. 🎈 😼

    • @Exodon2020
      @Exodon2020 День назад +1

      Lots of East Germans got into western music thanks to West Berlin existing. With the exception of parts of Saxony in the south-east, the entirety of the German Democratic Republic was within signal range of either Berlin or the Inner-German border.

  • @Nikioko
    @Nikioko 9 дней назад +1

    2:39: Actually, the 99 isn't the issue, but the balloon. In German, it is “Luftballon”, which literally translates to “air balloon”. But since you wouldn't say “air balloon”, it became “red balloon”.

  • @gman125
    @gman125 11 дней назад +7

    Hi Beth! wow, I haven't listened to Nena since this came out! She blew up with MTV playing this every hour of the day for months. BTW...
    A chain reaction has been taking place across the RUclips community with reactors. You have been chosen by the last one in the long chain, to check out a new band of teen prodigies, named Freeze The Fall from Canada. The song asked for you to watch, is "Daughters of Witches", found on their Official RUclips Channel. I would link it but YT has been taking down comments with links lately.

  • @nemo4907
    @nemo4907 11 дней назад +1

    Ich denk' an euch und lass' ihn fliegen
    Gotta love it! 🤘

    • @ingvarjensen1088
      @ingvarjensen1088 10 дней назад +1

      Denk' an dich (Singular, not euch which is Plural) und lass' ihn fliegen 😉

    • @apveening
      @apveening 7 дней назад +1

      @@ingvarjensen1088 That is the official version on the album, live she usually uses "euch". As it fits perfectly both ways (and gets lost in translation anyway), I'd say you are both right.

  • @jimdouglas9944
    @jimdouglas9944 12 дней назад

    I was very happy to see 99 Luftballons prominently featured in the first episode of Deutschland 83. It was perfect for the year, and also perfect thematically because the series was about the Soviets potentially overreacting to a large NATO military exercise, which really could have triggered a nuclear war.

  • @rifelaw
    @rifelaw 12 дней назад +1

    When this came out, I was recently returned from Germany and still fairly fluent. Antiwar and anti-nuke protests were everywhere in the Bundesrepublik then. You couldn't go anywhere without seeing a sign reading, "Atomwaffe Raus!"

  • @Dumbledork_Prime
    @Dumbledork_Prime День назад

    I've loved this song ever since it first came out... and I also love the many parodies that have been produced. Some are really hilarious. Here are some: "99 Dead Baboons" by Tim Cavanagh, "99 Death Eaters" by Draco and the Malfoys, "99 Words for Boob" by Robert Lund, "99 Words for Vagine" by Dan the Engineer, "99 Words for Peen" by JDI-310 Productions.

  • @fkessler53
    @fkessler53 10 дней назад

    Thank you for recognizing this song. It’s a classic thank goodness for RUclips. Otherwise, these songs will just fade into oblivion.

  • @scottbdaniels
    @scottbdaniels 13 дней назад +2

    I've always preferred the German version of this song, something about it always sounded better to me.

  • @HiltownJoe
    @HiltownJoe 4 дня назад +1

    It's a bit weird to hear Nena to be refered as Gabriele. I think in Germany she is just known as Nena.
    I wanted to make a referrence to how it is like with Madonna who is also known with her artist name until I looked her up on wikipedia and learned that her first name actually is Madonna. Same with Cher. Her first name is Cherilyn. I clocked both of them as Artists names.

  • @adampoll4977
    @adampoll4977 10 дней назад +1

    Apparently the reason the German version was played on Top of the Pops in the UK rather than the English was down to hairy arm-pits. The producer had seen the clip with Nena wearing a tank-top (singing in German) and the English version he'd seen she was wearing sleeves. He really wanted the hairy pits (which weren't in the officially released clip anyway) so they played the German cut and it went to number one - and of course, it IS the best version.

  • @terpcj
    @terpcj 12 дней назад +1

    It was interesting when this came out as the Cold War was still in full flower. I also happened to know German, so the lyrics resonated more with me than most others who were either hearing the English version or the also popular English/German pastiche. So many didn't get either the war or the hope allegory of this "Red Balloon" song because of this. (Then again, what singers sing and what people think they sing don't always match even if they speak the same language.)

  • @Ueberschaer
    @Ueberschaer 10 дней назад

    Nice. There is so much history in it. The keyboarder Jens Uwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen was in the Band of Jean Beauvoir, who was for two albums in the band of Steve Van Zandt's Little Steven & the Disciples of Soul . Steve himself is part of Bruce Springsteens E Street Band. Nena is or was a great star in Germany, I am unsure about that, 'cause she didn't deal great with the restrictions in the times of the pandemic, that was tough. You realize, it's just a song and so much more. That's culture, I guess.