Aldo Moro (musician)

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Aldo Moro is a German musician and co-founder of the band Die Goldenen Zitronen .

biography

Like Schorsch Kamerun, the musician moved from Timmendorf to Hamburg in the vicinity of Hafenstrasse in the mid-1980s . There Moro co-founded the band Die Goldenen Zitronen in 1984 and played bass and guitar with them until 1994.

In 1991, before Moro left Die Goldenen Zitronen , they were ambushed and attacked by neo-Nazis in Hoyerswerda . Jens Rachut , the band's driver at the time, was put out of action. In an interview with the music magazine Spex in 2009, Rachut said that the attack on the right would have led to serious injuries for him and the band if Moro had not reacted with quickness of mind and maneuvered their tour bus out of the danger zone , even though he was not in it at the time Was in possession of a driver's license .

Moro named himself after the Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro , who was murdered by the Brigate Rosse , which Thorsten Seif, the A&R manager of the music label Buback , described in an interview with the national daily newspaper taz as a funny provocation, as it happened more often in the 1980s when there was “even in the bourgeois camp a certain understanding of the acts of the RAF ”. Other artist names of the musician were Frau Rabe , Frau Raabe , Rabe or Elan Rabe .

Discography

With The Golden Lemons

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Alexander Grimm: The Hamburg School. The emergence and decay of a Hamburg music cluster. In: Alenka Barber-Kersovan, Volker Kirchberg, Robin Kucher (eds.): Music city. Musical approaches to the “creative city”. Transcript, Bielefeld 2014, pp. 245–266, here p. 251 f. ; Friederike Gräff: The one who didn't arrive. In: Die Tageszeitung , April 25, 2007.
  2. Why do everyone know Die Toten Hosen, but only a few know Die Goldenen Zitronen? In: null41. February 26, 2009, accessed March 15, 2019 .
  3. In search of his own artificial language: Jens Rachut. In: [[Spex (magazine) |]]. April 18, 2009, accessed March 15, 2019 .
  4. Jan Paersch: Manager for more than 30 years Buback Records - "More like a cabbage-and-beet shop". Conversation with Friederike Meyer and Thorsten Seif. In: Die Tageszeitung , June 5, 2018.