Appearance: Hannes Wader

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Appearance: Hannes Wader
Live album by Hannes Wader

Publication
(s)

1998

Label (s) Plans - ARIS

Genre (s)

Chanson / singer-songwriter

Title (number)

18th

running time

78min 50s

occupation
  • Bass : Benjamin Huellenkremer

production

Hannes Wader, Ben Ahrens

Studio (s)

Mastered in Studio Blue Noise, Hamburg

chronology
I thought of you - Wader sings Schubert (1997) Appearance: Hannes Wader What a Night (2001)

Appearance: Hannes Wader is an album by the singer and songwriter Hannes Wader from 1998.

Origin / meaning

Appearance: Hannes Wader is a sound document of the songwriter's summer tour and was recorded in May 1998.

The main focus of the tour was the albums 10 Lieder (1995) and classical motifs by Schubert, Beethoven and Mozart and some older songs.

Wader was to produce a studio album in the same year. It's about the album Wünsche . After the production of the album An dich hab ich thought - Wader singt Schubert (1997), Wader was no longer allowed to enter a studio. In between, another live album was released, namely Was für eine Nacht (2001), which is a sound document of the summer tour with Konstantin Wecker , which took place 25 years earlier at the suggestion of Wecker. In 2001 another summer tour was started by the two songwriters.

Track list

  1. The better time - 4:40
  2. There's still something like that - 6:26
  3. To Hamburg - 3:33
  4. Some city - 4:10
  5. All hills - 4:35
  6. Good night - 4:09
  7. Day To Day - 3:12
  8. Reminder - 7:41
  9. Daydream - 3:34
  10. Night trip - 3:51
  11. Au bord de la rivière - 4:40
  12. To the music - 2:22
  13. Serenade - 2:01
  14. Tender love - 1:51
  15. Jepstestinija Stepanova's Garden - 4:25
  16. Rider again at the black wall - 4:06
  17. You can now close your eyes - 4:55
  18. The moon has risen - 3:35

particularities

Appearance: Hannes Wader , like all albums since the early 1990s and the separation from Detlef Petersen , was produced by Hannes Wader and Ben Ahrens.

Florian Sommer recorded the concert in May 1998. The sound was mixed and mastered by Ben Ahrens in the Blue Noise recording studio, Hamburg.

The album is the songwriter's third live album. There is also Hannes Wader sings Arbeiterlieder (1977), That nothing remains as it was (1982), Was für eine Nacht (2001 with Konstantin Wecker ) and Mey Wader Wecker - the concert (2003) with Reinhard Mey and Konstantin Wecker.

The songwriter sings the title The Better Time , which is on the album Not Just Me Alone (1983). He brings a slightly revised version.

Alle Hügel is a folk song by Maddy Prior & Tim Hart (Steeleye Span) and was edited and introduced by Klaus Weiland . The song first appeared on the album 10 songs (1995), from which the titles Nachtfahrt and Tagtraum also come from.

With Au bord de la reviere , Wader brings a version of the title Am Fluss , which appeared on Embers on the Horizon (1985). The French version was originally supposed to be just a translation exercise for the songwriter and was revised by Lydie Auvray , who toured with Hannes Wader between 1980 and 1985 as an accordion player. The song was allowed to be sung frequently on television by the songwriter in 1986 to mark his 20th stage anniversary.

With Reiter back on the black wall , Wader sings a song by Franz Josef Degenhardt that only appeared on this live album. Wader sings more songs by Degenhardt on the live album That nothing remains as it was (1982). It concerns the winter song and summer song .

The songwriter sings a premiere on stage with Schubert's song An die Musik . The piece was originally produced for the Schubert CD in 1997, but not published because Hannes Wader considered it to be too badly sung. He later recognized this as a mistake and therefore integrated it into his tour program a year later. Other premieres are Reiter again on the black wall , serenade , which was based on a motif by Mozart, and the folk song The moon has risen , which Wader regards as one of the most beautiful traditional songs of the 18th century. All of these tracks are only available here on this live album.

Jepstinija Stepanowa's Garden was first published on Liebeslieder (1986) and is about a Caucasian Russian woman whose nine sons all died in the war. Wader got the inspiration for this song from an article in the magazine Soviet Union Today .