Daniel Malheur

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Daniel Malheur at House of Dogs (2016)

Daniel Malheur (born May 9, 1969 in Hamburg ) is a German singer , entertainer and conférencier in the style of the 1920s.

Daniel Malheur Switzerland Steampunk 2019

history

In 1995 Daniel Malheur appeared in public for the first time. At that time he made his debut with his “nostalgic vocal interludes accompanied by famous gramophone orchestras!” - vocal performance to shellac records from the gramophone - as part of an event in the Hamburg club “Ketzer”. After that, Malheur went through pubs and cafes with a suitcase gramophone, appeared in theaters and cultural associations and also played in senior citizens' residences.

In 1998, in co-production with the writer Alexander Häusser, “Zeppelin!” Was created , a literary performance with music, theater and radio play elements. In addition to the first full-length SOLO program, the collaboration with the pianist Dirk Bewig began a year later. Malheur specialized more and more in presenting forgotten and now unknown cabaret hits and chansons from the shellac era by Willy Rosen , Rudolf Nelson , Otto Stransky and Friedrich Hollaender . In his programs he tells the biographies of the artists and stars of the time, such as Comedian Harmonists , Richard Tauber and Paul O'Montis, with music and conference, and paints the picture of the amusement metropolis of Berlin during the Weimar Republic .

Malheur has lived in Berlin since 2007 and is part of the Berlin Bohème Sauvage line-up as a singer and emcee. He makes regular guest appearances in clubs and theaters as well as across genres at national and international gothic, techno, alternative rock and, above all, at steampunk festivals.

In 2014 Malheur founded the jazz band The Heaven and Hell Orchestra (piano, violin, double bass, drums, vocals) with pianist Dirk Bewig - 1920s metal cover, milestones of heavy metal and hard rock in the guise of a 20s jazz band.

The SalonTrio Malheur was formed in 2018 (piano: Peter André Rodekuhr, violin: Agata Gromek, vocals: Daniel Malheur). The trio plays a musical blend of cabaret chansons and classic salon pieces by Arturo Toscanini , Vittorio Monti and Astor Piazzolla and complements this with recitations by Kurt Tucholsky and Joachim Ringelnatz .

In 2019 the SalonTrio Malheur published an audio postcard. This foil-coated postcard became popular in the 1920s, includes a sound recording of up to 3 minutes and can be played on a record player

Sound carrier

  • Your first letter (audio postcard 2019)
  • 5 o'clock tea with the Kraus family (album 2019)
  • Mephistopolis (CD 2016)
  • Susi blows the saxophone (CD 2014)
  • Best of Monokelpop (CD 2010)
  • In the bar to the crocodile (CD 2002)
  • Salontenor Daniel Malheur (CD 1999)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Frankfurter Neue Presse: A journey into the time of the zeppelins | Frankfurter Neue Presse. Retrieved November 3, 2017 .
  2. ^ Daniel Malheur: Pop Goes the Monocle. Retrieved November 7, 2017 (American English).
  3. WAVE-GOTIK-TREFFEN 2013 Day 3 - Leipzig (May 19, 2013) [concert reports] - Monkeypress.de . In: Monkeypress.de . June 14, 2013 ( monkeypress.de [accessed November 3, 2017]).
  4. The MonoclePop audio postcard. In: MonokelPop Entertainment Berlin! Retrieved on March 10, 2019 (German).
  5. monokelpop: 5 o'clock tea with the Kraus family (download). In: MonokelPop Entertainment Berlin! Retrieved on March 10, 2019 (German).
  6. Album "MEPHISTOPOLIS" (2016) | The Heaven and Hell Orchestra. In: www.monokelpop-entertainment.de. Retrieved September 12, 2018 .
  7. ^ Nicole Clemens, Hermine Clemens: Lady Metal Webzine: Heaven and Hell Orchestra - Mephistopolis. Retrieved March 10, 2019 .
  8. Album "Die Susi blows the saxophone" (2014) | Daniel Malheur. In: www.monokelpop-entertainment.de. Retrieved September 12, 2018 .
  9. Album "Best of MonokelPop" (2014) | Daniel Malheur. In: www.monokelpop-entertainment.de. Retrieved September 12, 2018 .