Sparifankal

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Sparifankal (Bavarian for devil ) was a Munich band that appeared from 1972 and was known for their political texts in Bavarian dialect. Till (actually: Tillmann) Obermaier invented the word "Rübelmusik" for her style, a Bavarian-bluesy freestyle.

Career

It was preceded by the volumes of poetry why nacha ned? und friss wos i sog, which Michael Fruth and Carl-Ludwig Reichert had written under the pseudonym Benno Höllteufel and also published on record. Julius Schittenhelm , who had made the recordings for the poetry record, made contact with the musician Till Obermaier.

Sparifankal lived and worked as a municipality in the context of the social and political movements of the seventies (free concerts, benefit events for socially and socially disadvantaged people, alternative Christmas parties, rock seminars, music with the disabled, etc.). From 1975 to around the beginning of 1980 they lived on a farm in Illbach near Pleiskirchen in the Altötting district . Then the band broke up for the time being.

The founding members Carl-Ludwig Reichert and Till Obermaier, later Obermaier-Kotzschmar (who died in spring 2018 at the age of 69), subsequently worked as ignition radio presenters and journalists. Jan Dosch was a co-founder of the Free Music Center in Munich.

After an 18 year hiatus, Sparifankal performed again in late 1999. In summer 2005 the band finally broke up. C.-L. In 2007 Reichert and Ulrich Bassenge recorded the CD babbalababb with the now defunct band Wuide Wachl .

Sparifankal 2

At the beginning of September 2009, Carl-Ludwig Reichert announced that Sparifankal 2 had been founded. The members of the new band are

  • Bernie - drums
  • Andi Sturm - bass
  • Stani Kirov - guitar, vocals
  • Carl-Ludwig Reichert - guitar, vocals

Sound carrier

The first record, Bayern-Rock , wasn't released until 1976, after the group had worked together for several years. It was recorded in February at concerts at the Theater K in Munich and at the Picnic youth center in Erding. The topics range from compulsory consumption ( da brown baaz) to a love song ( i mechd de gean amoi nackad seng) to bluus fo da peamanentn razzia, a song about house searches.

Huraxdax Drudnhax hit stores two years later. "In Joar 2000 do weads uns no rechd horusn do wead us no wos blian wamma uns ned rian ...": This is how a twofold begins, who paints out where life could develop at the turn of the millennium.

Negamusi is a double album released in 1981. Pages 3 and 4 were recorded at Circus Gammelsdorf . It was noticeable that many old texts from 1969 and 1970 were provided with music from 1980/81.

The last work, the CD dahoam is wo andas, was released in 2004. In 2005, the group finally disbanded.

occupation

  • Ulrich Bassenge: bass, organ, vocals (on 3, 4; see "Albums")
  • Jan Dosch: bass, guitar, ocarina, vocals (on 1, 4)
  • Roland Duckarm: drums (on 4)
  • Butze Fischer († 2002): drums, tablas, cowbells (on 2)
  • Rudi Haunreiter: drums, percussion (on 3)
  • Florian Laber: bass, vocals (on 1)
  • Stefan Liedtke: guitar, banjo, harmonica, jew's harp, humming pot (on 2)
  • Till Obermaier-Kotzschmar († 2018): vocals, dulcimer, ( bottleneck ) guitar, kazoo, dulcimer, sulna (on 1, 2, 3, 4)
  • Carl-Ludwig Reichert : vocals, guitar, 12-string guitar, post horn (on 1, 2, 3, 4)
  • Anton Seutter von Loetzen: Guitar (on 4)
  • Günther Sonderwald: drums, triangle (on 1)

Albums

  • 1976: Bayern-Rock, LP (1)
  • 1978: Huraxdax Drudnhax, LP (2)
  • 1981: Negamusi, double LP (3)
  • 2004: Dahoam Is Wo Andas, CD (4)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. "Bavarian Feuilleton - Bad Bavarian Boys: The Band 'Sparifankal'", broadcast in Bayern 2 on August 26, 2018