Musikantenstadl

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Television series
Original title Musikantenstadl (1981–2015)
Stadlshow (2015)
Silvesterstadl (1984, 1989–2014, 2016)
The New Year's Eve show with Jörg Pilawa (since 2017)
Country of production AustriaAustria Austria Germany Switzerland
GermanyGermany 
SwitzerlandSwitzerland 
original language German
Year (s) since 1981
Production
company
Austrian Broadcasting
Bavarian Broadcasting
Swiss Radio and Television
length 140 (New Year's Eve: 255) minutes
Episodes 210
Broadcasting
cycle
until 2015: several times a year since 2016: annually
genre music show
Director Kurt Pongratz
Moderation
First broadcast March 5, 1981 on FS1
Presenter Francine Jordi
Moderator Jörg Pilawa

The Musikantenstadl (title from 1981 to 2015 Musikantenstadl , 2015 Stadlshow , 2016 Silvesterstadl , from 2017 The New Year's Eve Show with Jörg Pilawa ) is a live entertainment program on public television with folk music , brass music , popular classical music , German hits and international light music . The show is a co-production within the framework of Eurovision and tours through venues in Austria, Germany, Switzerland and South Tyrol as well as occasionally in non-German-speaking countries. The producer is the ORF in cooperation with the Bavarian radio and the Swiss radio and television .

Conception

The name of the show, which started as Musikantenstadl , is derived from Stadl , the Bavarian-Austrian word for barn . The music show, conceived as a 120-minute entertainment program, is based on two components: easily catchy music and small talk . From September to December 2015, the name of the show was Stadlshow .

When it started, a special feature of the program was that production was not limited to a fixed location. The program was mainly produced in various cities in Austria, Germany and Switzerland. Occasionally, programs from South Tyrol were also recorded, sometimes outside of Europe. Within the German-speaking area one visited not only the large, but also the smaller cities. A prerequisite for a visit, however, was the existence of a suitable city or sports hall for the show. This approach, which has been used in a smaller geographical context since the 1960s for the program Zum Blauen Bock , was later also used in other entertainment programs, e.g. B. Bet that ..? applied.

The impression of a barn was created by tables with benches on which guests could take a seat, and around two meters high backdrops arranged around them, which were supposed to give the impression of barn walls with various decorations, such as corn on the cob hung up to dry . The Wolfgang Lindner Band played in the program for many years and accompanied all invited artists. In addition to the music, verbal contributions took up almost as much space. This included humorous interludes by Hias , in which Karl Moik also participated, and conversations with the guests, where the mayor and the important personalities of the respective city always had their say. With the acquisition of Stadl by Andy Borg in 2006, this concept was adapted slightly, but not significantly changed.

The “ Fernsehwastl”  - a stuffed dog that the guests were given as a thank you and as a souvenir after their performance - and the beginning of every program in which Karl Moik briefly presented the city in question in a film presented other peculiarities . For many years the trumpet echo of Slavko Avsenik and his original Oberkrainers played as a musical intro . Between 2006 and his farewell in Pula in 2015, Andy Borg opened every show with the self-composed Stadlzeit .

Erich Mathias Mayer, alias Hias , performed in the Musikantenstadl from 1981 to 1991 and then left the show. However, on the 20th anniversary of the series and in Karl Moik's last broadcast on December 31, 2005 in Klagenfurt, he was represented as a guest. From 2006 to 2015, Martin Rassau and Volker Heißmann, as Waltraud & Mariechen, provided funny interludes.

Broadcast date

The first broadcast on March 5, 1981 was still produced by ORF alone and came from the Upper Austrian city ​​of Enns . From April 16, 1983 the Musikantenstadl was broadcast nationwide in Germany. In 1986 she got the slot at 8:15 p.m. on Saturday evening. The 50th episode aired on February 4, 1989, the 100th episode on February 15, 1997. The tenth anniversary on April 4, 1991 and the 20th anniversary on March 10, 2001 were both celebrated in the Wiener Stadthalle . Since the last show hosted by Karl Moik ran on December 31, 2005, there was no gala for the 25th anniversary of the Stadl in 2006 (the short name of the show). On January 12, 2016, the ORF announced that it would no longer produce regular programs due to falling audience figures from 2016. However, the New Year's Eve edition took place between 2016 and 2019.

presentation

Moderation

From the start of the broadcast, the program was hosted by Karl Moik . At his side were the singer Hias, who appeared as a farmer's boy , with sketches and puns, and a mascot, the dachshund Wastl .

Andy Borg, Musikantenstadl tour 2010

Moik's contract expired at the end of December 2005 when Moik was 67 years old and was not renewed by ORF and ARD . He declined to moderate the issue for the 25th anniversary of the broadcast in March 2006, which Moik had been asked to do. Since then Andy Borg has moderated the Musikantenstadl as his successor . After its premiere in the 145th episode on September 23, 2006 from Wiener Neustadt , the following broadcast from Graz saw over 7.5 million TV viewers in Switzerland, Austria and Germany.

In February 2015, ARD , ORF and SRF announced that Borg would host the show for the last time on June 27, 2015. His successors were the presenter Alexander Mazza and the Swiss singer Francine Jordi . The format should appeal to a younger audience in the future, which is why the concept of the show has been fundamentally revised. However, there was only one regular edition and one New Year's Eve edition 2015 with the two.

In May 2016 it became known that Mazza would be replaced by Jörg Pilawa as the male moderation part in the only remaining New Year's Eve programs .

orchestra

Wolfgang Lindner jr, Musikantenstadl tour 2010.

From 1984 the Wolfgang Lindner Band was an accompanying orchestra under the name of Wolfgang Lindner and his Original Stadlmusikanten as an integral part of the Musikantenstadl with Karl Moik. When Wolfgang Lindner had to quit his job in 2005 for health reasons, he handed over the management to his son Wolfgang Lindner junior , who was still accompanying the last TV shows with Karl Moik.

With the change of moderation in 2006, the band also changed, but not the musical director. Since then, Wolfgang Lindner jr. and the young Stadlmusikanten the performing artists through the broadcasts and tour concerts.

Special editions

Transfers from abroad

The show has already appeared in several non-German-speaking countries. The Stadl from Portorož in what was then Yugoslavia was broadcast at the end of August 1985 . This barn was also the first to be held not in a hall, but as an open-air event in the port of the holiday resort on the Adriatic .

Thanks to a collaboration between the producing broadcasters and the Soviet radio, it was possible to organize a broadcast from Moscow in September 1988 . Tatjana Wedenejewa , a well-known Russian TV announcer , acted as co-moderator .

From the mid-1990s to 2001 there were more broadcasts from abroad. Karl Moik made guest appearances in the Coliseum Arena in the Exhibition Palace in Toronto, Canada (1994), in Flinders Park in Melbourne (1995), in Cape Town (1996), in Disneyworld ( Orlando ) (1998) and on the square in front of the lunch gate in the Forbidden City in Beijing (1999). In November 2000 the barn was recorded in New York , New Orleans and the Caribbean . About 3,500 people took the Carnival Triumph cruise ship to the recording location. The television audience saw a compilation of the trip in February 2001. At the personal invitation of the Sheikh of Dubai , Moik was allowed to record his Stadl in the United Arab Emirates in October 2001 . Moik's last trip abroad was shown two months later in December 2001.

After a ten-year break, Andy Borg performed his first international musicians' stadl live on May 7, 2011 from Poreč in Croatia .

Silvesterstadl

For the first time in 1984, a special edition named Silvesterstadl took place on the night of December 31, 1984 to January 1, 1985. Such a program has been broadcast annually since 1989. The Silvesterstadl 2005 was also the last broadcast moderated by Karl Moik. Since 2016 there are no longer any regular editions. From now on , the Silvesterstadl will remain the only fixed edition of the format in the year.

30 years of Musikantenstadl

On March 12, 2011, an anniversary episode for the 30th anniversary of the show was to be broadcast from Freiburg im Üechtland . Because of the earthquake disaster in Japan the day before and the associated nuclear accident at the Fukushima nuclear power plant , ARD and ORF decided to suspend the live broadcast in favor of special programs about this event. The anniversary edition was finally broadcast on March 26, 2011.

reception

Similar to other programs of popular music, the Musikantenstadl was often the target of parodies and satires , e.g. B. from Matthias Schriefl's band Mutantenstadl .

Since 2009 (from episode 157) the show has been broadcast with subtitles for the hearing impaired .

Episodes and venues

1981

  • Episode 1 (March 5, 1981): Enns
  • Episode 2 (June 7, 1981): Bärnbach
  • Episode 3 (July 30, 1981): Feldkirch
  • Episode 4 (October 22, 1981): Vienna
  • Episode 5 (December 17, 1981): Linz

1982

1983

1984

  • Episode 20 (February 9, 1984): Iron ore
  • Episode 21 (April 12, 1984): Zeltweg
  • Episode 22 (May 10, 1984): Baden near Vienna
  • Episode 23 (October 4, 1984): Feldbach
  • Episode 24 (November 8, 1984): Wels
  • Episode 25 (December 6, 1984): Ternitz
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 1984): Linz

1985

1986

1987

  • Episode 38 (February 12, 1987): Perg
  • Episode 39 (April 9, 1987): Murau
  • Episode 40 (May 28, 1987): Wiener Neustadt
  • Episode 41 (August 6, 1987): Gmunden
  • Episode 42 (September 17, 1987): Munich
  • Episode 43 (December 11, 1987): Vienna

1988

1989

1990

1991

  • Episode 62 (February 14, 1991): Oberwart
  • Episode 63 (April 4, 1991): Vienna
  • Episode 64 (May 25, 1991): Lustenau
  • Episode 65 (July 20, 1991): Saarbrücken
  • Episode 66 (August 24, 1991): Liezen
  • Episode 67 (September 28, 1991): Kiel
  • Episode 68 (October 31, 1991): Bolzano
  • Episode 69 (November 23, 1991): Bad Vöslau
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 1991): Linz

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

  • Episode 116 (March 4, 2000): Basel
  • Episode 117 (April 15, 2000): Graz -Unterpremstätten
  • Episode 118 (June 3, 2000): Rostock
  • Best Of (August 5, 2000)
  • Episode 119 (September 23, 2000): Stuttgart
  • Episode 120 (October 28, 2000): Bad Vöslau
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2000): Wels

2001

2002

2003

  • Episode 130 (March 1, 2003): Graz
  • Episode 131 (April 26, 2003): Dornbirn
  • Episode 132 (June 14, 2003): Flensburg
  • Episode 133 (September 27, 2003): Sankt Pölten
  • Episode 134 (November 22, 2003): Salzburg
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2003): Hanover

2004

2005

2006

2007

  • Episode 147 (February 17, 2007): Basel
  • Episode 148 (April 28, 2007): Klagenfurt
  • Episode 149 (June 16, 2007): Vienna
  • Episode 150 (September 22, 2007): Salzburg
  • Episode 151 (November 17, 2007): Passau
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2007): Oberwart

2008

  • Episode 152 (March 8, 2008): Basel
  • Episode 153 (April 26, 2008): Klagenfurt
  • Episode 154 (July 5, 2008): Dornbirn
  • Episode 155 (September 20, 2008): Munich
  • Episode 156 (November 15, 2008): Innsbruck
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2008): Graz

2009

  • Episode 157 (March 7, 2009): Riesa
  • Episode 158 (April 18, 2009): Tulln
  • Episode 159 (May 23, 2009): Friborg
  • Episode 160 (September 19, 2009): Linz
  • Episode 161 (November 14, 2009): Passau
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2009): Wiener Neustadt

2010

2011

2012

2013

  • Episode 174 (April 6, 2013): Salzburg
  • Episode 175 (June 15, 2013): Ingolstadt
  • Episode 176 (September 14, 2013): Tulln
  • Episode 177 (November 16, 2013): Basel
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2013): Klagenfurt

2014

  • Episode 178 (March 8, 2014): Wiener Neustadt
  • Episode 179 (May 3, 2014): Friborg
  • Episode 180 (September 22, 2014): Passau
  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2014): Graz

2015

  • Episode 181 (March 28, 2015): Oberwart
  • Episode 182 (June 27, 2015): Pula / Croatia (Open Air)

Consequences of the Stadlshow:

  • Episode 183 (September 12, 2015): Offenburg
  • Stadlshow New Year's Eve (December 31, 2015): Linz

2016

  • Silvesterstadl (December 31, 2016): Graz

2017

  • New Year's Eve Show (December 31, 2017): Graz

2018

  • New Year's Eve Show (December 31, 2018): Linz

2019

  • New Year's Eve Show (December 31, 2019): Offenburg

More productions

Francine Jordi and Andy Borg, Musikantenstadl tour 2010.

In addition to the television programs and the associated merchandising products (items of clothing, bags, mugs, etc.), a number of other productions are also marketed under the Musikantenstadl umbrella brand . Groups, bands and individual performers perform as part of the Stadl junior competition . From 2008 onwards, a Musikantenstadl tour took place once a year with a number of musicians known from the programs and moderated by Andy Borg. In 2009 there was the first Stadl cruise with concerts on a cruise ship.

Stadlpost

Stadlpost
Stadlpost logo 2015 final rgb-03.jpg
description Print and online magazine
publishing company Stadlmedia
First edition 1997
Frequency of publication 8 times a year
Sold edition 60,000 copies
Web link www.stadlpost.at

The Stadlpost (formerly Musikantenstadlpost ) is a print and online magazine for folk music and hits from Stadlmedia Verlag. The magazine became the 100th broadcast of the Musikantenstadl in 1997 a. a. Founded by Karl Moik and was a licensed product of the ORF until 2012 as the print title of the Musikantenstadl accompanying the program. A relaunch of the Stadlpost was attempted in Vienna in September 2015 . The Stadlpost describes itself as a print and online magazine for "Heimatmusik and Alpine lifestyle", independent of the program, in the tradition of the Musikantenstadl. The focus of the reporting is the folk music and hit scene, information about events and concerts in the entertainment industry, reports on current events and news from the stars, fashion & beauty, health & wellness, travel as well as puzzles & competitions.

literature

  • Susanne Binder, Gebhard Fartacek (ed.): Der Musikantenstadl. Alpine popular culture from a different perspective. Lit-Verlag, Vienna a. a. 2006, ISBN 3-8258-9802-4 ( online version ).
  • Eva Mang: The big Stadl book. A show makes television history . Verlag 66, Amstetten 2004, ISBN 3-902211-20-2 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ " Musikantenstadl director Kurt Pongratz became professor " schlagerportal.com
  2. The "New Year's Eve show with Jörg Pilawa" - live on December 31 in ORF 2, the first and SRF - der.ORF.at . In: der.ORF.at . ( orf.at [accessed September 12, 2017]).
  3. ^ Off for the regular “Stadlshow”. In: oesterreich.orf.at. January 12, 2016. Retrieved October 22, 2017 .
  4. Jörg Pilawa takes over the "Silvesterstadl"
  5. Thomas Lückerath: Information instead of entertainment - ARD does not broadcast the "Musikantenstadl". DWDL.de , March 12, 2011, accessed December 14, 2014 .
  6. Jubilee Musikantenstadl runs on March 26th
  7. Stadlpost is celebrating a comeback

Web links

Commons : Musikantenstadl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files