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General information
origin Bremen , Germany
Genre (s) skirt
founding 2005
resolution 2007
Last occupation
Rainer Friedrichs
Plate
Chris
Marcel Kuschela ("Captain Flubber")

VollKontaCt was a hooligan rock band from Bremen that was founded in 2005 and disbanded in 2008.

Meaning of the band name

Rainer Friedrich founded the band VollkontaCt because of quarrels with Hannes Ostendorf, the singer of Category C . In 2004, one year after the split of Category C, two songs appeared on the sampler Category A, B & C - Die Fußballrocker - under the band name Fußball Rocker MC . The politically inconspicuous bands Emscherkurve 77 and Abschlach were also represented there ! . Then he called the band VollKontaCt. The capital K and C refers to the category system of the Central Information Center for Sports Operations and is the strongest attribution there for the “violent sport”. This includes above all “football fans who are purposefully seeking violence”, the hooligans. In addition, this designation also refers to the old band name Category C.

In 2006, the in-house production was released without many words , then they cooperated with the label Sieg oder Spielabbruch , which belonged to the Bremen hooligan mail order company 90minuten, which was not only aimed at a right-wing audience. Managing Director Martin Elsner had also previously been a Category C manager. The two albums Für dich (2006) and Es geht weiter (2007) were released on the label . The latter was also released as an LP.

Only a few months after the last album Es geht weiter Rainer Friedrich returned to Category C.

style

The lyrics are about football and violence, especially the so-called third half , excessive alcohol, male friendships and fights. But Germanic history and the world of gods also play a role in the lyrics of the last album. The band belonged to the right-wing hooligan scene, but distances themselves from any political extreme in their songs. In the song Kotz dich aus it says: "From the left I hear Nazi, from the right I hear Zecke, they didn't understand anything, they push us into the corner".

All band members belonged (and partly still belong to this day) to the right-wing Bremen hooligan scene. Drummer Marcel Kuschela, alias “Captain Flubber”, also acted as regional manager North at a HoGeSa demo 2014 in Cologne and was head of the HoGeSa spin-off Together Strong Germany .

After the dissolution

Marcel Kuschela was found dead on September 19, 2018 in Mönchengladbach . The autopsy revealed that he had committed suicide with a knife . In response to the death of the well-known right-wing extremist, 250 people, including many from the right-wing scene, came to Mönchengladbach for a funeral march and laid a wreath at the Abteiberg Museum . Hannes Ostendorf from Category C sang a farewell song for the deceased. In social media , it came after the announcement of the death Kuschelas to speculation about a possible third party negligence (see also riots in Chemnitz in 2018 and demonstrations in Köthen 2018 ).

Discography

  • 2006: Without many words (self-published)
  • 2006: For you (victory or abandonment)
  • 2007: It continues (victory or abandonment)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Various - Category A, B & C on Discogs . Retrieved May 9, 2017
  2. Article about " Category-C " in the Lexicon of Right-Wing Extremism by Belltower.News , accessed on May 9, 2017
  3. Victory or abandonment at Discogs
  4. a b Ingo Taler (among others): Football connects . In: Antifascist information sheet . September 15, 2008 ( antifainfoblatt.de ).
  5. quoted from: VollKontaCt. Songtexte.com, accessed May 9, 2017 .
  6. Andrea Röpke : Hooligans on the move: beaten together. Taz.de , October 29, 2014, accessed on May 9, 2017 .
  7. Jan Oppel: Bremer registers hooligan demo in Dortmund. Weser Kurier , October 7, 2016, accessed on May 9, 2017 .
  8. Hogesa co-founder: Well-known hooligan found dead in Mönchengladbach . In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Online , September 20, 2018, accessed on September 20, 2018.
  9. Thomas Grulke and Gabriele Peters: After a hooligan's suicide: Right-wing groups move through Mönchengladbach . In: Rheinische Post Online , September 20, 2018, accessed on September 21, 2018.