Anderster

Anderster, or andɐrstɐr as it says on the album cover, is a studio album by the German punk rock band Wizo, released 1 November 2004. When announcing the album, the band offered the English translation of "differenter". The band explains on the back cover of the album that the album was supposed to be different but instead turned out even "differenter".

Anderster
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1, 2004
GenrePunk rock
Length41:36
LabelHulk Räckorz
Wizo chronology
Herrenhandtasche
(1995)
Anderster
(2004)
Punk gibt's nicht umsonst! (Teil III)
(2014)

The word anderster is an artificial construction based on the German word anders, which means "different". The word anderster does not officially exist within the German language and could be considered a neologism or a grammatically incorrect construction. Because anders is an adverb, it is not considered proper to use in a comparative describing a noun. The proper adjective form of anders is andersartig, which changes to andersartiger with the proper comparative inflection, meaning "more different".

The album was the last album released prior to the band's dissolution in 2005.

Track listing

  1. Kopf ab, Schwanz ab, Has! (head off, tail off, hare!) 1:13
  2. Nana 2:26
  3. Jimmy 4:18
  4. Unsichtbare Frau (invisible woman) 2:40
  5. Kleines Missgestück (little mishap/bitch (combination of both words)) 2:46
  6. Der lustige Tagedieb (the jolly dawdler) 3:20
  7. Heut Nacht (tonight) 2:23
  8. Egon 2:39
  9. Phlughaphöm (airport (wrong spelling)) 2:27
  10. Chezus (Jesus (wrong spelling)) 3:45
  11. Schlau, Versaut und Gutaussehend (smart, dirty and attractive) 3:31
  12. Raumgleita (orbital glider (wrong spelling)) 3:24
  13. Miss Pickafight 2:39
  14. Z.G.V. 4:05
gollark: I think the biggest issue is that any system doing it is either going to have a central authority or some sort of web-of-trust-y federated model, and it might be possible for some groups to just completely discard votes from people they don't like.
gollark: Decentralized vote counting is... nontrivial, but probably possible.
gollark: You *can* do direct democracy.
gollark: Distributed systems design is hard even when you can trust all the things involved.
gollark: Approximately. I think you need some sort of central resolution for *some* things.
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