Pink Turns Blue

Pink Turns Blue are a post-punk band from Berlin, Germany. Formed in 1985, they were part of the first generation of gothic rock in Germany,[4] and released their first LP, If Two Worlds Kiss with a sound reminiscent of new wave with very dark undertones and use of synthesizers, and went to become part of the developing sub-genre of dark wave.

Pink Turns Blue
live in Stuttgart 2018
Background information
OriginBerlin
GenresPost-punk,[1] darkwave,[1], gothic rock[2]
Years active1985–1995, 2003present
LabelsFun Factory!, Our Choice, Orden, Strobelight
Associated actsEscape With Romeo[3]
Websitewww.pinkturnsblue.com
MembersMic Jogwer
Ruebi Walter
Paul Richter
Past membersThomas Elbern
Marcus Giltjes
Louis Pavlou
Brigid Anderson
Reini Walter

Beginnings (1985–87)

The band originally was a duo consisting of Thomas Elbern (vocals and guitars), Mic Jogwer (vocals, bass and keyboards) and a drum machine.

In 1985,[2] Elbern was part of an NDW-ensemble called Seltsame Zustände but wanted to form a new band in Cologne and was looking for musicians via an ad. The music student Mic Jogwer answered, and they had several small appearances around Cologne under the name Pink Turns Blue (named after the Hüsker Dü song Pink Turns to Blue). Musically they were oriented towards post-punk bands like early The Cure, The Chameleons or The Sound. In early 1986, art student and drummer Marcus Giltjes joined the band. The trio won a 'new talent award' from Germany’s biggest radio station WDR which included as a prize a studio session with producer and radio host Volkmar Kramarz.

The years as German indie insider tip (1987–91)

In June 1987, Mic Jogwer switched from bass to guitar and Ruebi Walter, who joined the band in 1986 as a keyboard player, moved to bass.

In August the band were signed by the newly found record label Fun Factory! The band recorded a few new songs and remixed existing material from 1986 for their debut album If Two Worlds Kiss, released in October 1987.

From October 1987 to March 1988, the band toured and the song Walking On Both Sides got them TV appearances and was played on the radio. They were invited to tour with the controversial Yugoslavian band Laibach, and Jogwer became friends with their soundman Janez Križaj. Križaj invited Pink Turns Blue to record their second album in Ljubljana. To pay for the recordings, the band smuggled Western studio equipment across the border.

In August 1988, the single Touch The Skies was released, and Pink Turns Blue played their first concerts in England, France, Switzerland and the Netherlands. In October, their second album Meta was released which carried the keyboard heavy The Cure sound to extremes and which sold 2,300 units within 8 weeks. As second single, Your Master Is Calling, was released which got them TV appearance in Tele 5, was on rotation of many radio stations and is their most popular song to date with more than 2.4 million YouTube views.

The third album Eremite also was recorded with Janez Križaj in Ljubljana and was finished in August 1989. However, their record label Fun Factory got into financial difficulties and Pink Turns Blue switched to the Rough Trade Records sub-label Our Choice, which released the album in April 1990. "Michelle" was remixed in Manchester and released in October as a single. Early 1990, Ruebi Walter’s younger brother Reinhold joined on keyboards, and drummer Marcus Giltjes left the band.

The fourth studio album, Aerdt (Art+Earth), was recorded between January and February 1991 in Ljubljana by Mic Jogwer and Ruebi Walter as a duo. A drum machine was used. The album was released in August. The band performed the songs live with a conventional setup supported a hired drummer.

Relocation to London (1991–95)

In spring 1991, after finishing the album Aerdt, Mic Jogwer and Ruebi Walter moved to London. The song "Seven Years" from Aerdt was re-recorded in a dance version and released as a single in September. In early 1992, two more dance oriented singles followed: "Overloaded" and "Star".

In May 1992 Pink Turns Blue recorded their fifth album, Sonic Dust, with their new English drummer Louis Pavlou, and it was released in August.

In December 1992, Pink Turns Blue recorded their sixth album, Perfect Sex, with David M. Allen, the producer of The Cure and Sisters Of Mercy. It was released after some delay in 1994. Louis Pavlou left the band to join The Cure to record Wild Mood Swings.

In November 1994, the unplugged album Muzak was released which was recorded by Mic Jogwer and his sound engineer colleague Marc Williams in his London flat. It contains a selection of Pink Turns Blue songs performed with acoustic instruments.

In 1995, Pink Turns Blue disbanded. Mic Jogwer later remarked that with the move to London, the band lost its musical orientation and spread itself too thin. Mic Jogwer made a career in the music and media industry producing CD ROMs and websites.

Re-union (2003–today)

In April 2001, Mic Jogwer produced three songs with Violetta Superstar, the band of Brigid Anderson which was released in October 2001 on a compilation CD (Die fiesen Diven). The two formed an electronic duo called Orden and started to write songs together and recorded some Demos.

Early 2003, Thomas Görnert, the manager of the Wave-Gotik-Treffen in Leipzig, requested a performance of Orden and he addressed Mic Jogwer’s band Pink Turns Blue. Jogwer and Andersen persuaded Thomas Elbern, Reini Walter and Louis Pavlou into a one-off Re-Union show and Pink Turns Blue performed at the Wave-Gotik-Treffen in June 2003. Following this, the band reformed and played as headliners at M'era Luna 2004.

The restart was announced in combination with a greatest hits album called Re-Union.

The seventh studio album Phoenix was recorded in Berlin in winter 2004/2005, mixed by Janez Križaj in Ljubljana and released in April 2005. The album received 'album of the months awards' in three music magazines (Sonic Seducer, Orkus, Zillo) and spent eight weeks on chart position 3 in the German Alternative Charts.

The eighth album, Ghost, which came about in the same setting in fall/winter 2006/2007 followed in May 2007. The release was presented at the Wave-Gotik-Treffen 2007 and again got 'album of the month awards', made it to chart position 37 of the annual German Alternative Charts.

In November 2009 the band recorded their ninth album Storm with the singles Storm Rider and Run From Me which made it to chart position 2 in the German Alternative Charts. Storm also got critical acclaim from the mainstream press (laut.de) and brought international attention and festival invitations.

In April 2016 Pink Turns Blue released their tenth studio album The AERDT – Untold Stories with their Club EP staying on chart position 3 for eight consecutive weeks in the German Alternative Charts. With the some success on the alternative chart in combination with placements and attention on the Internet as on Apple Music, Spotify, YouTube, Facebook and Last FM the band has since played at various alternative music clubs and festivals in Europe and worldwide.

Awards

Awards
Society Award Year
Westdeutscher Rundfunk New Talent Award 1986
Sonic Seducer Album of the Month (#2) 2005
Sonic Seducer Album of the Month (#1) 2007

Discography

Studio Albums

  • 1987: If Two Worlds Kiss (LP/CD)
  • 1988: Meta (LP/CD)
  • 1990: Eremite (LP/CD)
  • 1991: Aerdt (LP/CD)
  • 1992: Sonic Dust (CD)
  • 1993: Muzak (CD)
  • 1994: Perfect Sex (CD)
  • 2005: Phoenix (CD)
  • 2007: Ghost (CD)
  • 2010: Storm (CD)
  • 2016: The AERDT - Untold Stories (CD)

Compilation Albums

  • 1998: Best of and Rarities (Compilation CD)
  • 2004: Re-Union (Compilation CD)

Singles/EPs

  • 1988: Touch the Skies (12"/MCD)
  • 1988: Your Master Is Calling (12"/MCD)
  • 1990: Michelle (12"/MCD)
  • 1991: The Son (12"/MCD)
  • 1991: Seven Years (12"/MCD)
  • 1991: Overloaded (12"/MCD)
  • 1992: Star (12"/MCD)
  • 1994: Talk Baby (12"MCD/7'Vinyl)
  • 2005: Phoenix (MCD)
  • 2010: Storm Rider / Run From Me (7"Vinyl)
  • 2016: The Aerdt Club EP (12"MCD)

[5][6][7][8][9]

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References

  1. Pearis, Bill (14 December 2018). "German darkwave icons Pink Turns Blue plot first-ever North American tour". Brooklyn Vegan. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  2. Moyer, Matthew (26 Nov 2018). "Darkwave legends Pink Turns Blue to play Central Florida show in 2019". Orlando Weekly. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  3. "Pink Turns Blue Biography". metalorgie.com (in French). Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  4. Spracklen, Karl; Spracklen, Beverley (15 August 2018). "The Evolution of Goth Culture: The Origins and Deeds of the New Goths". Emerald Group Publishing. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  5. "Pink Turns Blue". Discogs. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  6. "Pink Turns Blue". MusicMight. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  7. "Pink Turns Blue kündigen neues Album an!". Sonic Seducer (in German). 2009. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012.
  8. "Pink Turns Blue". Motor.de (in German). Archived from the original on 29 February 2012.
  9. Pink Turns Blue at AllMusic. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
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