Punk Wedding

Punk Wedding is the second extended play by German singer Nina Hagen. The German version Punkhochzeit was first released in 1987 by Metropol Records and the English version was released in 1988 by Amok Records. The EP celebrates Hagen's marriage to an 18-year-old South African punk named Iroquois.[1] It is also her first independent release since the expiration of her recording deal with Columbia Records. The German version of the EP was labeled "Banned from East Berlin".

Punk Wedding
EP by
Released1987
1988
Recorded1986
StudioHansa Tonstudio (Berlin)
GenrePunk rock
Length14:07
Label
  • Metropol
  • Amok
ProducerNina Hagen
Nina Hagen chronology
Nina Hagen in Ekstasy
(1985)
Punk Wedding
(1987)
Nina Hagen
(1989)

Background

After her recording contract with Columbia Records expired in 1986, Hagen kept on performing and releasing music independently. In 1987, she caught the attention of the media by announcing her marriage to an 18-year-old South African punk named Iroquois, whom she met in Rome in 1985. [2] The song "Punk Wedding" was written for the wedding and Hagen described the event as a marriage between the punk and new age movements. The wedding was scheduled on August 9, 1987.[3] When asked about having any apprehensions about marrying someone barely half her age, Hagen replied:

It doesn't matter how old people are. It matters if they love each other and have fun with each other. It has nothing to do with age. To get old is a mental disease. Everything is in the head.[4]

In 1995, when Hagen married Gordon Polk, the lead singer of the punk rock band FiFi, she claimed it was her first wedding and the previous wedding with Iroquois was "just for fun" and not real.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Can You Take a Joke (Or Do You Wanna Have Some)"
3:51
2."Punkhochzeit"
  • Kuphal
  • Dehmel
  • Liesegang
  • Krause
  • Hagen
3:41
3."Hardcore Rebell-Hochzeitsparty" (feat. Ramonez 77)
  • Martin Witte
  • Thomas Zabel
  • Pforr
  • Burmester
  • Hagen
2:54
4."Punkwedding" (English Version)
  • Kuphal
  • Dehmel
  • Liesegang
  • Krause
  • Hagen
3:41
Total length:14:07

Personnel

  • Nina Hagen – vocals
  • Jens Kuphal – keyboards
  • Jürgen Dehmel – bass
  • Billy Liesegang – guitar
  • Peter Krause – drums
gollark: Probably gitget.
gollark: I should look at how Opus does its updates, since Opus is generally considered good.
gollark: I see. Your standards for "not too hard" are probably different to mine.
gollark: I mean, git is complicated and has many legacy things behind it, a simple CC updater thing with limited diff-ing capability is still pretty generalizable.
gollark: Admittedly I may just end up reimplementing half of what git does anyway, but I feel like I could probably have a simpler task-specific version with fewer problems.

References

  1. Der Spiegel Gott sei Punk. 17 August 1987. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  2. Der Spiegel Gott sei Punk. 17 August 1987. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  3. Matsumoto, Jon. "Fleshing Out The Spiritual Side Of Nina Hagen", Los Angeles Times, July 17, 1987.
  4. Matsumoto, Jon. "Fleshing Out The Spiritual Side Of Nina Hagen", Los Angeles Times, July 17, 1987.
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