Dschinghis Khan (song)
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| "Dschinghis Khan" | |||||
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| Song by Dschinghis Khan | |||||
| Album | Dschinghis Khan | ||||
| Released | |||||
| Recorded | 1979 | ||||
| Genre | Disco | ||||
| Label | BMG | ||||
| Writer | Ralph Siegel, Bernd Meinunger | ||||
| Producer | Bernd Meinunger | ||||
| Dschinghis Khan track listing | |||||
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| Eurovision Song Contest 1979 entry | |
|---|---|
| Country | Germany |
| Artist(s) | Louis Hendrik Potgieter, Wolfgang Heichel, Henriette Heichel-Strobel, Edina Pop, Steve Bender, Leslie Mándoki |
| As | Dschinghis Khan |
| Language | German |
| Composer(s) | Ralph Siegel |
| Lyricist(s) | Bernd Meinunger |
| Conductor | Norbert Daum |
| Finals performance | |
| Final result | 4th |
| Final points | 86 |
| Appearance chronology | |
| ◄ Feuer (1978) | |
| Theater (song) (1980) ► | |
Dschinghis Khan (English translation: "Genghis Khan") was the West German entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1979, performed in German by Dschinghis Khan. It was later covered by Cantopop singer George Lam in 1980s, also by Japanese idol group, Berryz Kobo in 2008.
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[edit] Dschinghis Khan version
The song was performed ninth on the night (following Switzerland's Peter, Sue & Marc & Pfuri, Gorps & Kniri with "Trödler und Co" and preceding Israel's Gali Atari & Milk & Honey with "Hallelujah"). At the close of voting it had received 86 points, coming fourth in a field of nineteen.
The song was written and composed by the prolific duo of Ralph Siegel and Bernd Meinunger, and owes a considerable debt to disco music, specifically of the Boney M tradition. As the name suggests, it is in praise of the titular Mongol warrior, with verses extolling his military ("And about his enemies he only laughed/Because nobody could resist his strength") and sexual ("And each woman, that he liked/He took into his tent/They said, a woman who did not love him/Did not exist anywhere in the world/He fathered seven children in one night") prowess. Indeed, the entirety of his band are the subjects of this paean, being described as exceptional drinkers with a devil-may-care attitude to life ("And the devil gets us early enough").[1]
The performance as in a similarly flamboyant style, with one member of the band (Louis Hendrik Potgieter) dressed as a caricature of the warlord himself and capering about the stage, seducing the female members of the band and laughing as appropriate.[2]
The song makes many appearances in medleys and best-of collections of the Contest. As an example of the latter, it was featured prominently on the commemorative CDs produced to coincide with the "Congratulations" special in late 2005. Prior to the 2006 Contest, it was performed as part of a medley — one of only two non-winning songs to earn this honour.
It was succeeded as German representative at the 1980 Contest by Katja Ebstein with "Theater".
The song is also used at the end of Peelander-Z's live shows. The band dances to it before going offstage.
The song is played at Madison Square Garden for New York Rangers winger Petr Prucha.
The song was a show-stopping number in the middle of a 1979 German sex comedy film called Sunnyboy und Sugarbaby, a film which received a lot of late-night airplay in the early days of HBO under its English-language title, She's 19 and Ready. The film's characters go to a disco club, dancing to what is presented to be a live performance by the band, although the band and the actors are not seen together in the clips.[7]
[edit] Berryz Kobo version
| "ジンギスカン Dschinghis Khan" |
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| CD+DVD cover | |||||
| Single by Berryz Kobo | |||||
| B-side | Darling I LOVE YOU (Berryz Kobo ver.) (ダーリン I LOVE YOU (Berryz工房 ver.)) | ||||
| Released | |||||
| Format | CD+DVD single, CD single, Single V | ||||
| Recorded | 2008 | ||||
| Genre | J-pop | ||||
| Label | Piccolo Town | ||||
| Writer(s) | B. Meinunger, Yamamoto Iori | ||||
| Producer | Tsunku | ||||
| Berryz Kobo singles chronology | |||||
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| Alternate artwork | |||||
CD-only cover
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Single V cover
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Japanese idol unit Berryz Kobo has also released a cover of the song, albeit with toned-down lyrics, which do not make mention to the more explicit details pertaining to war, rape or the consumption of alcoholic beverages found in the 1979 original.
This single release marks the groups first cover song to be slotted as an a-side in a single. There are two versions to this single, a limited edition with a DVD (PKCP-5112~3) and a regular edition (PKCP-5114 – first pressing containing a photo card and a ticket for a raffle to attend an event promoting the single).[3]
The song was used as the main song to the group's musical, Dschinghis Khan ~Wa ga Tsurugi, Netsu Suna wo Some yo~ (ジンギスカン~わが剣、熱砂を染めよ~), running through January 2008. [4]
[edit] Track listings
[edit] CD track listing [3]
- Dschinghis Khan (ジンギスカン Jingisukan)
- Darling I LOVE YOU (Berryz Kobo ver.) (ダーリン I LOVE YOU (Berryz工房 ver.) Dārin I LOVE YOU (Berry Kōbō ver.))
- ジンギスカン (Instrumental)
[edit] DVD with CD track listing [5]
- ジンギスカン (Dance Shot Ver.)
[edit] Single V track listing [6]
- ジンギスカン (Video Clip)
- ジンギスカン (Close-up Ver.)
- Making-of Video (メイキング映像 Meikingu Eizō)
[edit] Royal Sprite version
Another version of this song was performed by Thai band called Royal Sprite. The song was released in the 1980s in Thailand.[citation needed]
[edit] Koyote version
The Korean dance/hip-hop group "Koyote" (코요태) have also made a cover of the song, "아자! 아자!", which appears on their Dance Best album, "vol. 9.5".
[edit] Die Apokalyptischen Reiter version
Another version of this song was performed by Die Apokalyptischen Reiter on the Dschinghis Khan EP this EP was bonus Allegro Barbaro Re-Release.
[edit] Notes
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