Blutengel

Last updated

Blutengel
Blutengel-blackfieldfestival-2013.jpg
Blutengel performing on the Blackfield Festival 2013
Background information
Origin Berlin, Germany
Genres
Years active1998–present
Labels Out of Line Music
MembersChris Pohl
Ulrike Goldmann
Past members
  • Nina Bendigkeit
  • Kati Roloff
  • Gini Martin
  • Eva Pölzing
  • Sonja Semmler
  • Constance Rudert
  • Steffi Weingarten
  • Anja Milow

Blutengel (stylized BlutEngel; German for "Blood Angel") is a German electronic music group formed by singer Chris Pohl (also of the groups Terminal Choice, Tumor and Miss Construction and the owner of the Fear Section label) after leaving Seelenkrank. The lyrics are written primarily in German and English and are presented with male and female vocals. The themes of the songs usually centre around themes common in Gothic fiction such as love, vampirism, sexual fetishism, death and immortality. The band calls their musical style "dark pop". [1]

Contents

History

Formation and early years (1998–2001)

Blutengel was formed in 1998 after Chris Pohl had decided to give up the preceding project, Seelenkrank (which had released two albums), due to contractual problems. Just as its predecessor, Blutengel uses melodious electronic tunes in combination with both male and female voices. The lyrics are primarily in German or English and mixed between male and female vocals paired with electronic sounds and with songs often focusing on all aspects of love, from the tragedy of hopeless romance of vampires (all the way to the more animal aspects of desire) and aspects of death and the afterlife.

The group's first album, Child of Glass , was released in early 1999 with Kati Roloff and Nina Bendigkeit as the original female vocalists.

In 2001, the second album, Seelenschmerz , was released. Bendigkeit left to concentrate on photography and eventually form the band Formalin. Gini Martin joined the band as the second female voice alongside Roloff. The first Blutengel gig ever took place at the Wave-Gotik-Treffen on 1 June 2001 in Leipzig in front of 10,000 fans. At the end of 2001, the single "Black Roses" was released with Constance Rudert as a session singer. The band performed at the Dark Storm Festival where Rudert appeared on stage with Roloff and Martin. This was the last time the band would play with its original lineup. Roloff and Martin left the band days later for personal reasons and founded their own project together, Tristesse de la Lune. Rudert, who had originally only been recruited for the single "Black Roses", became a full-time member of the band. Eva Pölzing joined soon after as a second vocalist.

Rise in popularity (2002–2008)

Angel Dust was released in 2002, placing 58th on the German charts. [2] The Angel Dust promotional photo shoot and booklet was made by Nina Bendigkeit.

In 2004, Blutengel's fourth album, Demon Kiss , was released, featuring the single "Forever". A DVD release, Live Lines , and the album-length EP, The Oxidising Angel , appeared in 2005, the latter of which contained new material as well as a cover of "Cry Little Sister" from The Lost Boys soundtrack. In early October, Eva Pölzing left band due to other projects. She was replaced by Ulrike Goldmann (ex-Say-Y).

For the following two years, the band released a couple of singles with a slightly more "pop-driven" sound until their fifth album, Labyrinth , was released in September 2007. It reached 36th in the German charts [3] and featured the single "Lucifer" and the live favourite "Engelsblut".

Extended albums (2009–2012)

Blutengel at Amphi Festival 2010 in Cologne Blutengel6.JPG
Blutengel at Amphi Festival 2010 in Cologne

In 2009, Blutengel released the album Schwarzes Eis , which featured the single "Dancing in the Light" and accompanying music video to promote the album. An extended edition of this album contained three full CDs, each with its own subtitle (Schwarzes Eis, the instrumental Behind the Mirror, and Redemption). The EP Soultaker was released later that year.

In 2010, the band performed at the Amphi Festival featuring Anja Milow, Maria Rehfeld and Jenny Haufe who had been hired in 2009 as a dancers for the Schwarzes Eis tour. Days later, it was announced on the official website that Constance Rudert had been replaced by two new singers, Anja Milow and Steffi Weingarten. Both featured on the seventh album, Tränenherz , released in 2011, and placed in the German charts at number 12. [4] Two singles, "Über den Horizont" and "Reich mir die Hand", were released to promote the album, with accompanying music videos, the latter featuring Pohl's new girlfriend Viki Scarlet as the "Bloody Girl" in "Reich mir die Hand", who would later become a permanent dancer.

The EP Nachtbringer followed that same year. A music video was released for the title track, featuring the complete lineup excluding Haufe for this video. Weingarten was fired from the band before they began touring, and on her official Facebook page, she wrote a statement claiming that she was not allowed to tour due to legal issues with Rudert. Haufe left in 2012, followed by Milow to focus on her job as a model for the clothing label AMF Korsets, continue college studies and work as an independent designer with her label Madone Noire.

Monument and Black Symphonies (2012–2014)

From 12 to 20 May 2012, Blutengel toured North America for the first time, playing in Mexico City, New York, San Antonio, San Francisco, Los Angeles and in Montreal for the Kinetik Festival. After the tour, Maria Rehfeld left the band.

The first single from the album Monument , "Save Our Souls", was released in November 2012, while the second single, "You Walk Away", was released in January 2013. Monument was released in February 2013 and placed #4 and #96 on the German and Switzerland music charts respectively. "Kinder dieser Stadt" was released on 19 July 2013 as the third single from the album.

Blutengel released an orchestral compilation album, Black Symphonies (An Orchestral Journey) , in February 2014. A single and music video for "Krieger" was released to promote the album.

Omen and best-of album (2014–2016)

Blutengel performing in 2014 14-07-26 Amphi Blutengel 10.jpg
Blutengel performing in 2014

The first single, "Asche zu Asche", from their upcoming album, was released on 14 November 2014. The second single, "Sing", was released on 23 January 2015. Omen was released on 12 February 2015.

The band then embarked on the first leg of the Omen tour in April and spanning through to August. Festival appearances included Wave-Gotik-Treffen, Mera Luna Festival, and Summer Breeze Open Air.

A new EP, In alle Ewigkeit , was announced via the band's website in early August as well as the tour dates for the second leg of the Omen tour, which began in November and ended in early December. The new EP was released 23 October 2015 and featured a reworking of "Weg zu mir", originally from Child of Glass, which served as a preview for the upcoming best-of album. [5]

On 26 February 2016, their best-of album Nemesis: The Best of & Reworked was released with re-recorded versions of Blutengel classics. To support this release, they played the Nemesis – Open Air Festival in July. [6]

Due to legal issues, Omen was re-released under the title Save Us. [7]

Leitbild and Un:Gott (2016–present)

In early 2016, BlutEngel entered the studio to record a new album, set for a release in February 2017. "Complete", the first single from the upcoming tenth album, Leitbild , was released on 2 December 2016; it featured two B-sides and a remix by British darkwave act Massive Ego. The second single, "Lebe deinen Traum", was released digitally on 3 February 2017.

Leitbild was released on 17 February. The album would be the band's third straight album to chart in the top 5 of the Media Control Charts at number 4. It would also chart Swiss Music Charts at number 49. Blutengel went on tour starting in April and ended in May to promote the album, with Massive Ego as their support. On 12 May, they performed an acoustic set which was recorded for release on DVD as A Special Night Out: Live & Acoustic in Berlin.

After the Leitbild tour ended, Chris teased that he began work on a new mini album or EP, to be released towards the end of the year. The mini album was later confirmed and entitled Black. The second leg of the Leitbild tour was also announced for October–December 2017. Live im Wasserschloss Klaffenbach was released April 2018, with footage from their Nemesis – Open Air Festival from July 2016.

In May 2018, Blutengel were back in the studio working on their next album, Un:Gott, which was released 15 February 2019 and was promoted with a tour that began in February. The tour was once again supported by Massive Ego.

A new mini album, Damokles, was released on 1 November 2019.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, three singles were released: The first, "Wir sind unsterblich", on 27 March; the second, "Obscured" (a collaboration with Hocico), on 3 April; the third, "Nothing but a Void" (a collaboration with Massive Ego), on Friday, 13 November.

Line-up

Current members

Current dancers

Former members

Former dancers

Discography

Studio albums

Related Research Articles

Xmal Deutschland, often written as X-Mal Deutschland, was a German musical group. Founded in 1980 with a completely female line-up, they had chart success both in and outside their native country. Their last album was released in 1989.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eisbrecher</span> German rock band

Eisbrecher is a German Neue Deutsche Härte band that consists primarily of Alexander Wesselsky (vocals) and Noel Pix, with live support from Jürgen Plangger (guitar), Rupert Keplinger (bass), and Achim Färber (drums). In the United States and Canada, their record label is currently Metropolis Records.

Sara Noxx is a German musician and member of the alternative music scene. She is also a member of the band Essexx, who in 1997 were the winners of the Zillo band contest.

<i>Child of Glass</i> (album) 1999 studio album by Blutengel

Child of Glass is the debut album by German band Blutengel. A 25th-anniversary edition remaster of the album was released with a bonus disc of rare tracks.

<i>Seelenschmerz</i> 2001 studio album by Blutengel

Seelenschmerz ("Soulache") is the second album by German band Blutengel. It was re-released in 2011 remastered as a 2 disc release, the original remastered album and a bonus disc of tracks from the original bonus disc, the Bloody Pleasures single, and a compilation track.

<i>Angel Dust</i> (Blutengel album) 2002 studio album by Blutengel

Angel Dust is the third studio album by Blutengel and the first featuring Constance Rudert and Eva Pölzing as female vocalists. Vampire Romance Part I was released as a single preceding the album.

Seelenkrank was a German Darkwave music project of Chris Pohl. The objective was to create a more intimate sound than the industrial stomp of Terminal Choice. Female vocals were included in this project, all of them performed by Nina Bendigkeit. Chris would go on to record two albums for the Machinenwelt Records in this style, though the name had to be dropped after Pohl left the label due to contractual issues. The project lives on today with a new label and also a new name: Blutengel.

<i>Demon Kiss</i> 2004 studio album by Blutengel

Demon Kiss is the fourth studio album by German band Blutengel.

"Totes Fleisch" is a song composed by the rock band Terminal Choice, from their 1995 mini-album with the self title.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Milow</span> Belgian musician

Jonathan Ivo Gilles Vandenbroeck, known professionally as Milow, is a Belgian singer-songwriter. Milow released his debut album, The Bigger Picture, in 2006 on his own label Homerun Records. The fourth single from that album, "You Don't Know," became one of the biggest hit singles of the year in Belgium in 2007, and The Bigger Picture stayed on the Belgian album chart for 110 weeks. However, it was not until his second self-released album Coming of Age in 2008, that Milow achieved major commercial success all over mainland Europe. The album peaked at number three on the German Album Top 50 chart, at number four in the Swiss Album Top 100, and peaked in the top twenty of many European charts. The album reached platinum in Germany and Switzerland, it reached gold in France, the Netherlands, and Belgium, and it sold over 500,000 copies in mainland Europe and Canada.

<i>Labyrinth</i> (Blutengel album) 2007 studio album by Blutengel

Labyrinth is the fifth studio album from German future pop band Blutengel. It entered the German Top 50 Albums Chart at 36 for a week. The album spawned a popular single, titled "Lucifer." It is also with Ulrike Goldmann, and not Constance Rudert. Lucifer was released as 2 cd's, entitled Purgatory and Blaze.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laura Jansen</span> Dutch-American musician (born 1977)

Laura Jansen is a Dutch-American musician. Before gaining fame in the Netherlands, Jansen became a fixture in the constellation of artists associated with Los Angeles nightclub Hotel Café – a national launching pad for artists as Sara Bareilles, Priscilla Ahn and Joshua Radin. As a daughter of an American mother and Dutch father, Laura has been living in the United States for over 10 years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">How to Destroy Angels (band)</span> American post-industrial band

How to Destroy Angels is an American post-industrial band formed in 2009 by Nine Inch Nails members Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross alongside Reznor's wife Mariqueen Maandig and longtime Nine Inch Nails collaborator Rob Sheridan. The group is named after a 1984 Coil EP of the same name. Alessandro Cortini joined the lineup for the duration of the 2013 tour.

<i>Black Symphonies (An Orchestral Journey)</i> 2014 compilation album by Blutengel

Black Symphonies (An Orchestral Journey) is an orchestral compilation album from German futurepop band Blutengel. It was promoted as a classical 'best of'.

<i>Schwarzes Eis</i> 2009 studio album by Blutengel

Schwarzes Eis(Black Ice) is the sixth studio album from German band Blutengel. It was released as a single CD and 2x CD limited edition, and 3x CD box set. Dancing in the Light was released as a single preceding the album, with an accompanying music video.

<i>Omen</i> (Blutengel album) 2015 studio album by Blutengel

Omen is the ninth studio album from German futurepop band Blutengel. It was released as a single CD, 2xCD digipack with a bonus disc, and a collectors edition box set with the 2xCD album and an EP entitled Dark & Pure Volume 2 featuring stripped down piano & guitar acoustic versions of songs from Omen, arranged and performed by Conrad Oleak with Chris and Ulrike.

<i>Nemesis: The Best of & Reworked</i> 2016 compilation album by Blutengel

Nemesis: The Best of & Reworked is a best-of compilation album by German futurepop band Blutengel. All the tracks on the first disc are re-recorded. The deluxe edition second disc features songs released between 2005 and 2015. In the collectors box set, there is also a DVD of all the music videos released to date.
Weg Zu Mir was released as a preview for Nemesis on their 2015 In Alle Ewigkeit EP. All tracks are taken from all albums and EPs, with the exception of Demon Kiss.
Two lyric videos were released, Children of the Night (Reworked) preceding the release by a week, and Soul of Ice (Reworked) on the day of the album's release. On 19 February, Children of the Night (Reworked) was also made available to download from the album.

<i>In alle Ewigkeit</i> 2015 EP by Blutengel

In alle Ewigkeit is the fourth EP by German futurepop band Blutengel. "Weg zu mir" is a reworking of a track from their first album Child of Glass, and was released as a preview for Nemesis, their 2016 best-of compilation album. A video was released for "Kinder der Sterne", which featured Meinhard, who released a version of the same song on his album Alchemusic II: Coagula, which featured Blutengel. There are two collaborations with dark-dance act Grenzgænger, and two demos of songs from Monument.

<i>Leitbild</i> 2017 studio album by Blutengel

Leitbild is the tenth studio album from German futurepop band Blutengel, released on 17 February 2017. It was released as a single CD, two-disc digipak with a bonus disc, and a collector's edition box set with the two disc album and a shaped MCD that features a rework of "Anders Sein" plus two songs off Leitbild in symphonic and acoustic versions. It also has two disc audiobook of Chris Pohl's Lebe Deinen Traum.

Massive Ego was a British darkwave musical group formed in 1996 by singer Marc Massive and Andy J Thirwall. The band has changed its sound and image since its formation. The original releases being mostly covers in a Eurodance, Hi-NRG style. Massive and Thirwall later parted ways, and Massive searched for a new musical direction for the band. Collaborations with Empire State Human and Lia Organa & Electric Prince were the start of a darker sound for the band. The band joined alternative German label Out of Line Music in 2015 with the line-up; Marc Massive, Oliver Frost, Lloyd Price and Scot Collins. Their debut album for Out of Line was released on 17 February 2017. The current themes of the songs centre around the darker side of life, depression and anxiety, death, suicide, love, sex and vampirism.

References

  1. "Blutengel | 2016 Juni". Blutengel.de. 30 July 2016. Retrieved 23 March 2020.
  2. "Offizielle Deutsche Charts: Blutengel – Angel Dust". Offiziellecharts.de. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  3. "Offizielle Deutsche Charts: Blutengel – Labyrinth". Offiziellecharts.de. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  4. "Offizielle Deutsche Charts: Blutengel – Tränenherz". Offiziellecharts.de. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  5. "Out of Line Shop in Alle Ewigkeit Out of Line Shop". Archived from the original on 31 October 2015.
  6. "Blutengel: Nemesis – the Open Air 2016". Archived from the original on 11 December 2015.
  7. "Blutengel forced to rename 'Omen' album to 'Save Us' due to legal dispute". Side-line.com. 26 June 2016. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  8. Formalin Archived 11 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  9. F.O.D Archived 11 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  10. "Zillo Musikmagazin – Constance Rudert und Blutengel gehen getrennte Wege". Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  11. Masters of Comedy Archived 22 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine