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17 Hippies? history parallels the progression of Berlin?s music scene since
the 1980s; beginning with acoustic unplugged concerts and changing lineups of up
to 20 musicians, and maturing into a vibrant 13-piece band: double bass, banjo,
ukulele and guitar for a rhythmic base and violins, cello, accordion, clarinet,
trumpet and trombone for the melodies.
Though actually only 13 band mates, nor hippies, 17 Hippies still mix
traditional music from Eastern Europe, French chanson and American folk music
with their own Berlin background to form their own traditions.
The latest album by 17 Hippies features ukulele and a Persian hammered
dulcimer?played by a former heavy metal drummer?together with an acoustic
Turkish take of the hip hop classic ?Apache?. The Berlin-based group emerged
after the Berlin Wall fell. ?It was like someone had opened a hidden door,?
explains vocalist and lyricist Kiki Sauer. ?New and exciting music from
Eastern Europe flooded into town with new grooves. All we could do was listen,
learn, and try to find our own musical connections."
"The band started with a simple concept," says vocalist and musical
mastermind Christopher Blenkinsop. ?We said, ?OK, so you play an instrument?
Well, don?t bring it!?? Christopher picked up the ukulele (after playing
bass in rock bands); Kiki, who had been trained on classical piano, took up
accordion; L??l found a misplaced banjo; Dirk, the heavy metal drummer, had
always wanted to play guitar; Antje switched to clarinet, after classical flute
training; and off they went creating their own sound.
Twelve years and 1200 concerts later, this renegade acoustic sound is captured
on
Heimlich, released in North America by Buda Musique, and by the band?s own
label Hipster Records through CD Baby.
From the beginning, the number of musicians was constantly changing. ?In
Berlin you?d call a person trying to do something in a nice way, but only half
succeeding, a hippie,? Kiki explains. ?So with their tongue in their
cheek, people were referring to us as the five hippies, 24 hippies, or whatever
amount of musicians that happened to be on stage.?
One day when in a trio format, the band opened for a friend?s British punk
band. ?The English lead singer asked for our band name, as he wanted to
announce our ?appearance,?? says Christopher. ?On a lark, one of us
said 17 Hippies, and since then it stuck. In German, ?17? is pronounced ?zieb-t-zeen,?
and has a nice sound to it. It also has a somewhat magical appeal. It could
never have been 16 or 18.? As of this writing, there are 13 band members in
17 Hippies. And they also play the jew?s harp, the Indian tanpura, the Irish
bouzouki, and assorted other string, brass, and wind instruments. Just what you
would expect from 17 Hippies, regardless of how many of them are on stage.
?In Germany?and only in Germany?people tend to count musicians on stage,?
chuckles Kiki, ?and sometimes they say, ?Why, there aren?t 17 of you!? One
or two have wanted their money back! Same thing happens about the hippie thing:
?Why, you?re not hippies?? We tell them, ?Well, the Rolling Stones aren?t
exactly stones.??
Preparing for the new album
Heimlich, Kiki was writing very personal lyrics, revolving around the
feeling of losing what you thought was secure. One of the texts was ?
Heimlich,? a ?deep? German word, meaning something like ?the secret way? or
?top secret.? The title song tells what happens when a strong feeling should be
kept a secret, so as to keep that feeling alive and strong; whereas blaring it
out would destroy it. ?To keep the song from sounding too
?singer-songwriter-ish? we started adding different sounds. One day Carsten,
Dirk, Christopher, and I all coincidentally turned up with kalimbas [African
thumb pianos]. We played? and it was just right!?
?When we started, our friends were organizing the Techno-heavy,
musical-political celebration ?Love Parade,?? says Christopher. ?Techno
was the thing everybody was into, while we were ?going acoustic.? We had all
grown up on Chuck Berry and the Beatles, and maybe Beethoven, and that ever
since the ?70s, when David Bowie and Iggy moved here, the ?scene? considered
itself to be Europe?s rock city. There was no such thing as German folk, or
world music, or whatever you might call it? When we started, everyone here
thought we had gone mad.?
17 Hippies continues to use traditional tunes, and instruments, but rarely
playing them ?the right way? (whatever that is). ?Our audience in Berlin
learned about these new, old sounds by listening to us,? says Kiki. ?The
?traddies? hated us. After a while, people started referring to the way we
played as a style. Now in other parts of Europe they call it ?Berlin style.?
At the same time, the rock and roll aesthetic is carried one step further with
the ?17 Hippies Real Book? idea, which gets their tunes out to people so that
everybody can play along. ?Folk music in the sense of: music for folks!? says
Kiki. The band has released two books with scores (17 Hippies Realbook I & II). |