In 1984 the re-named Alphaville released their debut single "Big in Japan", followed by "Sounds Like a Melody" and "Forever Young", quickly followed by the album Forever Young. Despite its success Frank Mertens left the band in the same year and was replaced by Ricky Echolette (born Wolfgang Neuhaus, in Cologne, August 6, 1960) in January 1985.
"Big In Japan" was their biggest U.S. success, shooting to #1 on Billboard's Dance chart. While they never again had a Top 20 U.S. Dance hit, several of their releases went Top 40 and Top 30 on the Dance charts. They were less successful at mainstream U.S. radio, reflected by their showing on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles charts, where "Big" only reached #66. The first U.S. release of "Forever Young" failed to scale the charts. In 1985, amid reports pop star Laura Branigan was featuring the song on her next album, Hold Me, Alphaville's "Forever Young" was re-released as a single in the U.S., and again floundered in the lower recesses of the chart. Branigan's version, though promoted on stickers adorning the album, subsequently remained an album cut in the U.S., though it was released to radio in South America. She would go on to perform the song as an encore at nearly every concert she performed, from her 1985 tour until her death in 2004. The Alphaville version was released a third time in the U.S. in 1988, to promote Alphaville: The Singles Collection, and peaked this time at #65. Their highest U.S. Singles chart showing, it was also their last. International re-releases of Alphaville's "Forever Young" followed in 1989, 1996, and 2001. Several covers have been recorded and remixed, featuring male or female vocalists often erroneously attributed to be Alphaville's Marian Gold, or Laura Branigan.
In 1986 the second album Afternoons In Utopia was released, followed in 1989 by The Breathtaking Blue. As an alternative to individual music videos, the band enlisted nine producers, among them Godfrey Reggio (Koyaanisqatsi), to create a film entitled Songlines based on the album's tracks.
The next album, Prostitute, was not released until 1994. In 1996 Ricky Echolette left the band. Salvation followed in 1997. Stark Naked and Absolutely Live was released in 2000, followed by the remix album Forever Pop in 2001. A DVD was released in 2001 documenting two concerts performed in Salt Lake City, Utah. Two box-sets have also been released; rather than being collections of previously released album tracks they are actually 12 unique albums, several live, several rarities and outtakes, and several newly recorded. The first box, of eight discs, was released in 1999 (called Dreamscapes) and the second in 2003 (called CrazyShow or Dreamscapes 9-12). All the material in CrazyShow is newly recorded.
Bernhard Lloyd did not contribute to the CrazyShow album, and shortly after its release, on March 18, 2003 he officially left the group. The current core members of Alphaville are Marian Gold (vocals), Martin Lister (keyboards), David Goodes (guitars) and Pierson Grange (drums).
" Just a note to say Bernhard Lloyd is/has/recently played live with Alphaville. I saw him at the Esbjerg Rock Festival in June of this year. They sounded absoutely brilliant. Check out the Alphaville website, it's worth a look. Added by Fletchie, 02.11.07"
Marian Gold has released two solo albums (So Long Celeste, 1992 and United, 1996) alongside his work in the band. Bernhard Lloyd also worked on a project named Atlantic Popes with singer Max Holler. In 1996 Frank Mertens started on a musical project called Maelstrom which was a combination of ambient-style music, impressionistic and colorful art in the form of paintings and sculptures, and etheric poetry. This project seems now to have been by far abandoned, though, as Mertens has not been visibly active with it. In 2006 and 2007, Alphaville appeared on the "ELEKTRISCH" vol.1 and 2 album compilations with "From Germany With Love" and "Guardian Angel".
There is another artist with the same name:
2) A spanish Synthpop/dark/post punk group born in 1981 in Madrid by José Luis F. Abel (guitar & vocal), Mendi (bass), José Carlos ‘Charles’ Sánchez (keyboards), Jose Luis Orfanel (guitar) and Juan Antonio ‘Rep’ Nieto (drums).
The independent label DRO released their first EP in April 1982, "Paisajes nocturnos", which included four tracks. Their first hit arrived some months later with the 4-tracks 12'' "Palacio de invierno". In 1983 they released the album Despues De La Derrota.
Those Were the Days
Alphaville Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
I sometimes travel
But this is strictly after dark
Beyond the barricades and trenches
There stands the factory
Hand me the costum of the sad acrobat
And he says
Son, this is the bread i break for you
And he says
Son, this is the wine i pour for you
But do not drink it
Dein aschenes haar, sulamith
And he says
Son, this is the bread i break for you
Son, this is the wine i pour for you
But do not drink it, don't drink at all
There is a stranger on the shore
I sometimes travel
But this is strictly in my dreams
He feeds the seagulls in the winds with ashes
And as he speaks he's got my father's voice
And he says
Son, here is some bread i broke for you
Son, here is some wine
Those were the days, my friend
Dein aschenes haar, sulamith
Der tod ist ein meister aus deutschland
The opening lines of Alphaville's Those Were The Days create a vivid, surreal image of a secret world contained within the imagination. The lyrics describe a landscape that is explored only after dark, beyond barricades and trenches, and the traveler is outfitted in the costume of a sad acrobat. The imagery suggests a sense of danger and secrecy, as if this inner world is something to be hidden from the light of day. The central figure of the lyrics is the father, who appears in two forms - the first as a sad acrobat who warns his son not to touch or drink the bread and wine he offers; the second as a stranger on the shore who speaks in the father's voice and feeds the seagulls with ashes. The lyrics are cryptic and open to interpretation, but they seem to be exploring themes of loss, memory, and hidden knowledge.
One way to interpret the lyrics is as a meditation on the passing of time and the passage from youth to adulthood. The title of the song, "Those Were The Days," suggests a nostalgic longing for a time that has passed, and much of the imagery in the lyrics supports this interpretation. The landscape in the traveler's head may represent a lost world of childhood innocence and imagination, which can only be explored under cover of darkness. The father figures may represent the knowledge and wisdom of older generations, which is passed down but sometimes impossible to fully understand. The bread and wine they offer may symbolize the sustenance and wisdom that is available to us, but which we sometimes fear or misunderstand.
Overall, the lyrics to "Those Were The Days" are carefully crafted and richly symbolic, inviting the listener to explore their own interpretations and meanings. The song hints at a complex emotional landscape, full of loss, nostalgia, and hidden knowledge, and invites us to partake in its mysteries.
Line by Line Meaning
There is a landscape in my head
The singer has a mental landscape that they envision and explore
I sometimes travel
The singer occasionally ventures into this mental landscape
But this is strictly after dark
The exploration of the mental landscape only occurs at night
Beyond the barricades and trenches
The mental landscape lies beyond barriers and obstacles
There stands the factory
The mental landscape includes a factory
Hand me the costum of the sad acrobat
The singer requests the costume of a melancholic performer
And he says
The sad acrobat speaks
Son, this is the bread i break for you
The sad acrobat offers the singer bread
But do not touch it
The sad acrobat warns the singer not to touch the bread
Son, this is the wine i pour for you
The sad acrobat offers the singer wine
But do not drink it
The sad acrobat warns the singer not to drink the wine
Dein aschenes haar, sulamith
Repeating the previous lines in German, referring to Sulamith's ashen hair
Son, this is the bread i break for you
The sad acrobat repeats the offer of bread
Son, this is the wine i pour for you
The sad acrobat repeats the offer of wine
But do not drink it, don't drink at all
The warning not to drink the wine is emphasized
There is a stranger on the shore
The singer also envisions a stranger on a shoreline
I sometimes travel
The singer occasionally visits this vision
But this is strictly in my dreams
The shoreline vision only appears in dreams
He feeds the seagulls in the winds with ashes
The stranger feeds seagulls ashes in the wind
And as he speaks he's got my father's voice
The stranger speaks with the voice of the singer's father
Son, here is some bread i broke for you
The stranger offers the singer bread
Son, here is some wine
The stranger offers the singer wine
Those were the days, my friend
Repeating the title of the song, reflecting on past experiences
Dein aschenes haar, sulamith
Repeating the German phrase, referencing Sulamith's ashen hair
Der tod ist ein meister aus deutschland
The title of a play by Paul Celan, alluding to the theme of death
Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Gene Raskin
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind