add
a biography
Reviewer:
Iluvthe80s
Falco
was the most internationally successful pop artist ever to come
out of Austria, best known for his 1986 chart-topping hit "Rock
Me Amadeus." Born Johann Holzel in Vienna on February 19, 1957,
he was a classically trained child prodigy, but after graduating
from the Vienna Conservatoire, he relocated to West Berlin and
began fronting a jazz-rock band. Rechristening himself Falco in
honor of the German skier Falko Weissflog, he returned to Vienna
in time to play bass on the punk outfit Drahdiwaberl's 1979 album
Psycho Today, penning their best-known song, "Ganz Wein."
Falco began his solo career in 1982 with the LP Einzelhaft; his
"Der Kommissar," which fused techno-pop with rapped German lyrics,
became a major European hit and a club favorite in the U.S., with
a cover version by the group After the Fire reaching the Top Five
in 1983. The follow-up, "Jeanny," was banned outright by radio
as a result of its theme of prostitution, but nevertheless went
on to top the German charts. While 1984's Junge Roemer attracted
little attention, in 1986 Falco issued Falco 3, highlighted by
the single "Rock Me Amadeus," a campy blend of classical music
and synth pop which topped both the American and British charts.
While the rock ballad "Vienna Calling" was a minor hit, Falco's
subsequent efforts, including 1986's Emotional and 1988's Wiener
Blut, fared poorly; he had been long out of the spotlight when
he died in a car accident on February 6, 1998 at the age of 40.
— Jason Ankeny
SOURCE:
Allmusic.com
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