Music – Berlin – The Doctors on stage for 40 years – Culture
Berlin (dpa) – Four decades after their first appearance as Die Ärzte, the Berlin musicians are aware of the importance that has grown with their fame. “At the very beginning, applause was optional,” said guitarist Farin Urlaub (58) of the German Press Agency in Berlin, 40 years after the debut on September 26, 1982 in Berlin’s “Besetzereck”, a squat in the trendy district of Kreuzberg. “For this first concert we also drew posters ourselves.”
“Sometimes you finished a song and then just listened to people drinking beer,” says Farin Urlaub. “You can’t be like rock stars. It’s a bit different now. We have quite a lot of attention and hopefully we’ll deal with it responsibly.” The musicians (“Scream for Love”, “Too Late”) are involved individually or as a band with many campaigns for small clubs in crisis, against right-wing extremism or for refugee initiatives.
Jan Vetter, Farin Urlaub’s real name, and drummer Dirk Felsenheimer, better known as Bela B (59), had met two years earlier and played for Soilent Grün. After the punk band broke up, the two musicians founded Die Ärzte together with bassist Hans “Sahnie” Runge in Berlin. After the band broke up for five years, Rodrigo “Rod” González (54) has been the bassist since 1993.
“We called our first tour through the German-speaking world a world tour, we allowed ourselves the megalomania,” Bela B said in retrospect to the dpa. “In the end we thought it would all be over in a year or two.”
The first performance in the “Besetzereck” was not sold out with 50 or 60 people. “During the concert there was a bit of resentment, because some of those present knew us from Soilent Grün, a very fast punk band with partly political lyrics. At first they didn’t like our new direction as much.” The doctors were also pop and slapstick.
Fundamental things have changed for Farin Urlaub in the repertoire since then. “Of course we’re playing a bit better now than we used to and there are more people there. But what is a huge difference: We played 20 songs at the first concerts with great difficulty because we had only written 18 songs and we also played two cover versions.”
For the set lists, the trio now has “many options for every position” with several hundred songs, which is “very luxurious”. Some songs are completely out. The band hasn’t played “Elke” for years. Farin Urlaub justified this recently during an appearance with the “Fat Shaming” passages in the text.
The first concert was “only in retrospect such a really important big moment”. The mood at the time was different for the guitarist: “I remember thinking afterwards: Well, now we’ve played a concert with the new band. But the feeling was not: Now it starts. That came about a year later.”
Drummer Bela B marked this turning point: “It wasn’t until about a year and a half later that we no longer had to dismantle our own system. That’s when real rock star feelings came up for the first time.”
© dpa-infocom, dpa:220922-99-853626/2