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Arndt Bause (30 November 1936 - 11 February 2003) was a German composer of popular songs.[1][2]

Arndt Bause
Arndt Bause 1936-2003
Angret Bause
Born30 November 1936
Leipzig, Germany
Died11 February 2003
Berlin, Germany
OccupationComposer of popular "Schlager-style" music
Spouse(s)Angret Hinsch
Children3 daughters
including Inka Bause
Parent(s)Werner & Emma Bause

Arndt Bause produced more than 1350 dance music melodies, many of which became "hits", which meant that he had a decisive influence on the music scene in East Germany for this genre.[2] Many of his compositions have acquired "Evergreen" status.[3]


Life


Arndt Bause was born in Leipzig, the fourth of the recorded children of Werner Bause, an accountant, and his wife Emma. For several years, starting in 1948, Arndt Bause was made to learn the piano: by 1955 he had been captivated by music in general and Boogie-woogie in particular. He made progress as a self taught musician and started to appear in several bands, both as a pianist and as an accordionist. Between 1960 and 1963 he was also taking trombone lessons.[4] Meanwhile, out of deference to his father's wishes, he had embarked on an apprenticeship in the relatively secure trade of glass blowing, which in 1954 he completed.[1]

By the time he completed his glass blowing apprenticeship his performing career had progressed to a point where he felt able to leave glass blowing on one side and focus on the music. He was a member of various groups which were soon getting contracts for concert and theatre work. On 6 October 1959 he married Angret Hinsch, the daughter of a plumber from Schwerin. Their three daughters were born in 1962, 1965 and 1968. With a growing family to support, Bause's income from music proved insufficient, and he returned to his trade of glass blowing. He never abandoned the music, but there was no longer time to follow an extensive performance schedule, and he turned increasingly to composing. In 1962 an orchestral composition was accepted for transmission on the radio.[1] Soon afterwards, teaming up with the lyricist Dieter Schneider, he began to produce a series of hit songs.[2] The collaboration with Schnieder brought Bause into the East German world of Schlager music. In 1964 the two of them came up with "He, Joe" which in 1964, sung by Gypsy, reached top place in the "Tip Parade", a hit parade-style ranking at this time organised by the national television service.[1] Further successes followed, with songs written not just for Gypsy, but also for Chris Doerk [de], Frank Schöbel and Andreas Holm.[1] In addition to Schneider, he was also working with lyricists such as Wolfgang Brandenstein [de][5] and Kurt Demmler.[6]

By 1968 his compositions were bringing in enough money to enable him to abandon glass blowing again, this time for good.[2] He was able to use some of the time saved to undertake an external course in composition and tonal structure ("Tonsatz") at the "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy" Music Academy in Leipzig between 1969 and 1974.[7]

In 1975 Bause relocated with his family from Leipzig to Berlin. In April 1976 they acquired a plot of land in Berlin-Biesdorf, which is where Arndt would live for the rest of his life.[1] The later 1970s were a period of intense collaboration with the singer Jürgen Walter. Between 1976 and 1982 they produced three LPs, incorporating demanding lyricss by Gisela Steineckert.[4] In 1979 he wrote the melody for Jürgen Hart's Sing mei Sachse sing,[2] which became his top selling title and featured on an LP entitled "Hart auf Hart" with which the two of them followed up the success of the single.[1]

In the 1980s Helga Hahnemann became the leading performer of Bause's songs, using lyrics by Angela Gentzmer. It was later reported that the professional collaboration with Hahnemann began after she accused him, "I never get any hits from you" (in their shared Leipzig variant of German: "Ick krieg wohl keenen Hit von Ihnen?"). By the time of her death in November 1991 their professional partnership was complemented by a close family friendship.[1]

Bause also wrote film music. His output included the music for two television films based on "talking head"-style monologues from Maxie Wander's book, "Guten Morgen, Du Schone" ("Good Morning My Lovely") and 24 "trick films" (animations) from the national film studio of which "The Flying windmills" ("Die fliegende Windmühle") became probably the best known.[7] Working with librettiste Gerda Malig he also wrote, the musical "Gesang der Grille",[2][4] which had its premier in 1987 at the Popular Theatre ("Volkstheater") in Halberstadt, followed by a successful tour of the country that included Berlin's Metropol Theatre (as it was then known).[8]

After the changes that led to reunification in 1990 there was less demand for his music as audiences in East Germany, for the first time, had unfettered exposure to the more diverse palette of West German Schlager music. The death of Helga Hahnemann in 1991 also removed from stage and screen someone who had, by that time, become the leading performer of his music.[9]

Arndt Bause died in Berlin suddenly, but surrounded by his family, following a major pulmonary embolism.[9]


Family


The eldest daughter of Arndt and Angret Bause, Katrin Gawenda, became the first "Miss DDR" ("Miss East Germany") when, in 1986, the régime cautiously, and under conditions of bizarre secrecy, arranged a national beauty pageant[10] inside a large temporarily reassigned fire station in Berlin-Marzahn.[11] Her participation in the contest, which initially came as a surprise, resulted from a prank by her then husband, Christian Gawenda.[11] Although her beauty was never in doubt, interviewed many years later she implied that her win might also have owed something to her aptitude as an interviewee. Asked by the moderator to name her favourite hobby, she replied, uncontroversially, that it was fishing. As a follow-up question she was asked about the biggest fish she had ever caught. "6ft2, 75 kilos, my husband Christian" ("1,86 Meter groß, 75 Kilo schwer. Mein Mann Christian.") The reply captured the spirit of the times and of the event: the audience applauded, shortly after which she received the crown.[11]

Their youngest daughter, Inka Bause,[7] embarked on her own career as a singer in 1985, at this point performing her father's songs.[4] More recently she has also appeared as a television presenter of popular entertainment shows.[12]


References


  1. Ingeborg Dittmann. "Der Komponist mit der Spürnase". Musiklegenden des Ostens – jot w.d.-Serie, Teil 87. "Verein zur Unterstützung öffentlicher Diskussion am nordöstlichen Stadtrand e. V., Berlin (jot w.d. - Die Bürgerzeitung aus Marzahn-Hellersdorf). Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  2. "Arndt Bause ..." Ino Hammer i.A. DDR-Tanzmusik, Rehfelde. 11 January 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  3. ""Arndt Bause und ich" - anlässlich des 10. Todestages erinnern sich namhafte Künstler an ihn am 17.02. im FFM". Pressemitteilung. Bezirksamt Marzahn-Hellersdorf von Berlin. 1 February 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  4. Bernhard Hönig. "Bause, Arndt * 30.11.1936, † 11.2.2003 Komponist". "Wer war wer in der DDR?". Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin & Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur, Berlin. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  5. "Wolfgang Brandenstein". Ino Hammer i.A. DDR-Tanzmusik, Rehfelde. 14 December 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  6. "Dean Reed - Es gibt eine Liebe die bleibt". Verein "Musik aus Deutschland e.V." (Deutsche-Mugge), Castrop-Rauxel. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  7. "Auf der Tonleiter in den Schlagerhimmel ... Vom Glasbläser zum Komponisten". Erinnerung an Arndt Bause ... Er war DER Schlagerkomponist der DDR - Arndt Bause schrieb Erfolgshits wie am Fließband: "Sing mei Sachse sing!", "Gold in deinen Augen" und "Erna kommt" stammen aus seiner Feder. Am 30. November wäre er 80 Jahre alt geworden. Mutteldeutscher Rundfunk, Leippzig. 15 December 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  8. chw (28 January 2012). "Inka Bause will ihren Vater unsterblich machen". Die Opern-Pläne der Moderatorin ... RTL-Moderatorin Inka Bause arbeitet in der bauernfreien Zeit wieder für den MDR: Am Sonntag startet ihre Show „Drei Wünsche frei“. Auch Bause selbst hat einen Traum – sie will die Oper ihres verstorbenen Vaters auf die Bühne bringen. FOCUS Online Group GmbH, München. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  9. Anita Oschmann; Anka Seyfert (12 February 2003). "Der große Arndt Bause: Wie seine Familie von ihm Abschied nahm". Berliner Kurier. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  10. Henryk M. Broder (4 February 2002). "Wie vor 16 Jahren die erste Miss DDR gekürt wurde". Weibliche Schönheit als Ware? Nein, so etwas gab es in der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik nicht, zumindest bis 1986. Damals wurden in Marzahn die ersten ostdeutschen Misswahlen organisiert - unter fast konspirativen Umständen. Der Spiegel (online). Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  11. Konstantin Marrach, Marzahn (28 April 2011). "Mein Interview mit der ersten Miss-DDR". B.Z. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  12. Alexander Krei (10 December 2011). "Inka Bause moderiert Wunsch-Sendung im MDR". Das MDR Fernsehen wird im kommenden Jahr einige Veränderungen am Programm vornehmen. "Bauer sucht Frau"-Kupplerin Inka Bause übernimmt eine Wunsch-Sendung am Wochenende. Auch im Informations-Bereich bewegt sich etwas. Medienmagazin DWDL.de, Köln. Retrieved 15 March 2017.

На других языках


[de] Arndt Bause

Arndt Bause (* 30. November 1936 in Leipzig; † 11. Februar 2003 in Berlin) war ein deutscher Komponist. Er war der Vater von Inka Bause.
- [en] Arndt Bause



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