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Du is the eighth studio album by American actor and singer David Hasselhoff, released on October 17, 1994 by Ariola Records.On the album, Hasselhoff worked again with Mark Holden, Dietmar Kawohl, Andreas Bärtels and Michael Sembello, the only holdovers from his previous album You Are Everything (1993), as well as new writers and producers.
"Du" ("You") is a song by German musician Peter Maffay from his 1970 album Für das Mädchen, das ich liebe. It was his debut single as a solo artist. It was his debut single as a solo artist. The song was covered in 1986 by Dutch singer Andre Hazes as the title-track for his album Jij Bent Alles .
Du, du liegst mir im Herzen du, du liegst mir im Sinn. Du, du machst mir viel Schmerzen, weißt nicht wie gut ich dir bin. Ja, ja, ja, ja, weißt nicht wie gut ich dir bin. So, so wie ich dich liebe so, so liebe auch mich. Die, die zärtlichsten Triebe fühl' ich allein nur für dich. Ja, ja, ja, ja, fühl' ich allein nur für dich.
No, it was David Hasselhoff who stole the show with this awesome yet totally bizarre medley of hits from the 1980s. "This thing, called love, well, I just can't handle it. Never gonna give you up ...
Hasselhoff performed this song before throngs of pro-German reunification activists at the Berlin Wall on New Year's Eve 1989, mere weeks after the wall had begun to be taken down. Wearing a piano-keyboard scarf and a leather jacket covered in motion lights, Hasselhoff stood in a bucket crane and performed the song along with the crowd.
On You Are Everything, Hasselhoff collaborated for the first time with Andreas Bärtels and Dietmar Kawohl on several songs from the album. Hasselhoff, Bärtels, Kawohl and Mark Holden written "A Star Looks Down Tonight", which became a duet with American singer Gwen. Bärtels, Kawohl and Mats Björklund also produced the song.
The video has been uploaded and released on July 26, 2019, on Blümchen's Official YouTube account. It solely stars Hasselhoff and Blümchen in front of a simple white background on a photoshoot and singing session having fun and mocking around, with some of the songs' lyrics popping up.
" Herzlich tut mich verlangen" (I do desire dearly) is a German hymn, with lyrics written in 1599 by Christoph Knoll, with a melody adapted from a secular song by Hans Leo Hassler. It is a prayer for a blessed death, beginning " Herzlich tut mich verlangen nach einem sel'gen End " (I do desire dearly a blessed end).