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The video, which is almost entirely black and white, was released online on 26 April 2019 at 11:00 CET following a 26-second black and white preview [2] for the video two days prior, containing Kraftwerk and Klaus Nomi references. [3]
"Mutter" (German for "mother") is a power ballad by German Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein, released as the fourth single from the album of the same name. The single release includes "5/4", a song that is instrumental except for a Speak & Spell dialogue sample that was played as the intro for live shows since 2000, but wasn't released until ...
"Zeit" (German: Time) is a song by German Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein. It is the title track from their eighth studio album of the same name and released as the first single from it. [1] The song became Rammstein's third No. 1 single in Germany after "Deutschland" in 2019. [2] The track was also nominated for the 2022 Kerrang!
"Rosenrot" (German for "Rose-red") is a song by German industrial metal band Rammstein. It was released on 16 December 2005, as the second single from the band's album of the same name . The song was highly anticipated by fans of Rammstein, as it was first hailed in February 2004 to be the first single from the band's fourth studio album, Reise ...
"Links 2 3 4" (also spelled "Links 2-3-4"; English: "Left 2 3 4") is a song by German Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein. It was released as the second single from their third studio album, Mutter, on 14 May 2001.
"Du riechst so gut" (German: [duː ˈʁiːçst zoː ˈɡuːt], "you smell so good") is a song by German Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein. It was released the band's first single on 24 August 1995, also acting as the lead single from their debut studio album, Herzeleid (1995).
Christian Diemer, musicologist and Germanist, subjected both the music video and the lyrics to a deeper hermeneutic examination, and came to the following conclusion: The text-based findings indicate that contrary expressions of opinion of varying degrees of explicitness and diffuseness are staged, partly in clearly assigned textual elements ...
The song contains controversial lyrics surrounding sadomasochism. Because of this, Liebe ist für alle da was placed on the "index" maintained by the German BPjM, leading to a forced censored re-release of the album. [1] In May 2010, the original uncensored album and the single were de-indexed and consequently released in Germany. [2]