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Alphaville discography at Discogs This page was last edited on 17 January 2025, at 16:29 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4. ...
Alphaville is a German synthpop band formed in Münster in 1982. They gained popularity in the 1980s . The group was founded by singers Marian Gold , Bernhard Lloyd , and Frank Mertens .
Prostitute is the fourth studio album by German synth-pop band Alphaville, released in 1994. [2] The album was reissued in a remastered and expanded edition in November 2023. [ 3 ]
When the compilation album Alphaville Amiga Compilation was assembled for release in East Germany in 1988, the song "Summer in Berlin" was submitted for inclusion, but rejected "for political reasons." [3] "Fallen Angel" was written after "Big in Japan" was released, and the band said "everything changes when you're number one.
In 2001, Alphaville released a new set of remixes in a "limited fan edition" called "Forever Young 2001". This single contained three music tracks, one spoken word track, and a PC-only track. This CD was released to fans for free, only postage needed to be paid. The names of every fan who had requested a copy were printed on the inside cover.
It should only contain pages that are Alphaville (band) albums or lists of Alphaville (band) albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Alphaville (band) albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Marian Gold (born Hartwig Schierbaum; 26 May 1954) is a German singer-songwriter who gained fame as the lead singer of the German synth-pop band Alphaville, but also has recorded as a solo artist. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He is known for his tenor multi-octave vocal range.
Afternoons in Utopia is the follow-up to Alphaville's successful first album, Forever Young. [3] Singer/songwriter Marian Gold said of these albums, "our first album emerged from the smut of the Here and Now and our second led back to our roots in Sugar Candy Mountain", [3] and the band employed no less than 27 guest musicians and singers to record the songs. [1]