Loading AI tools
German singer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Veronika Fischer, also called Vroni (born 28 July 1951 in Wölfis), is a German singer.
Veronika Fischer | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Wölfis, Thuringia, East Germany | 28 July 1951
Genres | Schlager, Pop |
Occupation | Singer |
Website | veronikafischer |
Fischer was born in the Thuringian municipality of Wölfis (near Gotha). She began to study at the Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber in 1968 with Hanns Petersen.[1] She also appeared with various bands such as the Fred-Herfter-Combo and 1970 with the Stern-Combo Meißen. In 1973 her first LP was released with the group Panta Rhei, which was jazz-oriented, among others Herbert Dreilich, Ed Swillms and Henning Protzmann, who later founded the group Karat. The titles Nachts and Blues were successful in hit parades like the Beatkiste.
Fischer graduated in music studies with the Staatsexamen as a soloist for chanson and musical. One year later, she founded the group Veronika Fischer & Band. In this volume, Franz Bartzsch (piano, keyboard, singing) was responsible for most compositions and arrangements. On the LP Veronika Fischer & Band, the guitarist and singer Johannes Biebl also contributed. In 1974 the blues appeared from the last opportunity, which was also released on numerous compilations. Her first solo album was released in 1975, when she also won the first place of the Year's Parade. Their next Amiga records sold more than 1.5 million times, making Fischer the most successful singer in East Germany. In 1977, Fischer's companionship split to start a solo career as 4 hp. Fischer formed a new band around Thomas Natschinski. From 1979, she worked again with Franz Bartzsch. At the end of the 1970s, she played with two albums of Reinhard Lakomy with music for children (the 1978 song title and Die Traumzauberbaum 1980). In 1979, her son Benjamin was born.
In 1981, Veronika Fischer left East Germany and moved to West Berlin after her house composer Franz Bartzsch and her then Hungarian husband Lászlo Kleber had also left the country. In the same year, the long-playing record amazed the audience at WEA. Further albums followed, but in West Germany Veronika Fischer could not build on the success she had enjoyed in the east. In 1983, she took part in the West German public selection of the national entry for the Eurovision Song Contest. Her title Infinitely far reached the eleventh and therefore penultimate place. More popular with critics than in the sales charts were subsequent titles such as In the evening before the storm, A feeling like life and You want your fun.
Shortly after the opening of the wall, Fischer was already appearing as a guest on East German television, and she has been giving concerts in former East Germany since 1990.[2]
On her album What's there, she released "Sohn meiner Nachbarin" ("Son of my neighbour"), an adaptation of Dusty Springfield's 1968 "Son of a Preacher Man" in 1993. With Dreamer like us, the version of a song by Renft-Texter Gerulf Pannach, she was seen in 1995 in the ZDF-Hitparade. She sang the children's music The Child and the Cat and released other albums, including one with children's songs and a Christmas CD. For some time, she has been working with the Berlin text author and writer Gisela Steineckert. This collaboration resulted in new songs and a biography of Veronika Fischer. In the autumn of 2008, she released her 20th album, Unterwegs zu mir.
In 2013-2015, Fischer's application under the VwRehaG to participate in the sales of her four long-playing records published in East Germany was rejected.[3]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.