Reise, Reise | ||||
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Studio album by Rammstein | ||||
Released | 27 September 2004 | |||
Recorded | 2003–2004 El Cortijo Studios, Málaga, Spain |
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Genre | Neue Deutsche Härte | |||
Length | 47:47 | |||
Language | German, English, Russian, French | |||
Label | Motor, Republic | |||
Producer | Jacob Hellner, Rammstein | |||
Rammstein chronology | ||||
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Singles from Reise, Reise | ||||
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Reise, Reise (German for Arise, Arise) is Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein's fourth studio album. It was released on 27 September 2004 in Germany and followed shortly by its release across Europe. It was released in North America on 16 November 2004. It was in the top ten in several European charts and a number one hit in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Iceland, Finland, Estonia and Mexico. As of February 2006, the album has shipped 1.5 million copies globally.[1]
Contents |
The album was recorded in Spain (El Cortijo Studio, Malaga) and produced by Jacob Hellner and Rammstein. The band recorded several songs during the sessions for "Reise, Reise" which were omitted from the album's final track listing and were later released on their follow-up album Rosenrot.[2] A statement from the band's management regarding the upcoming collection reads as follows:
“ | After the production period of the album, there were many songs which did not find a place on 'Reise, Reise' due to dramaturgical reason but are now completed. This is not unusual. As 'Ohne Dich' derived from the production of 'Mutter', many songs have been sitting to be completed for a year and shall now come to light. Which songs remains to be seen and is up to the band only. | ” |
The record company stated: "When we were introduced to the tracks of "Reise, Reise", many fascinating songs were among them, which were suddenly missing on the album. Among others I remember one song, which we all believed to be the first single of the album. The song was "Rosenrot", and when we had to realize that the band changed their minds and it did not even make it on to the album, we were speechless. The album was perfect nevertheless, but their enormous self-confidence surprised us."[3]
The album is based on the crash of Japan Airlines Flight 123 on the evening of August 12, 1985. Twelve minutes into its flight, the Boeing 747 suffered an explosive decompression due to failure of its rear pressure bulkhead, caused by a faulty repair years earlier. The explosion tore off most of the aircraft's vertical stabilizer and ruptured all four of the hydraulic systems, causing the loss of all flight control surfaces and rendering the aircraft uncontrollable. The pilots fought to keep the aircraft aloft for nearly 32 minutes, but eventually became trapped in the towering mountain ranges surrounding Mt. Fuji and crashed, killing 520 out of the 524 passengers and crew on board. As of 2011 it remains the deadliest single aircraft disaster in history. Some pressings of the album contain a recording of the last 30 seconds of the flight as an easter egg hidden in the pregap. The length of the album is often related to the Japan Airlines Flight 123's Boeing 747 that suffered an accident.
"Amerika" is probably the groups' most overt political statement to date, revolving around the recurring English-language chorus "We're all living in America, America is wonderful, Were all living in America, America, America". It is perhaps not the most nuanced attack of American cultural hegemony, but it is spirited and catchy nonetheless, a fine addition to the groups' tradition of crafting ineffably catchy anthemic sing-alongs."
The album "revels in the type of paradoxical, multi-faceted existentialism which comes second nature to Germans but is persistently untranslatable to Americans" and it opens with the track "Reise Reise" wich means "journey, journey", and "we are immediately put on notice that this particular journey will be a grim and harrowing one, leavened by German existentialism in the grand tradition of Mann and Goethe."[4] The song "Amerika" deals with the worldwide influence of the culture of the United States of America. The song's two verses are sung in German with a chorus in English: "We're all living in Amerika, Amerika ist wunderbar, We're all living in Amerika, Amerika, Amerika." The band views it as a satirical commentary on "Americanization", and it features mentions of Coca-Cola, and Mickey Mouse. The song "Mein Teil" is about Armin Meiwes, a man who achieved international notoriety for killing and eating a voluntary victim whom he had found via the Internet. After Meiwes and the victim jointly attempted to eat the victim's severed penis, Meiwes killed his victim and proceeded to eat a large amount of his flesh. Because of his acts, Meiwes is also known as the Rotenburg Cannibal or Der Metzgermeister (The Master Butcher).[5] According to Rammstein's bassist Oliver Riedel, the song came about after "one of our members brought a newspaper to rehearsal and it had a story about the cannibal guy in it. We were fascinated, shocked and amused at the same time." Vocalist Till Lindemann stated, "It's so sick that it becomes fascinating and there just has to be a song about it".[6] "Mein Teil" attracted controversy in Germany; the media dubbed it the "Kannibalensong" (cannibal song), which helped to boost it to second place in the German music charts after its release in early August 2004. Remixes of the song were done by Arthur Baker and the Pet Shop Boys. At the beginning of the song in the video, the phrase "Suche gut gebauten Achtzehn- bis Dreißigjährigen zum Schlachten – Der Metzgermeister" ("Looking for a well built 18 to 30 year old to be slaughtered - The Master Butcher") is spoken, voiced by Ollie, although the album version of the song does not have this beginning. The quote is taken from an online post by Armin Meiwes. "Ohne dich" (Without You) is a power ballad. It is seen as expressing mourning over the loss of a loved person. It follows a slow, even romantic ballad style. The central motif is "Without you, I cannot be..., With you, I am alone also..." "Los" is a German suffix meaning “-less” (as in “meaningless”), but it is also an adjective meaning “off” or “loose”, and when used as a command it means "go!". The track itself reminds the early work of "Depeche Mode", with repetitive acoustic guitar and a stripped-down, insistent beat.[4] The album ends with the track "Amour", one of the most intimate love songs written by the band. In the context of a disc filled with the imagery of "great black gaps in the fabric of human rationality", Rammstein somehow manage to make "honest and sincere romance seem just slightly alien, and tinted with enough melancholy to satisfy the heartiest emo-kid." There's also a guitar solo towards the end, another uncharacteristic gesture in the album.[4]
On the U.S. release, the "easter egg" fragment is placed at the beginning of "Reise, Reise" in normal playback. The 2005 pressing does not contain the easter egg, but the original 2004 pressing does. On the European version the easter egg is in negative time, to access it, you must rewind the CD past the beginning of "Reise, Reise". The American iTunes version of "Reise, Reise" also contains the easter egg. On 21 April 2005, Rammstein released a special Japanese version of Reise, Reise, with different cover art, which was later used as the Rosenrot cover art, though slightly altered. The booklet also features the same art as Rosenrot, but with the songs from Reise, Reise. The easter egg is not present in negative time as it is on the European version. It features two bonus tracks: "Mein Teil (You Are What You Eat Edit)" and "Amerika (Digital Hardcore Mix)". The Japanese Limited Edition has a bonus DVD featuring footage from Lichtspielhaus. The Japanese Limited Edition was re-issued in 2009 as SHM-CD and DVD edition, featuring the original orange cover art.
The album artwork shows a damaged airplane cockpit voice recorder depicted on the front and back covers. Its caption ("Flugrekorder, nicht öffnen") means "Flight Recorder, Do Not Open". The inner part of the Digipak edition case shows a picture of the six members in suits wielding suitcases and weapons (like Michael Douglas in Falling Down) leaving from a crashed airplane. The cover art is an allusion to the song "Dalai Lama", which deals with an airplane accident. It is also suggestive of the overarching "travelling" theme of the album. While past albums have all featured the six band members in various photographic scenarios, "Reise Reise" features a minimal packaging, and there are no photographs featuring the band's members.[4]
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [7] |
BBC | [5] |
Entertainment Weekly | (C+)[8] |
PopMatters | [4] |
Rolling Stone | [9] |
Upon the its release, the album received mixed response from contemporary music critics. David Jeffries from Allmusic gave the album a rating of three out of five stars, and stated that the album's content "is more of the same: the same grit, the same growl, and the same dramatic, orchestra choruses" and that "the lead single, "Mein Teil" is no "Du Hast" but the damning "Amerika" almost equals their breakthrough track." He also said that there was a bit more ingenuity in the production and a little more focus in the songs but it wasn't "enough for the nonfaithful to pick up on." Jeffries highlighted the track "Stein Um Stein" because it "creeps more than stomps in parts". He also mentioned that the track "Los" features a bluesy guitar that "adds some quirk to the band's stern." He finished his review saying "few bands can industrially grind as convincingly as Rammstein. Same as it ever was, "Reise, Reise" won't do much to increase the band's fan base, but being a tight, free-of-filler album, it'll satisfy the faithful."[10] Vaz Malik from BBC also gave the album a mixed review and said that the band could probably be "a lot bigger" in the United States if they opted to sing in English, but "German sounds a lot more threatening and it's done them no harm in their homeland." he stated that the songs "Morgenstern" and "Stein Um Stein" probably have pretty weak translations but in German they sound mean. He said "that tracks like 'Amerika' make the admission price worth while. Rammstein say it’s their most commercial song to date. Well more like this please because it’s funny but rocks at the same time."[5] Timothy Gunatilaka from Entertainment Weekly also gave the album a mixed review, and said: "[the band] returns with 11 more anthems of the apocalypse that rarely diverge from their formula of grind-thrash-grind and predictable choral interludes" but given the "eviscerating force" of the songs from the album, it's almost impossible to dismiss their "unabashed monotony". He finished saying: "except for the industrial-meets-blues groove of acoustic toe-tapper "Los" and the "t.A.T.u.-covering-Ministry" appeal of "Moskau", Rammstein's newest plods along as a tedious exercise in darkwave dullness."[8] Tim O'Neil from PopMatters gave the album a favorable review and said: "for those with the patience to look beyond the "Teutonic bluster" and punk insouciance, "Reise Reise" will be a uniquely rewarding experience."[4]
The album sold 26,716 copies in the United States in its first week of release in November 2004 to debut at position no. 61 on The Billboard 200 chart.[3] It was in the top ten in several European charts and reached number one in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Iceland, Finland, Estonia and Mexico. As of February 2006, the album has shipped 1.5 million copies globally.[1]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Reise, Reise" (Arise, Arise / Journey, Journey / Travel, Travel) | 4:11 |
2. | "Mein Teil" (My Part) | 4:32 |
3. | "Dalai Lama" | 5:38 |
4. | "Keine Lust" (No Desire) | 3:42 |
5. | "Los" (-Less) | 4:25 |
6. | "Amerika" (America) | 3:46 |
7. | "Moskau" (Moscow, feat. Viktoria Fersh) | 4:16 |
8. | "Morgenstern" (Morning Star) | 3:59 |
9. | "Stein um Stein" (Stone by Stone) | 3:56 |
10. | "Ohne dich" (Without You) | 4:32 |
11. | "Amour" (Fr. Love) | 4:50 |
Country | Date |
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Europe | 27 September 2004 |
United States | 6 November 2004 |
Chart (2004)[11] | Peak position |
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U.S. Billboard 200 | 61 |
UK Albums Chart | 37 |
German Albums Chart | 1 |
Australian Albums Chart | 19 |
Austrian Albums Chart | 1 |
Belgium Albums Chart | 5 |
Dutch Albums Chart | 2 |
Finnish Albums Chart | 1 |
French Albums Chart | 3 |
Norwegian Albums Chart | 4 |
Poland Albums Chart | 17 |
Swedish Albums Chart | 2 |
Swiss Albums Chart | 1 |
Russian Albums Chart | 1 |
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