Tic Tac Toe (band)

Tic Tac Toe
Background information
Origin Ruhr valley, Germany
Genres Pop, hip hop, pop rap
Years active 1995–2000, 2005–2007
Labels Sony BMG Germany
Website http://www.sonybmg.de/artists2.php?artist=85946
Past members
Ricarda "Ricky" Wältken (1995-1997, 2005-2007)
Liane "Lee" Sprenger-Wiegelmann
Marlene "Jazzy" Tackenberg
Sara Brahms (1998-2000)

Tic Tac Toe was an all-female German pop group that used hip-hop elements in their songs. They sold more than 3 million albums.

Formed in 1995, they released their self-titled debut album in 1996. Their second album, Klappe Die 2te, was released the following year. After a successful first few years, the group split due to personal difficulties. Tic Tac Toe attempted a return to the spotlight by releasing Comeback in 2006, which includes the 2005 comeback single "Spiegel". At the same time their former record company released The Best of Tic Tac Toe. After low sales, their record company ended the project in January 2007.

Contents

History

Tic Tac Toe was initiated by Claudia Wohlfromm and comprised three young women, Jazzy, Lee, and Ricky, from the industrial Ruhr valley area.[1] According to their record company, Tic Tac Toe was founded in 1995, when the three girls met at a hip hop festival. However, as many details of their biographies later turned out to be manipulated, one should be careful with information like this, especially as the company never disclosed where and when said festival had taken place.

Their first single was "Ich Find' Dich Scheiße" ("I Think You're Shitty"). Their success continued with the 1996 release of their debut album Tic Tac Toe, which went Platinum, and the release of two singles, "Funky" and "Leck Mich am A, B, Zeh," which reached the top 20. This was followed up with the single "Verpiss' Dich" ("Fuck Off"), which landed at number one and also reached Platinum status. In this same year, Tic Tac Toe won a VIVA Comet award for Newcomer of the Year.[1]

1997 brought the release of their second Platinum album, Klappe Die 2te, which included their biggest hit, "Warum?" ("Why?"), which spent 7 weeks in the number one spot. Other singles from this record included "Mr. Wichtig" and "Ich wär' so gern so blöd wie du." They also received attention for the song "Bitte küss mich nicht" ("Please don't kiss me"), which addressed the sexual abuse of children. Through these two albums, Tic Tac Toe sold nearly 3 million records.

Despite their professional success, the members experienced turbulence in their personal lives. At the insistence of their record company, all three members had pretended to be only 18 years old in order to market themselves to young buyers; however, it was soon revealed that Lee was not only older, but also married. This fact came to light when her husband committed suicide while the group was on tour. A week later it was revealed that she had worked for two weeks as a prostitute in order to finance her drug habit. The band lost credibility with the public after these revelations, especially since the record company had marketed the group as "sincere girls next door." Ricky left the band in 1997 after a public dispute. Her replacement, Sara Brahms, contributed to some more hits (the first released under the name "Sara @ Tic Tac Two"). Amid the resulting fallout and a lukewarm response to their third album, Ist der Ruf erst ruiniert the band faded into obscurity.

In 2004, Jazzy attempted to initiate a solo career, appearing on "the Comeback Show," but was eliminated in the first round.

In 2005, the group reunited with its original three-member-cast and in December 2005 they produced the single called "Spiegel" ("Mirror"), which entered Germanys Media Control single chart at number 9 and peaked at number 7. In February 2006, the trio released the album "Comeback," their first new material in five years. The album's success, however, could not be compared to their previous ones. It charted only at #25 in German Media Control album chart, which drove the record company to scale back the promotional tour from the originally announced ten locations to just three. In May, they released "Keine Ahnung" ("No Idea") as their 2nd single from "Comeback". This, however, was their least successful single as it reached only #103 on the German Singles Chart. A third and presumably final breakup was announced on January 31, 2007.

Musical Contributions

Researcher Mark Pennay contrasted Tic Tac Toe with Cora E, an old-school German female hip-hop act. In comparison, Tic Tac Toe produced more commercial music that was received with acclaim and commercial success. Rather than striving for a political message in their music, like Cora E and Advanced Chemistry, Tic Tac Toe's songs have an "explicit recognition of the need for emotional honesty."[2] Mark Pennay compares them to the successful German rap group Die Fantastischen Vier, writing, " Tic Tac Toe are clearly heirs to the Fantastischen Vier tradition." [2] The music of both groups distinguishes them from traditionalists such as the previously mentioned Cora E and Advanced Chemistry, instead creating "commercially accessible music centered on the traditional pop themes of feelings and relationships." [3]

Discography

Albums

Year Title Chart Positions Certifications
AUT[4] GER[5] HU[6] NET[6] SWI[7]
1996 Tic Tac Toe 3 3 - - 4
  • Germany: 2 × Platinum[8]
1997 Klappe die 2te 2 1 27 43 1
  • Germany: 2 × Platinum[8]
  • Poland: Gold [9]
2000 Ist der Ruf erst ruiniert... 50 34 - - 92
2006 The Best Of 35 51 - - -
Comeback 26 25 - - 43

Singles

Year Title Chart positions[10]
AUT GER NET PL SWI
1995 "Ich Find' Dich Scheisse" 4 2 38 25 6
1996 "Funky[11]" 13 10 - 23 9
"Leck Mich Am A,B, Zeh" - 21 - 13 87
"Verpiss Dich" 3 1 - 8 1
1997 "Warum?" 1 1 5 3 1
"Mr. Wichtig" 6 5 - 6 10
"So Blöd Wie Du" 32 17 - 20 -
"Bitte Küss Mich Nicht" - 47 - 88 -
1999 "Nie Wieder" 4 2 - 6 -
2000 "Ist Der Ruf Erst Ruiniert" - 27 - 23 -
"Ich Liebe Disch" 11 6 - 18 38
"Morgen Ist Heute Schon Gestern" - 38 - 96 -
2005 "Spiegel" 7 6 - - 10
2006 "Keine Ahnung" - 53 - - -

Notes

  1. ^ a b Pennay, Mark. "Rap in Germany: The Birth of a Genre." In Global Noise: Rap and Hip-Hop Outside the USA. Ed. Tony Marshall. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2001. 123.
  2. ^ a b Pennay, Mark. "Rap in Germany: The Birth of a Genre." In Global Noise: Rap and Hip-Hop Outside the USA. Ed. Tony Marshall. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2001. 124.
  3. ^ Pennay, Mark. "Rap in Germany: The Birth of a Genre." In Global Noise: Rap and Hip-Hop Outside the USA. Ed. Tony Marshall. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2001. 122.
  4. ^ Austrian Charts
  5. ^ Musicline.de
  6. ^ a b Hungarian Charts
  7. ^ Swiss Charts
  8. ^ a b "Gold-/Platin-Datenbank (Tic Tac Toe)" (in German). Bundesverband Musikindustrie. http://www.musikindustrie.de/gold_platin_datenbank/?action=suche&strTitel=&strInterpret=Tic+Tac+Toe&strTtArt=alle&strAwards=checked. 
  9. ^ ZPAV
  10. ^ GER AUT SWI NL
  11. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OeFQeczafyk