Das Ich + Guests
In the late 1980s, when Bruno Kramm and Stefan Ackermann — then still young
New Wave musicians — were sending out their first religion-critical demo tapes,
they had no idea that these releases would soon define an entirely new music
genre: "Neue Deutsche Todeskunst" (New German Death Art). Songs like "Gottes
Tod" and "Des Satans neue Kleider," which to this day carry a wholly unique and
undiminished magic, became widely sung anthems of the black scene in freshly
reunified Germany.
Even with early works like "Satanische Verse" and the album "Die Propheten," Das
Ich combined drama with music, expressionism with classical composition, and
electronics with Gothic — at an intensity the musical landscape had never
encountered before. They pushed boundaries and inspired countless bands and
art forms with their new sonic language.
On extensive world tours across Europe, the USA, South America, Asia, Israel, and
Russia, Das Ich were not only ambassadors of a new, expressive, and historically
conscious German culture — they also helped liberate the German language from
the confines of Schlager, folk music, and Krautrock. Between albums like "Staub,"
"Egodram," "Lava," "Antichrist," and "Cabaret," Stefan Ackermann and Bruno
Kramm always allowed themselves enough time to follow their inspiration freely,
developing a musical language that found its own distinct answer to every era and
every zeitgeist.




















