Amerika (song)
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"Amerika" is a song by German Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein. It was released on 6 September 2004 as the second single from their fourth studio album, Reise, Reise (2004). The song peaked at number 2 in Germany and entered the top 5 in Austria, Denmark, and Switzerland.
Content
The chorus of the song comes from a song called "Living in America" by Swedish band the Sounds. The song is intended as a commentary on the worldwide cultural and political imperialism of the United States of America. The song's lyrics, as well as its video, are a critique of America's cultural imperialism, political propaganda and role as a global policeman.[1] The two verses are sung in German with a chorus in Denglisch: "We're all living in Amerika, Amerika ist wunderbar, We're all living in Amerika, Amerika, Amerika" and "We're all living in Amerika, Coca-Cola, Wonderbra. We're all living in Amerika, Amerika, Amerika." The band views it as a satire on Americanization, and the lyrics make reference to various corporate and cultural symbols of America as Coca-Cola, Wonderbra, Santa Claus, and Mickey Mouse. Uncharacteristically for Rammstein, the song incorporates an interlude in which the lyrics explicitly state the band's intentions: "This is not a love song, This is not a love song, I don't sing my mother tongue, No this is not a love song".
Video
The video shows the band in Apollo-era space suitsTemplate:Efn-lr on the Moon, with shots of other cultures acting like stereotypical Americans, satirizing Americanization. These shots include Africans eating pizza and making Christmas wishes to Santa Claus, Buddhist monks eating hamburgers, South East Asians, Japanese, Native Americans, Inuit, Aboriginal Australians, an Indian Sikh man smoking a Lucky Strike cigarette and a Muslim man worshipping in front of an oil refinery after removing his Nike sneakers. Near the end, various ethnic groups sing and dance along. The end of the video shows that the band have actually been in a fake Moon set in a studio,[2] complete with film crew, an allusion to the Moon landing conspiracy theories. Till Lindemann, Rammstein's lead singer, wears a space suit with the name "Armstrong" on it, a reference to Neil Armstrong. The video ends with a band photograph left behind on the Moon's surface while the recording of Jack Swigert's quote "Houston, we've had a problem here" is being played.
Live performance
As with every song from Reise, Reise (except "Ohne dich"), "Amerika" debuted live in three consecutive concerts for members of the Rammstein fan club. During the live performances of this song on tour, Flake is often seen riding around on a Segway PT with confetti cannons firing red, white and blue confetti in a parody of a ticker-tape parade. It was the last song of the band's main set, and was played at every concert of the Reise, Reise tour. During a concert in Gothenburg, Sweden on 30 July 2005, frontman Till Lindemann suffered a knee injury when keyboardist Flake accidentally ran into him with the Segway PT; this caused concerts scheduled in Asia to be cancelled.
Track listing
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CD single
Pock-it CD
UK 7" vinyl
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Australian edition
UK version
UK DVD
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Charts
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Year-end charts
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Certifications
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See also
References
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ "How to Fake your own Moon Landing" Template:Webarchive, Ethan Siegel. Science Blogs. 7 June 2009. Accessed 7 June 2011
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- Pages with script errors
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- Anti-American sentiment in Germany
- 2004 singles
- 2004 songs
- Macaronic songs
- Protest songs
- Rammstein songs
- Satirical songs
- Songs about the United States
- Songs written by Richard Z. Kruspe
- Songs written by Paul Landers
- Songs written by Till Lindemann
- Songs written by Christian Lorenz
- Songs written by Oliver Riedel
- Songs written by Christoph Schneider
- Songs of the Iraq War
- Universal Music Group singles