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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/5cc21cf06dfc8.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:350: From left to right: Marian Gold (vocalist), Frank Mertens (keyboard player) & Bernhard Lloyd (ditto).]]
3->... night!
4
5->''"Let us die young or let us live forever\
6We don't have the power, but we never say never\
7Sitting in a sandpit; life is a short trip\
8The music's for the sad men."''
9-->-- "Forever Young"
10
11Alphaville is a German SynthPop[=/=][[NewWaveMusic New Wave]] group that gained international popularity in the 1980s. The band was originally named Forever Young.
12
13They are best known for their two biggest hits, "Big in Japan"[[note]]No relation to the Tom Waits song of the same name[[/note]] and "Forever Young"[[note]]Not the Rod Stewart one, nor the Bob Dylan one[[/note]], both released in 1984. While "Forever Young" and "Big in Japan" managed to peak at 65 and 66, respectively, on the US's Billboard Hot 100, Alphaville have always been best appreciated in Europe, releasing a few top ten singles in several countries throughout the 80s. "Forever Young" has seen a new appreciation in recent years through several covers, remixes, and appearances in movie soundtracks and TV shows.
14
15The founding members were Bernhard Lloyd, Frank Mertens, and singer Marian Gold. Frank Mertens left the band after the release of their first album, ''Forever Young'', and was replaced by Ricky Echolette. This lineup produced the bulk of Alphaville's studio material, responsible for ''Afternoons in Utopia,'' ''The Breathtaking Blue,'' ''Prostitute,'' and ''Salvation.'' Echolette left the band during the production of ''Salvation''. Alphaville existed for a while as just Bernhard Lloyd and Marian Gold, during which they released the anthology box sets ''Dreamscapes'' and ''Crazyshow''. Lloyd officially left Alphaville in 2003[[note]]His involvement in Alphaville as a band member was basically finished after ''Dreamscapes'' released in 1999, though he still did managerial and promotional work until his official departure. He has continued to be involved in the remastering process for rereleases of older material.[[/note]]. The lineup for 2010's ''Catching Rays on Giant'' is Marian Gold, Martin Lister on keyboards, David Goodes on guitar, and Jakob Kiersch on drums. Fifth member, bassist Maja Kim, joined the band the following year. Martin Lister passed away in May of 2014. After his death, Carsten Brocker took over on keyboards. Maja Kim left the band in July, 2016. She was replaced by Alex Merl.
16
17----
18!!Discography
19
20[[AC:Studio Albums]]
21* ''Forever Young'' (1984)
22* ''Afternoons in Utopia'' (1986)
23* ''The Breathtaking Blue'' (1989)
24* ''Prostitute'' (1994)
25* ''Salvation'' (1997)
26* ''Catching Rays on Giant'' (2010)
27* ''Strange Attractor'' (2017)
28* ''Thunderbaby'' (upcoming 2024)
29
30[[AC:Compilation Albums]]
31* ''The Singles Collection'' (1988)
32* ''Alphaville (The Amiga Compilation)''[[note]]''The Amiga Compilation'' is a FanNickname for this East Germany-only release. The actual title is simply ''Alphaville''[[/note]] (1988)
33* ''First Harvest'' (1992)
34* ''Forever Young and Other Hits'' (2003)
35* ''[=So80s=] Presents Alphaville'' (2014)
36
37[[AC:Live Albums]]
38* ''Stark Naked and Absolutely Live'' (2000)
39* ''Live at the Whisky A Go Go'' (2019)
40* ''A Night at the Philharmonie Berlin'' (2023)
41
42[[AC:Remix Albums]]
43* ''Forever Pop'' (2001)
44* ''Eternally Yours''[[note]]An album of rerecordings backed by an orchestra.[[/note]] (2022)
45
46[[AC:Anthologies]]
47* ''Dreamscapes'' (1999)
48* ''Crazyshow'' (2003)
49
50[[AC:Home Video]]
51* ''Songlines''[[note]]An anthology film of short segments set to tracks from ''The Breathtaking Blue.'' More or less a music video compilation, but the band allowed the directors carte blanche to do as they wished, which for some of the directors involved nudity and not using the song through the whole segment.[[/note]] (1989)
52* ''Little America''[[note]]Alphaville's July 17, 1999 concert at the Utah State Fair Park Promontory Building in Salt Lake City, Utah, their first live appearance in the United States.[[/note]] (2001)
53* ''A Night at the Philharmonie Berlin''[[note]]Concert with Alphaville backed by the Deutches Filmorchester Babelsberg on June 12, 2023 at the Berliner Philharmonie. Film of the live album of the same name.[[/note]] (2023)
54
55----
56
57!!Alphaville provides examples of the following tropes:
58
59* AfterTheEnd: One way to interpret the setting of the "Forever Young" video. Survivors in tattered old clothes sleep in a ruined building, suddenly awakened by the music of three men with EightiesHair.
60* AlbumFiller: After their first album was released, Alphaville was asked to write songs for a play. They only got so far as "Jerusalem" before the project halted, and the song ended up becoming the last song they recorded for their second album.
61* AlbumTitleDrop: ''Forever Young'' and ''Afternoons in Utopia'' have title tracks, ''The Breathtaking Blue'' is in the lyrics of "Summer Rain," ''Salvation'' is in the lyrics of "Spirit of the Age," and ''Strange Attractor'' is in the lyrics of "Sexyland." ''Prostitute'' and ''Catching Rays on Giant'' avert this completely.
62** If you count ''Crazyshow'' as an album, it has a title track on disc 2.
63* AmbiguousGender: "The Jet Set": "If she's a lady / I'm her man / If she's a man / I'll do what I can!"
64** "Things will happen while they can / I will wait here for my man tonight, it's easy when you're big in Japan." Wait, so is this a man singing from a woman's point of view? If it isn't, then it must be a gay man singing.
65* AnimatedMusicVideo: Accompanied the limited edition "Forever Young Diamonds in the Sun Remix."
66** Song For No One features a cut-out animated Marian Gold being dragged through CGI environments made to look like dioramas.
67* AscendedExtra: After Bernhard Lloyd left Alphaville in 2003, the then-current members of the touring band (Lister, Goodes, and Kiersch) were, along with Marian Gold, the band's official lineup, and they began work on ''Catching Rays on Giant''.
68* TheArtifact: Ricky Echolette appears in the animated music video for the "Forever Young Diamonds in the Sun Remix," even though the video was released several years after he left the band, and he was not in the band when "Forever Young" was originally recorded.[[note]]The video's creators, Creator/CartoonSaloon, made the conscious decision to design the band based on the way they appeared on the cover of ''Afternoons in Utopia,'' even down to the lineup.[[/note]]
69** Since the cover photograph from ''Afternoons in Utopia'' is often used for the band's official merchandise, Ricky and Bernhard continue to appear on official merch produced well into the 2020s despite leaving the group in 1996 and 2003, respectively.
70* ArtifactTitle: ''Prostitute'' was to be named for a song on the album of the same name. The song got cut, but the album title was never changed.
71* AudienceParticipationSong: Subverted on "C Me Thru." Marian invites the audience to "join the band and sing along" to the song. The very next line is backmasked.[[note]]"Come on over here and enjoy the crazy show! The crazy show you've ever seen in your life!"[[/note]]
72* AuthorAppeal: Alphaville seems to like bees. They may mention bees in their lyrics more than any other band.
73* BeYourself: "The Impossible Dream": "And I don't need to be a poet / I don't need to be a hero / When all I need to do is keep on loving you."
74* BookEnds: ''Afternoons in Utopia'' does something similar to ''Music/TheWall''. The first track is an echo of the word "night". The last track is the limerick "There was a young lady named Bright / Whose speed was much faster, much faster than light / She departed one day / In a relative way / And returned on the previous...."
75* {{Bowdlerise}}: The MTV version of the music video for "Fools" had to be edited to replace shots of cockfighting.
76* CallBack: "Faith" on ''Prostitute'' contains the line "cosmic meadows," which also appeared in "The Nelson Highrise Sector 2."
77** "Ivory Tower" is pretty much all call backs.
78** The mighty maomoondogs that first appeared on ''Afternoons in Utopia'' get mentioned again in "Ivory Tower" on ''Prostitute'' and then again in "Return to Paradise" (parts 1 and 2) on ''Crazyshow''.
79* CanonImmigrant: Alternate takes of several tracks from Marian Gold's solo albums ''So Long Celeste'' and ''United'' were included in the ''Dreamscapes'' box set, essentially adding those songs to the Alphaville song canon.
80* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: The subject of the song "Carol Masters." Carol stares out the window each night, listening for a call from "far beyond the atmospheres," which she believes will beckon her to Mars.
81* ConceptAlbum: ''Afternoons in Utopia,'' With images repeated throughout, like the mighty maomoondogs, the Ivory Cityside, and the acrobats and comets; Carol, a character who appears in multiple songs; and the repeated idea of travelling and sending messages across outer-space distances. All this is to say nothing of the generally optimistic, peaceful outlook of the lyrics throughout, i.e. "We shall stop the wars on those afternoons in utopia."
82* TheConstant: Marian Gold has been the lead singer for the band's entire existence.
83* ContinuityNod: The song "Ivory Tower" is full of references to previous Alphaville songs, including "Carol Masters," "Sensations," "Summer Rain," "Middle of the Riddle," "Fallen Angel," "Romeos," "Patricia's Park," "Anyway," "Forever Young," "Summer in Berlin," "Lassie Come Home," "Mysteries of Love," and "20th Century." The title "Ivory Tower" itself is a reference to a quote by Bernhard Lloyd which was printed in the ''First Harvest'' compilation.
84* CoverVersion: On ''Dreamscapes'': "Mercury Girl," "High School Confidential," "Roll Away the Stone," "The Shape of Things to Come," and "Peace on Earth." On ''Crazyshow'': "Do the Strand," "Something," and "Diamonds Are 4 Eva."
85** "Diamonds Are Forever" is once again covered on ''Eternally Yours''.
86* DemotedToExtra: Ricky Echolette left Alphaville during production of ''Salvation.'' As such, only Marian Gold and Bernhard Lloyd are presented in the liner notes for that album as the band members, even though Ricky is credited as a songwriter on every song.
87* EasterEgg: The vinyl LP of ''Afternoons in Utopia'' has the message "Do what you will" printed in the run out area. "Do what you will" is a lyric in the song "Red Rose."
88* EpicInstrumentalOpener: "Euphoria" spends over three minutes as an instrumental before Marian starts singing.
89* EpilepticFlashingLights: Feature in the video for "Big in Japan." In fact, when Rhino posted the video to their Website/YouTube page, they slowed the video down significantly.
90* EvolvingMusic: ''First Harvest'' is ostensibly a compilation album but about half the tracks were newly mixed for the release by Bernhard Lloyd. Most of these were minor tweaks, but the instrumental backing for "Sounds Like a Melody" was rerecorded.
91* FadingIntoTheNextSong: "Oh Patti/Ivory Tower" on ''Prostitute'', but most cleverly done with "20th Century/The Voyager/Carol Masters" on ''Afternoons in Utopia''. Carol herself is referenced in "20th Century," then two tracks later has her own song. It's even possible Carol is the unspecified She in "The Voyager."
92* FakeOutFadeOut: "The Impossible Dream."
93* {{Foreshadowing}}: "I.A.O. (International Aquarian Opera)," track one of ''Afternoons in Utopia'', is simply the chorus from track five, "Afternoons in Utopia."
94* ForeverYoungSong: "Forever Young", naturally.
95* GoIntoTheLight: At the end of the "Forever Young" video, Marian points to a painting and a diamond-shaped portal of light appears, into which the band's audience walk through one by one.
96* GrandFinale: ''Salvation'' ends with "Pandora's Lullaby," where Marian's vocals are supported by a sweeping orchestral background. The American release kind of spoils it with three bonus tracks.
97** "Beyond the Laughing Sky" is definitely this for ''Strange Attractor.''
98* GratuitousFrench: "Vingt Mille Lieues Sous Les Mers." The verses are in English, the chorus is in French.
99* GreatestHitsAlbum: Two: ''First Harvest'' and ''Forever Young and Other Hits''. All others are bootlegs.
100* {{Instrumentals}}: As far as studio albums go, "Patricia's Park" on ''The Breathtaking Blue''. ''Dreamscapes'' and ''Crazyshow'' each contain a few.
101* IntentionallyAwkwardTitle: ''Prostitute'', even though the word doesn't appear in any of the song lyrics or song titles.[[note]]The band planned to include a song called "Prostitute" and decided to name the album for it, but eventually left the song on the cutting room floor, while still keeping the name for the album[[/note]]
102** The first live album, ''Stark Naked and Absolutely Live''.
103* LadyInRed: Appears in the video for "Dance With Me." Complete with a black veil.
104* LiveAlbum: ''Stark Naked and Absolutely Live,'' recorded in Salt Lake City in 1999, ''Live at the Whisky a Go Go,'' recorded in Los Angeles in 2018, and ''A Night at the Philharmonie Berlin, recorded in Berlin in 2023.
105* LocationSong: "Big In Japan", which has the message that CelebrityIsOverrated when you're famous in that country.
106** "Mafia Island," which is inspired by a trip Marian took to the titular island in the early 90s. According to him, he got drunk at a bar and started to imagine what it would be like if the people on Mafia Island were the only people left on Earth.
107* LonelyPianoPiece: "Parade" from ''Prostitute''.
108* LoudnessWar: ''Catching Rays on Giant''. Marian Gold invoked this by name as one of the mistakes he felt the band made with that album. Both he and Martin Lister pledged to avoid it for ''Strange Attractor''. There is still a lot of compression on ''Strange Attractor'', but used with a bit more finesse.
109* TheMovie: ''Songlines,'' a music video compilation featuring a video for every song on ''The Breathtaking Blue.''[[note]]Except for "Anyway," which plays during the end credits.[[/note]] Creator/AlexProyas, [[{{Film/Koyaanisqatsi}} Godfrey Reggio]], and even [[Film/Stalker1979 Aleksandr Kaidanovsky]] directed videos for the movie, as did bandmember Ricky Echolette.
110* NewSoundAlbum: ''The Breathtaking Blue,'' the first full album recorded in a brand new studio the band designed themselves: Luna Park Studios in Berlin. Music/KlausSchulze of Music/TangerineDream co-produced the album. Yet, for an album made by musicians usually associated with synthesizers, the synthesizers exist mostly in the background, and is definitely a strong deviation from the synthpop style of Alphaville's previous two albums.
111* NonAppearingTitle: "Fantastic Dream" and "Lady Bright," sort of. The first has the word "dream" but not "fantastic," the second contains the line "There was a young lady named Bright." "Ascension Day," "Parade," and "Phantoms" are straight examples.
112* NonIndicativeName: "Big In Japan" is about a couple trying to break their heroin addiction. Marian Gold said in an interview that the lyrics are so esoteric only he and Bernhard Lloyd actually knew what they meant.
113* OneWomanSong: "Carol Masters," "Ariana," and "Oh Patti." Played with in that "Carol Masters" is more an abstract description of who she is than a tribute of love, "Ariana" is basically a derisive rant at a famous-for-being-famous socialite, and the singer in "Oh Patti" is actually trying to convince the listener, not himself, to love Patti.
114* PrecisionFStrike: Alphaville's music had nary a curse word until "Zoo" on ''Crazyshow.'' "I'll be so fuckin' bored! I'll be so fuckin' bored with you!"
115* PuttingTheBandBackTogether: Three of the four members of New German Wave band Ideal[[note]]Specifically, Ernst Duecker, Hansi Berhendt, and Eff Jott Krüger.[[/note]] reunited as backup musicians for ''The Breathtaking Blue'' six years after Ideal broke up. While they mostly played on separate tracks, all three played together on "Heaven or Hell."
116* RegionalRiff: "Big in Japan" uses a vaguely Asian-sounding scale, and also ends with a gong for good measure.
117* SequelSong: "The Nelson Highrise" series of songs come in four sectors: The Elevator, The Mirror, The Garage, and Scum of the Earth.
118* ShoutOut: The band took its name from the 1965 film, ''Film/{{Alphaville}}''.
119** The album ''Prostitute'' includes the song "All in the Golden Afternoon," a slightly edited take on the verse by Creator/LewisCarroll.
120** "Wonderboy" shouts out to Music/DavidBowie and Music/PetShopBoys.
121** "Waiting 4 The Nu Lite" contains the melody from "Within You Without You" from ''Music/SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand''.
122** The animated music video for the "Forever Young Diamonds in the Sun Remix" shouts out to a bunch of classic movies—but not, strangely enough, to ''Film/{{Alphaville}}.''
123** The cover of the "Sensations" single is a shout-out to ''Film/CitizenKane''.
124** ''Songlines'' is named in reference to the book by Bruce Chatwin. In fact the movie is dedicated to Chatwin, who died while it was being filmed.
125** It's really hard to make out, but Ricky Echolette is wearing a [[Franchise/StarTrek United Federation of Planets]] t-shirt on the cover of ''Afternoons in Utopia''. Marian actually wore this shirt during a TV performance of "Red Rose."
126** Wolfgang Neuhaus's stage name, Ricky Echolette, is a shout-out to Klemt Echolette, a company that sold amplifiers, microphones, and various other types of music gear.
127** "Iron John" is a song inspired by the [[Literature/IronHans Grimm fairy tale]].
128** "Beyond the Laughing Sky" is named after a song that was written for, but cut from Disney's ''WesternAnimation/AliceInWonderland''.
129** "Eternally Yours" is one big shoutout to William Shakespeare, setting lines from several of his sonnets to music.
130** "Criminal Girl" is a shoutout to "Mercury Girl" by Cleaners From Venus. The second verse borrows a few lyrics almost verbatim.
131** "Inside Out" is a shoutout to Romanian-born poet Paul Celan, borrowing several lines and titles from his poetry.
132** "The II Girlz"[[note]]Pronounced "The Parallel Girls"[[/note]] quotes the last line of Literature/TheGreatGatsby in the second verse.
133* SillyLoveSongs: At least one per album, but "The Impossible Dream" from ''Prostitute'' really stands out, since the four tracks that precede it are more toward the cynical end of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. It's then followed by a LonelyPianoPiece.
134* SixthRanger: Rainer Bloss has not generally been considered an official member of Alphaville, but he has contributed, in some capacity or another, to every album from ''Afternoons in Utopia'' to ''Strange Attractor''.
135* SoloSideProject: Marian Gold's two solo albums, ''So Long Celeste'' (1992) and ''United'' (1996). ''So Long Celeste'' was recorded in the aftermath of the ''The Breathtaking Blue'' when the band members weren't speaking to each other (see TroubledProduction). ''United'', however, is something of a "lost" Alphaville album. Alphaville member Bernhard Lloyd was one of the mastering engineers and some tracks were co-written by Alphaville member Ricky Echolette and frequent Alpahville collaborator Rainer Bloss.
136* SpokenWordInMusic: The transition between "Ivory Tower" and "Faith" is of a radio host from South Africa's anti-Apartheid Radio Freedom station introducing Alphaville as a West German group.
137* SpotlightStealingSquad: A lot of web sites list Robbie France as a former member of Alphaville, when he only spent a couple of years in the 90s touring with the band as a drummer. Other members of Alphaville's touring band from the same time period, such as bassist Alex Slavic and percussionist Shane Meehan, don't usually get listed as band members. France's status as a well-known music producer might explain the special treatment.
138* StageNames: Marian Gold = Hartwig Schierbaum; Bernhard Lloyd = Bernhard Gößling; Ricky Echolette = Wolfgang Neuhaus; Frank Mertens = Frank Sorgatz; Maja Kim = Terri Anker. Martin Lister, David Goodes, Alexandra Merl and Jacob Kiersch go by their real names.
139* StepUpToTheMicrophone: The lead vocals on "Call Me Down" are performed by Martin Lister.
140* SubvertedRhymeEveryOccasion: In the chorus of "Dangerous Places".
141-->"I promise this thing will sell. I promise I'll take you to Heaven."
142* TheNotRemix: Except for "Forever Young," all of the singles from ''Forever Young'' were mixed differently from the album version. "Big in Japan" removed the backwards gong intro; "Sounds Like a Melody" uses different, brighter-sounding synthesizers and a stronger reverb; "Jet Set" was rerecorded completely (after the album came out, no less), Marian's vocals sound less processed, and added the "Let's go to the moon!" mantra at the end.
143** This was clearly what the band had in mind with ''First Harvest,'' as many songs on the compilation are mixed differently from their original versions. Most of the changes are minor, such as the percussion coming in sooner on "Lassie Come Home," but "Sounds Like A Melody" is a completely different beast, with only Marian's vocals coming from the original recording.
144* ThisIsASong: "Song For No One," which is "the song for no one but myself."
145* WordSaladTitle: "Vingt Mille Lieues Sous Les Mers incl. The Nelson Highrise Sector 3: The Garage." Often referred to as "Vingt Mille Lieues Sous Les Mers," "The Garage," or "Nelson Highrise Sector 3."
146** ''Catching Rays on Giant'' is a nonsense phrase inspired by the caption of a photograph of Elizabeth Taylor that Martin Lister kept in his home: "Elizabeth Taylor catching some rays on the set of ''Giant''."
147
148----
149-->There was a young lady from Bright\
150Whose speed was much faster, much faster than light.\
151She departed one day\
152In a relative way\

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