But back to today.
Papa, Schenk Mir Einen Teddybär (Father, Give me a Teddy
Bear), released by Die Schlümpfe in Germany in 1975 is notorious: the sleeve turns
up in all of those ‘terrible record art’ lists, but few people have actually
heard it. In fact, the sleeve is so ridiculously bad that for a long time I
assumed it was a fake. But no, not only does it exist, but here are both sides
for you to enjoy (or endure).
The duo’s name, Die Schlümpfe, may seem familiar to you. That’s
because Die Schlümpfe is the German name for The Smurfs, although as far as I
can ascertain these two Smurfs have no connection to Peyo or to Father Abraham…
in fact, the only thing that seems to connect them is their love of blue and
white and the ridiculous, cartoonish voices employed on the disc.
Doris Kocks, author of the A-side (and co-author of the
flip) worked in children’s television in what was then East Germany. She was
one of the producers of the popular kid’s puppet show Das Spielhaus (The
Playhouse) throughout the 1980s. Kai Holland, the co-author of B-side, Der
Kaiser Mitschliki, would later find fame as an artist, specialising in collage.
However, the male voice on the disc, and the man pictured on the front of the
single sleeve, was a singer known only as Felix, who was still performing and
recording well into the mid-2010s.
5,000 copies of the disc were pressed and issued on the Blackfield Tonstudio label, based in Kirchhellen, In what was then West Germany. Blackfield specialised in custom recordings and pressings, so the chances are that Doris, Kai, and Felix funded production themselves. Felix recalled (in 2013) that although the disc received no publicity at the time, it sold well at the duo's performances.
I have read that there was supposed to
be a second single by Die Schlümpfe, but this has been denied by Felix. However, while writing this blog I discovered an earlier release from
Anyway, here are all four Die Schlümpfe tracks. Enjoy!
Download Papa 75 HERE
Download Kaiser HERE
Hi Darryl, could you check the link to this fascinating blog from Bruce Baryla?
ReplyDeleteHi Bob: the link was working but for some reason it is now dead. I'm in touch with Bruce so I'll see what I can do to sort it
Delete