Hamburg cabaret artist Hans Scheibner died

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Culture “Schmidtchen Schleicher”

Hamburg cabaret artist Hans Scheibner died

As of 9:58 p.m

Hans Scheibner died surrounded by his family

Hans Scheibner died surrounded by his family

Source: dpa/Daniel Bockwoldt

He wrote hits like “Schmidtchen Schleicher” and “Hamburg 75” and had his own series with “scheibnweise”. Now the singer-songwriter and cabaret artist Hans Scheibner has died at the age of 85.

Dhe Hamburg songwriter and cabaret artist Hans Scheibner is dead. He died on Monday (May 23) at the age of 85 after a short, serious illness, as his family announced to the German Press Agency (dpa) on Wednesday evening.

With songs like “I like to stand on the assembly line”, his series “scheibnweise” (from 1979 in the first) or the NDR political satires “Walther and Willy” (2001-2006) Scheibner had celebrated nationwide success. However, the son of a small forwarding company experienced his greatest time in the legendary “Hamburg scene” of the 1970s. In 1976, his lyrics to “Schmidtchen Schleicher” enabled singer Nico Haak to score a much-buzzed top ten hit.

Two years earlier, Scheibner had written the anthem “Hamburg 75” for Gottfried and Lonzo from the “Retirement Band”. “I love Hamburg more than anything,” the winner of the Biermann-Ratjen Medal from the Hanseatic City of Hamburg, who was born on August 27, 1936, confessed to the dpa on the occasion of his 80th birthday. As a child, he experienced the nights of the bombings of the “Fire Storm” in the city, and later he identified with the well-kept understatement of its residents. His role models Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) and Joachim Ringelnatz (1883-1934) also worked in Hamburg.

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Hans Scheibner live at the current Schaubude on December 14th, 2006

Scheibner’s title song of his LP “Achterndiek” became a hit of the anti-nuclear movement not only in Brokdorf. However, the artist himself repeatedly caused career curbs. In 1985, for example, he compared soldiers with murderers on the NDR talk show, whereupon he was dismissed for a long time “cheatwise”. The satirist, who also liked to take aim at everyday and interpersonal matters (“Who takes grandma?”), often appeared too conservative for the left and too left for conservatives. Scheibner told the dpa that he acquired a “humanistic view of man” through reading everything from Socrates and Plato to Lessing and Kierkegaard.

He renounced church and religion just as he later renounced Marxism, which conformed to the zeitgeist. Critical awareness and enjoyment of life were never mutually exclusive for the artist, who had been married to the actress Petra Verena Milchert since 1990 and later became the enthusiastic father of four daughters. He died at home surrounded by his family.

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