Aljoscha Rompe

Arthur Alexander "Aljoscha" Rompe (20 October 1947 in Berlin-Buch 23 November 2000 in Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg) was the lead singer of the East German band Feeling B.[1] The band began in 1983 as part of the second wave of underground punk acts operating outside the state-sanctioned music scene. By the time East Germany (the GDR) imploded in 1989, Feeling B had become one of the country's most popular bands. Soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Rompe co-founded the political party Wydoks, which wanted to reclaim public property on former GDR soil and fight against the takeover of the country by "money people," i.e. West Germans. He and like-minded members of the punk scene squatted several buildings in the East Berlin districts of Mitte and Prenzlauerberg. Rompe made films, ran pirate radio stations, and squatted for long periods of his life. He also spent long periods of time camping on Hiddensee, in the Baltic Sea, with his bandmates, playing gigs, selling drinks and organizing underground festivals. He was of Swiss origin and died in Berlin in the year 2000 (aged 53), following a severe asthma attack. Christian "Flake" Lorenz, Rompe's friend and bandmate in Feeling B who later found fame with Rammstein, said "he knew how money was able to corrupt people, he didn't want to be successful in a monetary sense either, neither of us wanted to, as we were all punks."

Aljoscha Rompe
Birth nameArthur Alexander Rompe
Born20 October 1947
Berlin, Soviet occupation zone (now Germany)
OriginBerlin, East Germany
Died23 November 2000(2000-11-23) (aged 53)
Berlin, Germany
GenresPunk rock
InstrumentsVocals
Years active1974-2000
Associated actsFeeling B, Rammstein, First Arsch

References

  1. Wielgohs, Jan (2010). "Rompe, Arthur Alexander (»Aljoscha«)". Wer war wer in der DDR? (in German). Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  • The book "Grün und Blau" written by Flake Lorenz), keyboardist of Feeling B and Rammstein
  • The documentary "mittendrin"


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