
Ideal (2025 Mix) Ideal
Album info
Album-Release:
2025
HRA-Release:
27.06.2025
Album including Album cover
I`m sorry!
Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,
due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.
We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.
Thank you for your understanding and patience.
Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO
- 1 Berlin (2025 Mix) 03:08
- 2 Rote Liebe (2025 Mix) 02:36
- 3 Telepathie (2025 Mix) 04:43
- 4 Blaue Augen (2025 Mix) 03:29
- 5 Hundsgemein (2025 Mix) 02:12
- 6 Luxus (2025 Mix) 04:01
- 7 Irre (2025 Mix) 03:50
- 8 Da leg' ich mich doch lieber hin (2025 Mix) 04:27
- 9 Telephon (2025 Mix) 02:47
- 10 Roter Rolls Royce (2025 Mix) 03:14
Info for Ideal (2025 Mix)
45 years old – and now as fresh as ever: On June 27th, Ideal's self-titled debut album from 1980 will be released in a newly mixed version. For the "2025 Mix," the original multi-track tapes were digitized and remixed by Moritz Enders (Kraftklub, Casper, among others) and Annette Humpe. The result sounds astonishingly direct, tangible, and contemporary – as if the Berlin band had just entered the studio.
The highlight: The new mix used only technology that was available in 1980. The sound is therefore not just new – but reimagined in the spirit of the old days. "Ideal (2025 Mix)" is not just a nostalgic look back, but a striking update: Songs like "Berlin," "Blaue Augen," and "Hundsgemein" seem as uncompromising, radical, and relevant today as ever.
One of the most important albums in German pop/rock music. At the time, only Nina Hagen was innovative and refreshingly different; otherwise, not much was happening. And Ideal manages a virtually impossible balancing act: between new wave and punk on the one hand, and pop and Schlager on the other. Hard guitar riffs meet the squeaky organ sound of Annette Humpe. It's about luxury and salmon, blue eyes and red love.
Ideal
Digitally remastered
Ideal
From April 1980, Annette Humpe (vocals, keyboards), bassist and singer Ernst Ulrich Deuker (July 13, 1954), guitarist and singer Frank Jürgen (Eff Jott) Krüger (December 24, 1948), and drummer, percussionist, and singer Hans-Joachim Behrendt (February 15, 1955) officially formed Ideal. In February of that year, Humpe—who also played with the Neonbabies—and Krüger performed with other musicians, including Neonbabies drummer Toni Nissl, at the Kant Kino with the X-Pectors. This band was then abandoned in March and reformed as Ideal with a slightly different lineup.
Annette Humpe, who began piano lessons at the age of six and later studied composition and piano for six semesters at the Cologne University of Music, had her first spontaneous performances with her sister Inga. Born in Herdecke/Ruhr, she gained her first band experience with the bands "Group Therapy" and "Pink Wave." Later, she sang and played briefly with Inga Humpe in the Neonbabies before joining Ideal with Eff Jott Krüger from the X-Pectors. Eff Jott Krüger, a self-described "53-year-old, perverted guitarist and singer"—a godsend for the media—had relevant experience in the jazz world. A brief guest appearance with the Release Music Orchestra is part of his musical biography. Ernst-U. Deuker also came from a jazz-rock background, which he brought to the stage with the band Margo, among others. Finally, Hansi Behrendt, a trained percussionist, toured with Germany's No. 1 jazz guitarist Volker Kriegel and his Mild Maniac Orchestra before turning to drums and quickly becoming one of the top drummers on the German music scene with the Neonbabies, the Deutsche Bundes-Band (where he met Deuker), and Ideal.
Musik Express later printed after the first LP release: "I consider it a blessing and a strong step for the musicians to deny their oh-so-cultural background and, so to speak, to play below their own standards, which means nothing more than playing below their own limits. In favor of a looseness rarely heard in Germany. Less is more." The reviewer was thus responding to discussions within the scene about the extent to which music such as that presented by Ideal to German listeners in the mid-1980s could be accepted as authentic by former jazz musicians and jazz rockers.
In May 1980, Ideal released their first single, "Wir stehn auf Berlin" / "Männer gibt's wie Sand am Meer," produced for the band's own Eitel Imperial label, which was soon sold out. On May 2nd – while Spliff were debuting at the Kant Kino – Ideal also made their first appearance at the TU Mensa in Berlin. However, their first major gig – also in May – took place at the Tempodrom at the Berlin Rock Circus (alongside Bel Ami, PVC, Tempo, and Z), which was recorded for radio and television. ARD later broadcast the event under the title "Sie verlassen den amerikanischen Sektor" (They Leave the American Sector). Even without an LP, Ideal received considerable press coverage: a media phenomenon rarely observed. This presence in the German press increased immeasurably in late summer. The British romantic rock band Barclay James Harvest, particularly successful in West Germany, organized a "Danke schön" open-air concert for their German fans on the grounds of the Berlin Reichstag (which was to be used for promotion, live recordings, and film and video productions). 150,000 visitors came to the grounds near the Wall and were particularly enthusiastic about Ideal, one of several bands booked for the opening act. These four musicians, in particular, were the major beneficiaries of this major event. The television news programs Tagesschau and Heute reacted to the rock event. But it wasn't Barclay James Harvest who flickered into German living rooms in August 1980, but Ideal. This marked the nationwide breakthrough for the neo-schlager band from Berlin. Immediately after this test, the four musicians entered the studio to produce their first LP for the IC (=Innovative Communication) label, founded by synthesizer specialist Klaus Schulze. It was released in November 1980, and just one month later, 13,000 copies had been sold. "20,800 LPs must be sold to recoup production costs," the alternative small label announced upon release, full of hope but by no means firmly believing in commercial success. ...
This album contains no booklet.