English · Interviews

Interview with Detlef Schwarte (Director Reeperbahn Festival) & Alexander Schulz (General Manager Reeperbahn Festival)

Schwarte
Detlef Schwarte, Director Reeperbahn Festival Campus, General Manager Inferno Events GmbH & Co. KG
Alexander Schulz, General Manager Reeperbahn Festival GbR, General Manager Inferno Events GmbH & Co. KG
Alexander Schulz, General Manager Reeperbahn Festival GbR, General Manager Inferno Events GmbH & Co. KG

What exactly is the ‘Reeperbahn Festival’ and how did it come into excistence?

Detlef Schwarte: Reeperbahn Festival today is the largest urban Festival for new international music in Germany presenting around 350 solo artists and bands from all over the world. And at the same time Reeperbahn Festival is one of the three most important meeting points for the international music industry in Europe. This year we will still expand the Festival´s horizon and include panels and performances which deal with other digital creative industry fields like mobile, games, maker-scene and media. We expect nearly 3.000 delegates from 35 nations to come to Hamburg this year. Besides this Reeperbahn Festival will again offer a massive arts programme including readings, exhibitions, guided tours or film screenings and the 8th edition of Flatstock Europe, the largest rock poster convention on the continent. All this will make Reeperbahn Festival the central european hotspot for international talents, trends and trade.

Alexander Schulz: But honestly this was not really what we had in mind when we started the Festival. I visited the SXSW Festival in Austin back in the year 2000 and came back with the idea that this kind of Festival – and it is just the music part we are talking about – could work perfectly in our hometown Hamburg, too. Because there is no other place in Germany like Hamburg St. Pauli and the Reeperbahn which is the central strip of this part of town. Two handful of music halls and theatres, dozens of clubs, hundreds of bars  – a 24/7 entertainment playground right at our doorstep. It took some years to convince the city, the club owners and the media of the idea. But in 2006 we booked the clubs, invited bands and started Reeperbahn Festival which was at this time half invention and half adventure. And it´s still like this, believe me!

The festival flourished in the past years – what is the main factor for this great success?

Alexander Schulz: The chance – and maybe the prevision – to develop the Festival step by step is the one reason for its success. When one element was doing alright we were able to add the next without changing the Festival´s general character. When the music Festival was – after a three years time – accepted and counted 20.000 visitors we opened the Reeperbahn Festival Campus as business-to-business section with a conference and networking services for the music and live entertainment industry. And now in 2013 we invite representatives of other digital creative industries for the first time to experience Reeperbahn Festival and a programme that is larger and more diverse than ever.

And all this still takes place at Reeperbahn – same venues, same atmosphere, but more input and fun. So the Reeperbahn itself surely is another reason for the Festival´s success.

And the third reason is that we are happy to have partners who believed in the concept of Reeperbahn Festival from the first day as there are the City of Hamburg, the Northern German Radio (NDR) or Warner Music.

What are the plans for Reeperbahn Festival Campus 2013, what can we expect?

Detlef Schwarte: In the scope of the conference we will cover a much wider selections of topics than before. Dave Stewart will hold one of our keynotes. He is a music world star but also a successful multi media entrepreneur and will talk about where in the business money still can be found. Nobody should miss that! Another keynote comes from Cornelia Funke, one of the world´s most widely read authors who sold more than 40 Million books. She won´t talk about traditional writing or publishing, but how she transfers her literary ideas into the digital world by means of a revolutionary application. So music crosses media crosses technology with the aim to get a better understanding of how ideas – or call it content – get alive and visible in the digital world. And how to do trade with it successfully.

Besides this Reeperbahn Festival Campus offers a number of matchmaking sessions where international delegates can meet with the german industry. We have around 20 international showcases from e.g. Canada, Netherlands, Switzerland or Israel and from companies like Warner Music, Believe Digital or Audiolith. Dozens of parties, internal meetings or shows as the legendary “Ray´s Reeperbahn Revue” with Ray Cokes complete the Campus programme 2013.

Why is it an absolute must for every professional to attend the festival?

Detlef Schwarte: Reeperbahn Festival is an event unique in Europe concerning its setting, programme and atmosphere. This is what we hear from our guests and probably this mix is the reason for that every year more and more people – fans and professionals – attend. From our perspective another advantage is that Reeperbahn Festival is big enough to meet a lot of people from the German and the international side of the industry. And it is still small enough to meet them a second or third time during the days of the Festival. And this is what finally counts – good new contacts. That is what makes Reeperbahn Festival the best gateway to the German and European market.

How do you want the Reeperbahn Festival to develop? What are your future plans? How could the Festival look like in 2020?

Alexander Schulz: We are convinced that we offer a modern type of meeting plattform for the music- and the digital industry already. Nowadays their deals are no more made along big boothes under the neon-lights in large exhibitions-halls. And public-visitors do not wish to only listen to world-famous live-acts some hundred meters away on a large stage. They like to pick music-cherries live, like they do every day on the internet, as well as the professionals do.

As we are aware of the fact that the event’s success among both, public- and business-visitors, is based on its compact and familiar music-atmosphere, Reeperbahn Festival cannot be enlarged in the future just by adding big venues, but only by adding another festival-day, while keeping the daily venue-capacity on this year’s level.

We have the plan to spread the brand year round and through different channels. We already started publishing an album-series of Reeperbahn Festival recordings on iTunes, we are presenting and supporting international artists’ tours in Germany, about 80 shows of this years Reeperbahn Festival will be recorded and broadcast through German public radio and TV and the European Broadcast Union, for example We are thinking of different other possibilities to spread the brand in the near future.

In 2020 Reeperbahn Festival should be established as a brand which is recommending good music in both worlds – the virtual as well as the real (live-)world. Sticking to that concept, the event will stay thrilling for public-visitors as well as for professionals.

Interviewed by Sara Shirazi

English · Interviews

“I produced many weird projects” – Interview with Charles Foskett

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Please tell us a bit about yourself.

Bought a guitar from a school friend in 1963 because he got the girls – He still got the girls and I was stuck with the ‘Rossetti Lucky 7’ – after playing it till my fingers bled I eventually got myself a gig with my first band The Howlin Blues – We were resident at Newcastle’s Club AGoGo alongside The Animals, John Mayall’s Blues Breakers, The Graham Bond Organisation and everyone else on the scene at that time.

Fast forward to the early 70’s – After gigging in just about every toilet in the British Isles I began getting offers from the likes of the early Roxy Music and Curved Air as their bass player – lots of bands and tours later I got fed up with the road, a case full of dirty underwear and endlessly losing my tooth brush!

I decided to focus more on recording studio sessions and played on all kinds of pretentious new wave rubbish of the time – I invested in a Teac four track tape recorder and some microphones of my own and also with a bit of extra cash I bought a new toothbrush!

Moved from Geordie land on Tyne and landed in South Croydon where I started writing and recording songs for anyone and everyone – some of them were mindless crap like much of the late 70’s pop music – over indulgent noise with endless tape loops of percussive drainpipe hitting and flanged clarinets – it made what Ferry was doing in Roxy Music sound quite straight and normal – Obviously I couldn’t get myself arrested with a record label producing such none commercial tosh which at that time I attempted selling as ‘Art’ – Talk about having your head up your own bum. I wasn’t alone, 99% of everyone else I knew shared the same delusion.

How did you get into production in the first place? 

Fast forward to early 80’s – Whilst living in Chiswick I set up a studio and production company called Off-Beat Music in Hammersmith Studios in Yeldham Road just off the Fulham Palace Road. We were over the yard from the rock band Yes and literally just through the wall from Thomas Dolby’s studio – when Tom was away on tour I would run in there and nick his gear.

I had two business partners who managed to get an ever flowing stream of work for me writing and producing music for radio and television adverts – I did everything from ‘Guinness’ to music for baby milk and ladies underwear. Rock n Roll!

After a year or so of following the musical briefs of twenty million west end marketing guys on cocaine I longed to make pop records or just work on a rock band project – something that was real!

A short time later I received a call from an old girlfriend saying that ‘Frankie Goes to Hollywood’ were rehearsing in a hotel in Jersey where she lived and Holly Johnston was interested in working with me – Holly had heard an album I had produced for an artist called Carey Duncan on the big indie Irish label Ritz Records.  Would I like to meet up with him to discuss.

Around the same time a good friend of mine had sent me a great but sad song about heroin addiction called ‘Smack’ – it had a kind of Rickie Lee Jones type vibe about it with an incredible lyric and hook and I wanted to find an artist to cut it with. I had been recording Bobby Tench (ex Jeff Beck band) and guitarist Big Jim Sullivan (ex Tom Jones) and loving being in amongst creative guys who could deliver a performance.  The song definitely wasn’t right for Holly but I wanted to find a few more songs of the same nature and put together a collection with various artists fronting them.

Maybe it would be something that a major label might go for if I could round up some names but where on earth would I start the ball rolling.  I wasn’t known outside of my own front room and still felt very much like a hayseed from the north.

They might all go for it especially if a percentage of the sales were for an anti drugs charity. I didn’t know one musician that didn’t know of someone that had been badly affected by drugs.

I had lost one or two colleagues to heroin over doses and saw the state of my ex girlfriend (actress Sarah Miles’s) son Tom, when he repeatedly got himself totally wasted and into a torpid mess on smack. She had spent a fortune on getting him cleaned up time after time and eventually his father, the playwright Robert Bolt sent him off to be locked up in Minnesota somewhere; it worked, Tom was lucky to have that kind of support behind him to get clean.

After months of working around the clock I had a group of two dozen top session players and many top names on-board to design the best anti drugs record of all time; EMI signed the deal and gave me full support along with my own production office, my own p.a. and pr person.

‘It’s a Live-In World’ was about to hit the planet in a big way!  I had free run of all studios in Abbey Road – I was invited to work at the most famous home studio in the world ‘Tittenhurst Park’ which belonged at that time to Ringo Starr – Ringo bought it from John and Yoko when they moved to New York – Ringo asked me to work on a track at Tittenhurst with engineer Martin Adam and he would play on my album along with his son Zak Starkey.

CF and Ringo

I had co-produced tracks with Paul and Linda McCartney, wrote songs for Kim Wilde, Bonnie Tyler, Elkie Brooks, Fish from Marillion and produced Elvis Costello and Loudon Wainright. We eventually wrote a great song called ‘Slay the Dragon’ which I produced with Holly Johnston. Artists just kept on coming my way and I somehow managed to stay on my feet and remain compos mentis even though I was only getting around five hours sleep and less each night.

I was spending more and more time producing artists in every top studio in town and had to eventually split from my two Off Beat Music partners in Hammersmith; they still believed I should be composing music for television and radio alongside all the top flight action I had scored through hard graft and yelling at the top of my voice to anyone who would listen to what I had planned.

The double album and single ‘It’s a Live-In World’ was due for Christmas release 1986 and featured pretty much everybody that was a big name at that time. I had artists flying in from America, taking days out from their tour schedules to get in on the action. Organising it was an administrational nightmare but with the help of my p.a. and various EMI departments (who would run in the opposite direction at the sight of me coming) we kept on top of it.

It always becomes a lot easier when you have a major label support behind you – every Tom, Dick and Harry wants to jump on your ride to big up their own failing careers and why not – I got a million quid’s worth of free publicity including prime time television – BBC and ITV news, MTV and the whole shebang. We, without doubt were going to have the biggest number one Christmas hit that would equal Band Aid without problem.

I had been told by two Beatles (Ringo and Macca) that I had written one great big classic hit song, this fed my ego somewhat and meant a lot – I had also been offered a top job at the home office as David Mellor’s right hand man on the government’s proposed 1987 anti drug campaign. Mellor took me out for dinner and schmoozed me no end!

It was at this point I should have smelled a rat – and one gigantic rat at that!

I turned Mellor’s job offer down favouring popular music over politics and one week later EMI received a telephone call from the home office ordering them to ditch the release of ‘It’s a Live-In-World. They were proposing to dump twenty months of my hard labours in the blink of an eye, none of us could understand it; my endless pushing and pulling of hundreds of great talented people and their managements and agents and most of all my own love of achieving something really worthwhile in a self gratifying industry.

Cliff Richard, Paul McCartney, Elvis Costello and myself complained like hell at the front door of the Home Office, we rang Parliament – The BBC were rendered totally helpless and were also banned from giving ‘It’s a Live-in World’ any airplay what-so-ever.  They were forbidden from even covering our endeavours to campaign for the news – Nothing! Zilch!

Why? 

I got in the way of their own anti heroin campaign and it was looking like ‘It’s a Live-In-World’ may have proved much more effective than their own multi million pound effort which was spent on those huge hording adverts that appeared throughout the UK in January 1987 – Kids with dark rings under their eyes looking gray and washed out; giant syringes dripping blood looked down onto every other street corner for a couple of months – I could see what they were getting at by those images but could not understand why we couldn’t have joined forces with them on the same campaign.

The answer was obvious – ‘Ego’ – not knowingly I had bashed their egos in a massive way, they couldn’t have been seen to have spent so much of the countries money on cleaning up Great Britain from heroin abuse, then along comes this Geordie musician and makes much more noise about the problem having not spent one penny on funding his own plan of action.

The carpet had been pulled from right under our feet and we were well and truly buried without trace.  ‘It’s a Live-In-World’ was wiped out.

In hindsight I should have created this gig for Macmillan Cancer support – They have just saved my life from bowel cancer! www.singitback.net  No one would have, could have argued!

All will be revealed in my autobiography ‘Ashtray on a Motorbike’ – keep reading. For more info on my time at Tittenhurst Park and Abbey Road studios go to www.shmusicmusic.com – click on / Meet the crew / Charles Foskett  (page 1) / click title ‘Ashtray on a Motorbike’ and read ‘From Elvis to Ringo’

For any of the artists on Music2deal looking for a producer, what would you recommend is the best way to get a producer?

The music business is exactly that – A Business! It’s a business first and foremost about money and not your god given gift of being able to shout down a microphone or bash a guitar, it’s about money!!!

Holding onto this little doorway of enlightenment think about it – It is just like any other business, selling a second hand car, selling a horse etc – It is about investing your hard earned dosh into your talent – putting your money where your own mouth is and I’m not talking about spending on a new guitar and amplifier either. If you don’t invest in hiring a great producer, someone with vision, not a dictator but a great guide as well as someone with all the tech knowledge (that goes without saying) you will probably end up falling on your arse and not selling one unit (unless your mother buys one off you).

That’s what it’s all about these days ‘Selling Units’ just like everything else on the shelf – if you sell enough units under your own steam you may get a major label wanting to sign you for your next album – but let’s not get ahead of ourselves here.

The answer to the question is basically the same answer to all the other questions that will come your way??? Dohhh? Walk out your front door, follow your nose and start networking – become Sherlock Holmes – go on-line and suss where producers hang out – type record producer into Google and you’ll get millions of them come up. Get on the phone to one of them – get on the phone to two, three of them – go and meet them. There are many top guys these days prepared to get involved in vanity projects – this term need not necessarily be thought of as a derogatory term – many vanity releases, if handled correctly can become successful releases and make profits.

Be prepared with a realistic budget to cover your production costs – any producer worth his/her salt will not just work on a percentage basis  – We don’t starve for our own art never mind someone else’s and apart from that we have to buy the baby a new bonnet. If you are not prepared to invest money in your own gig you will never attract investors to invest their cash in you either.

Just imagine wandering up those stairs to the Dragon’s Den to sell absolutely nothing and not having any ideas of how to create something saleable – you may just get thrown out of the window never mind shown the stairs back down to the outside door! Ha ha!

Get a great producer on-board and get a great job done!!

What notable projects have you completed and how did you get involved with Paul McCartney?

I was working an all nighter in Abbey Road studios – I was up in the penthouse and at around 3.am the internal phone rang. I thought it was the young kid and tape op from down stairs again – he had been supplying me with coffees every hour to keep me awake. When I picked up a voice said ‘Hello is that Charley Foskett?’ to which I replied ‘Yes! Piss off and let me get on with my work, I’m on a deadline here!’ ‘I’ve had enough coffee to last me all week’ – I then hung up and continued working. Two minutes later the phone rang again and a voice said ‘Hello Charley, it’s Paul here’ to which I replied ‘Paul who?’ and the voice said ‘Paul McCartney’ – and I yelled back ‘F**k Off’ and hung up the receiver again.  I thought about running down stairs and tying up and gagging the young tape op and locking him in the basement for the rest of the night.

I had no sooner sat down and rewound the tape and the phone rang again – by this time I was really pissed off and just took it off the receiver and left it hanging there. I could hear a voice talking away as I got on with my work – I picked it up again after running the tape for a couple of minutes and there he was still on the line. ‘Hello Charley, It’s Paul McCartney here’ to which I replied ‘Yes of course you are but your scouse accent is rubbish!’ I almost turned into Basil Fawlty before the penny dropped – his accent was perfect Liverpudlian and it was Macca ringing me in the middle of the night. ‘You’ve really gone and done it haven’t you’ said ‘The one of great Hofner violin bass playing’.

‘Oh shit! Sorry! I thought you were the guy down stairs making the coffee’ I mumbled nervously. We laughed and he invited me to discuss stuff the following week after Zak Starkey’s 21st birthday bash at Tittenhurst Park. He had written a song for me called ‘Simple as that’.

Have you found involvement with MMF and MPG both beneficial?

Think I got sacked from the MMF for not paying my subs? I’ll no doubt find out when I try and use them to get a cheap deal into Midem next January! The music producer’s guild send me their magazine every now and then – they don’t mention me much (just can’t understand that??)

I guess when you are hot – you are hot!

On anyone wanting to be a producer which one piece of advice would you give them?

Make sure you are not deaf! Seriously though, my best advice is ‘Make sure you always without fail capture the magic of the performance!

What was the weirdest project you ever worked on?

I produced many weird projects from 1980’s Gothics from New York City who presented me with some animal bones each morning whilst cleaning the tape heads. After that they wanted their bone selection spread over the mixer throughout the sessions. Sarah Miles wouldn’t record a note until she had consulted the ‘I Ching’ on every vocal phrase. In fact Sarah threw three coins into the air and consulted the ‘I Ching’ on every move she ever made in life.

Another one was the top singer of Iraq or Albania or somewhere with lots of sand, dust and muck – he filled the studio live room and control room with endless one string fiddles drums and a plethora of other noise making objects.

Whilst bragging about how many bullet holes he had in his car doors another guy arrived to play all these instruments – there was no second takes in his sessions – there was no playbacks to double check on anything – each overdub was only given one shot – what a horrible racket!

We recorded sixteen tunes in one day and when I came to set the volumes of the mix I realised that it sounded totally authentic and magical and not the out of tune crap I had envisaged it would turn out to be – So they wanted me to record every track without hearing it back but they didn’t leave animal bones on the mixer either.

What was your favourite all time production job?

It has to be ‘It’s a Live-In-World’ (EMI) – There has only been a few of us nailing gigs like that – Geldof  – Live Aid (8) / Nile Rogers’ We are Family – for 9/11 and one or two others

If you had the choice of producing one artist either dead or alive who would you choose?

 Elvis!

Did you have a mentor when you first got into the music industry?

No.

What do you think is the single largest problem faced by the music industry today? How do you think it can be resolved?

It cannot be resolved and the problem is, everyone has a computer and a microphone and are now songwriters and music producers – the whole population of the world are now singers and on YouTube – You see them all running around like a swarm of ants at all the trade fairs with their hit songs hoping to win the lottery.

Your plans for 2013?

To keep breathing – to keep on smelling the roses each day – to keep on doing what I love, which is working with talented singers and musicians who can really deliver a heartfelt vocal and a magical performance and never forgetting to keep stretching my own capacity as a great music producer.

A good word on Music2Deal.com please?

Music2Deal is a fantastic one stop platform for everyone wanting to network – whether its licensing you are after, recording, finding new artists, record producers, finding songs, promoters, music publishers, agents etc – the list of possibilities goes on and on and runs the whole gamut of music biz requirements. Music2Deal is Spot on!

by Sara Shirazi

German · Interviews

“Ich bringe sogar Holzbeine zum Schwingen!” – Interview mit Rapper Volkan Horn

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Wer ist eigentlich Volkan Horn?

Ich, Volkan Horn, bin ein gebürtiger Hamburger mit türkischen Wurzeln. Aufgewachsen bin ich im Bezirk Horn der als Problembezirk verschrien ist. Hier habe ich eine Menge gutes, aber auch schlechtes erlebt. Es war nicht immer leicht, aber ich habe hier auch Menschen kennengelernt, die für Ihre Träume kämpfen und ich bin einer davon. Dieser Stadtteil lässt mich nicht los, und hat sich in meinem Namen verewigt. Man kann mich nicht auf eine Schiene beschränken, denn “Volkan Horn hat viele Gesichter”.

Wie bist du dazu gekommen Musik zu machen?

Ich fand es einfach cool, meine eigenen Gedanken auf Papier zu bringen. Irgendwann bat sich mir die Möglichkeit, meine Songs auf die Bühne zu bringen. Seitdem ist Hip Hop in meinem Leben nicht mehr wegzudenken. Rap wurde zu einem Ventil für mich. Auch Jugendprojekte waren Teil meines Weges. Mit ihnen haben wir gemeinsam getextet und sogar einen Sampler veröffentlicht. Bei einem dieser Projekte lernte ich den Beatproduzenten Pasto kennen. Hier haben sich zwei getroffen, die dieselbe Meinung teilen. Da geht noch mehr…

Schreibst du deine Texte selbst? Woher nimmst du die Inspiration für neue Songs?

Natürlich. Denn ich möchte die Dinge mit meinen eigenen Worten und so wie ich sie sehe rüberbringen. Klar habe ich Vorbilder aus der Hip Hop Szene, die mich bis heute inspirieren und prägten. Aber die Welt, in der ich lebe und die Erfahrungen, die ich in ihr machte und mache, beinhalten eine Menge Brennstoff für meine Texte.

Was unterscheidet dich deiner Meinung nach von anderen Rappern?

Durch meine lockere und verrückte Art bringe ich sogar Holzbeine zum Schwingen. Doch das Leben besteht nicht nur aus Party und hat auch eine harte Seite. Deshalb beschäftigen mich auch ernste und nachdenkliche Themen, die mich nicht loslassen und sich in anderen Songs wiederspiegeln. Jeder Song hat den Volkan Horn Charakter, egal in welche Richtung es geht. Ich habe eine eigene Art zu rappen. In meinen Songs findet man keine Ermutigung für Gewalt und Resignation, ganz im Gegenteil.

Wer sind deine musikalischen Vorbilder? Mit wem würdest du gerne mal zusammenarbeiten?

Obwohl mir einige Künstler aus der Musikszene sehr gut gefallen und mich auch inspirierten, habe ich kein direktes Vorbild. Ich höre mir viel Musik aus allen Richtungen an und bin der Meinung, es gibt zu wenig individuelle Künstler, die gefördert werden. Dort sind schon einige dabei, mit denen ich gerne mal was machen würde.

Volkan 4

Wie läuft so ein Videodreh eigentlich ab?

Kamera an, Action, Kamera aus. Aber im Ernst, es erfordert viel Planung und Arbeit im Vorfeld, um ein solches Video erst mal zu realisieren. Man muss viel Vorarbeit leisten, um auf ein gutes Ergebnis zu kommen. Es braucht mindestens 3-4 Wochen Anlaufzeit, um sowohl Location, Darsteller und alle nötigen Requisiten zu organisieren. Wir machen uns vorab Gedanken über den Ablauf, so dass wir uns während des Drehs voll und ganz auf die Szenen konzentrieren können. Doch ist das alles im Sack, macht ein Videodreh sehr viel Spaß, auch wenn so ein Drehtag meistens sehr lang und kräftezehrend ist. Ohne Filmfatal im Rücken wäre es allerdings nie zu so einem guten Ergebnis gekommen.

Wie schwierig ist es wirklich, als Newcomer im Musikbusiness Fuß zu fassen?

Ich denke, dass es heutzutage viel schwerer ist, aus der Masse zu stechen, als es früher der Fall war. Es wird mehr Musik produziert, als gehört werden kann. Das macht es schwer, in den Köpfen der Leute hängen zu bleiben. Ein guter langfristiger Support ist wichtiger denn je.

Wo siehst du dich und deine Musik in 5 Jahren?

Musik werde ich immer machen und ich werde meinem Stil treu bleiben. Was in 5 Jahren so passiert, kann ich nicht sagen. Plan ist, mein Album fertigzustellen und meine Fanbase aufzubauen. Frag mich nochmal, wenn ich mein Best Of veröffentliche! *lach*

Könntest du dir vorstellen, Deutschland dauerhaft zu verlassen, weil deine Musik beispielsweise in den USA oder der Türkei besser ankommt und man dort von dem Geld besser leben könnte?

Keine Chance.

Hier findest du Volkan Horn:

Music2Deal – http://bit.ly/10lQYi0

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/volkanhorn.music

Wirf jetzt exklusiv einen Blick in Volkans neues Musikvideo!
Die Single dazu ist ab jetzt in vielen Online-Stores erhältlich!

by Sara Shirazi