"Textual Gaudi and musical Gwoit": Gamskampler release their third album
Created: 08/07/2022, 02:00 p.m
Creating a good atmosphere: the "Gamskampler" at the Raut Oak Festival 2022 in Riegsee.
© Wilz
For the first time with a love song: The Ammertal band "Gamscampler" has released their third album.
20 songs can be heard on it.
Ammertal - When the "Gamskampler" are on stage, things get wild.
Singer Manuel Herz takes off his top to loud screams from the audience and lets a fan blow through his wild mane.
A bra flies onto the stage, the band hands out safety vests, folding rules and rolling pins.
Such a rolling pin also adorns the new album that the three Ammertalers released this summer.
Title: "Wia hammer's den da?!" That's a question that Stefan Gut (36), Manuel Herz (37) and Leo Bierling (33) have often dealt with in these troubled times.
"You ask yourself that all the time these days - that's why the title is an overall concept," says Gut, who plucks the bass alias "Hans im Glück".
His colleague Bierling "Hans vom Bier" is responsible for the drums, while Herz sings and plays the guitar in the role of "Hans mit Dampf".
20 songs can be heard on the third album - four of them with female vocal accompaniment.
The lady is introduced as "Resl vo die Depfberg".
However, the musicians do not want to reveal the true identity of Schöffau.
Soft tones and "folk music with Gwoit"
They recorded their new record in just one day in the summer of 2021.
The scene was a recording studio in Murnau, where the three of them recorded a love song for the first time, which manages without any ironic breaks.
"Your pulse beats my beat and when madness hits me, you take me by the hand and I sing land again," reads a line from "Herzschlåg".
The piece convinces with soft tones, which is a novelty for the "Gamscampler".
After all, they stand for “folk music with gwoit”.
But don't worry, there's more than enough of that on the record.
Gut's favorite song is "Rindsbesamer Rudi" - and as you can imagine, the name says it all.
"Woman for all cases" is what Bierling is passionate about.
This scene, in which friends sit together with a crate of beer, reminds him of his own life.
On the other hand, Herz speaks out in favor of “Never exist”.
According to him, it's about cultural pessimism and the earlier-everything-was-better mentality.
Every piece is different
"It doesn't matter whether it's fast, slow or with Gwoit - somehow every song on the new album is different," says Bierling.
The fans also praise that.
According to the band, the feedback on the CD release show in Bad Bayersoien was consistently positive.
The "Gamskampler" also performed twice with great success at the Tollwood Festival in Munich.
Although they performed their new song "Dir huif I scho" there, in which a wealthy dentist from the state capital is criticized for buying the building land from under the noses of the rural population.
But the locals don't look on idly.
He defends himself with yodeling songs in the garden, ennobles the newcomer's laundry and starts the circular saw on Saturday morning.
The musicians thus fulfill their own requirements: "It's about textual fun and musical gwoit",
Herz sums up the intention of the "Gamskampler".
(
Constanze Wilz
)
Information and dates:
"Gamskampler" concerts: Friday, August 12: Böbing Open Air;
Saturday, August 20: from 7 p.m., Waldschlucht Bad Kohlgrub.
Further information is available on the band's website
www.gamskmampler.de.