The Scorpions-Klaus laughs at the CIA theory

Can Norwegians save 4.25 billion in interest? German musician Klaus Meine, world famous as the frontman of the hard rock band Scorpions, has accomplished a feat

Norwegians can thus save 4.25 billion in interest costs

German musician Klaus Meine, world famous as the frontman of the hard rock band Scorpions, managed to write the kraft ballad “Wind of Change” (1990). The song for whistling the parties and the political messages also tone the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Not everyone had to accept Meines’ song about peace, reconciliation and a new future, a song that helped unite the people of Eastern and Western Europe, written from the heart. Over the years it has been speculated that more than My was involved in låtens massive range.

CLASSIC: cover of “Wind of Change” by Scorpions from 1990. Photo: PolyGram Records Show more Tight lærbukser

Now a new eight-episode long podcast, named after a Scorpions song, is evoking a lot of attention. Spionspillet in scenes during the cold war and the historical trace of the world-famous song.

The “Wind of Change” podcast series summary reads: “Spies. Secrets. Soviets. And narrow lærbukser,” and “Wind of Change,” created by The New Yorker’s award-winning journalist Patrick Radden Keefe, stocks, apparently, all of this.

The podcast starts from the theory, or rumor if you will, that it wasn’t the band Scorpions who wrote the monster hit “Wind of Change”, but that it was supposed to be the poetic pens of the etterretningsessene in the CIA behind it.

Rock, a cultural weapon

“Kraftballad helped shrink the Soviet Union. Was it written by the CIA?” asked Keefe, who told The Guardian that he learned of the theory through a source in the US intelligence service ten years ago.

The search for an answer takes him around the world. Keefe tells the story of how Western popular culture was used to influence the masses in the East.

– The CIA viewed rock music as a cultural weapon during the Cold War. “Wind of Change” was released a year after the fall of the wall and became the theme for a new album for the fall of communism and the reunification of Germany. The song has a soft but powerful message that the intelligence community wanted to promote,” Keefe told the paper.

Video not found KILL SEX MARRY: the ladies behind the “Jank and Martes podcast” are a little at odds when standing between Magnus Carlsen and Petter Northug. Reporter: Julie Solberg / Video: Emilie Rydning Show more He starts to laugh

After interviews, ranging from spies and former Eastern European underground rockers, Keefe ends up ending up in Hannover, Germany, with the inevitable protagonist, Klaus Meine.

In the podcast, the last episode, faced with Keefes claims and theories, gets My latterkrampe. At one point he asks Keefe if he thinks he’s interviewing a special agent.

– Are you a special agent, ask Keefe.

– No, I’m not a special agent and I didn’t have anything to do with the CIA – says Meine and says he’s never heard that theory about the song he wrote 30 years ago.

In a recent interview with SiriusXM radio’s “Trunk Nation,” my conversation with Keefe was a little distant. Where is the podcast concept and remember the session as memorable but bizarre.

I think the whole thing was very fun and gapskrattet. It’s a fun and dizzying history, but like I said, it’s not true. As you Americans say, it’s “fake news,” says Meine.

Full of confusion about the foundation: – Deep despair

Want to chat?

Visit the Dagbladet debate! Date of update: 22 May 2020, 04:17

Categories: Optical Illusion
Source: newstars.edu.vn

Leave a Comment