Nicole Seibert

(Redirected from Nicole (German singer))

Nicole Seibert (née Hohloch; born 25 October 1964), known professionally as Nicole, is a German singer, songwriter, musician and producer.[2]In 1982, she became the first German representative to win the Eurovision Song Contest.[3] She has released more than 25 studio albums and 80 singles,[4] some of which she performed and recorded in, among other languages, English, Dutch, and French. She wrote the music and lyrics for some of her recordings.[5]

Nicole Seibert
Born
Nicole Hohloch

(1964-10-25) 25 October 1964 (age 59)
Other namesNicole
Notable work"Ein bißchen Frieden" ("A Little Peace")
Spouse
Winfried Seibert
(m. 1984)
Children2
Musical career
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • musician
  • producer
Instrument(s)
Years active1980s–present
Labels
Websitewww.nicole-4-u.de

Early life

Hohloch was born in Saarbrücken, Saarland, West Germany. She began performing at the age of four, but did not achieve commercial success until she was 16, when her first single ("Flieg nicht so hoch, mein kleiner Freund") was released. It peaked at #2 in Austria and reached Top 40 positions on multiple European music charts.[6]

When she was 17, she won the 1982 Eurovision Song Contest with "Ein bißchen Frieden", which reached #1 on multiple European music charts. After the end of the contest's voting, Hohloch reprised the song by performing parts of it in English, French and Dutch, along with the original German.[7]

Interviewed years later, she made a statement regarding the points received from Israel: "But the most important victory (was) that a German girl gets 12 points from Israel with a song about peace." In the interview, she also stated that she received an invitation from the Israeli government (which she accepted) to go to Tel Aviv to sing for soldiers stationed there.[3]

She recorded an English version of "A Little Peace", which reached #1 on the UK Singles Chart. It went on to be the 500th number one single in the UK Singles Chart.[8] Full versions in French ("La Paix sur Terre"), Dutch ("Een beetje vrede"), Spanish ("Un poco de paz"), Danish ("En smule fred"), Slovene ("Malo miru"), Russian ("Немного мира"), Polish ("Troszeczkę ziemi, troszeczkę słońca"), and Hungarian ("Egy kis nyugalmat kívánok én", with Neoton Família) have also been recorded.[9]

Later in 1982, she released two studio albums, one German (Ein bißchen Frieden) and the other in English (A Little Peace). Like the title tracks, most of the songs have corresponding German and English tracks.[10]

In 2005 she co-produced her album Alles Fließt, which was released in May of that year.[2] In 2008, she released the album Mitten ins Herz,[11] which was accompanied by a three-month "unplugged" tour that ended in January 2009.[6]

Early in her career, the songs she recorded and performed were primarily written by composers such as Ralph Siegel, Bernd Meinunger, Robert Jung [de], and Jean Frankfurter [de].[12][13] For the recordings of songs in other languages, she's worked with, among others, Paul Greedus, Zack Laurence, Pierre Delano [de], and Jean-Paul Cara.[14][15][16]

In 2016 she worked with Siegel and Meinunger when making her studio album Traumfänger, and Hohloch (as Seibert) is also credited with some of the compositions.[17] In 2019, for the songs on her studio album 50 ist das neue 25, she worked with Heinz Rudolf Kunze, Jens Carstens, Martin Koppehele [de], Suna Koppehele [de], Gabi Koppehele [de], and Giorgio Koppehele [de], and is credited with songs from that album as well.[5]

In 2020, Hohloch celebrated her 40th anniversary in the music industry with a concert tour; however, these dates were rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[18]

Mostly associated with being a Schlager musician, she has also recorded and released jazz, pop, rock and gospel songs.[1]

Personal life

Hohloch is one of four children, born to Marliese and Siegfried Hohloch. She grew up with her brother and two sisters in the small community of Nohfelden in Saarland. It was there that she attended school and graduated from high school. She is an honorary citizen of her hometown of Nohfelden.[19]

Hohloch married Winfried Seibert (a childhood friend she had known since she was 14) in a civil ceremony on 17 August 1984; a day later they had a wedding ceremony in a church. They have two children.[20][21]

She likes to give concerts in churches because of the atmosphere and acoustics. Since she was a child, she has found answers in her spirituality and firmly believes that guardian angels will take care of her. This belief was reinforced by some events in her life. In one such instance, Hohloch had planned a trip for Thailand in the winter of 2004, around the time the tsunami struck, killing over 220,000 people. Due to strong recommendations from friends, she cancelled her trip to Thailand and went to South Africa instead.[22]

She supports various humanitarian causes, such as child abuse prevention, and healthy activities for homeless children in the Philippines. She continues to campaign for Rett syndrome and for "life without chains". She has been to Africa twice for Welthungerhilfe.[19]

Honors and awards

Discography

Studio albums

YearTitleFirst published
1981Flieg nicht so hoch, mein kleiner Freund1981
1982Ein bißchen Frieden17 June 1982
1982A Little PeaceOctober 1982
1983So viele Lieder sind in mir10 October 1983
1985Gesichter der Liebe1985
1986Laß mich nicht allein1986
1987Moderne Piraten1987
1988So wie du1988
1990Für immer...für ewig...1990
1991Und ich denke schon wieder nur an dich2 September 1991
1992Wenn schon...denn schon9 November 1992
1993Mehr als nur zusammen schlafen gehn4 October 1993
1994Und ausserdem24 October 1994
1996Pur3 June 1996
1998Abrakadabra20 April 1998
1999Visionen20 September 1999
2001Kaleidoskop2 April 2001
2002Ich lieb dich9 September 2002
2004Für die Seele3 May 2004
2005Alles fließt30 May 2005
2006Begleite mich24 March 2006
2008Mitten ins Herz8 February 2008
2009Meine Nummer 119 June 2009
2012Jetzt komm ich16 March 2012
2013Alles nur für Dich10 May 2013
2014Das ist mein Weg24 October 2014
2016Traumfänger15 April 2016
201712 Punkte14 April 2017
201950 ist das neue 2511 October 2019

See also

Literature

  • Guido Knopp, Peter Arens: Our best. The 100 greatest Germans. Econ, Munich 2003, ISBN 3-430-15521-5.

References

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Winner of the Eurovision Song Contest
1982
Succeeded by
Preceded by Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest
1982
Succeeded by