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SoundBites
Coal, Kebabs and Cold Water

Malaria! play a concert at Documenta 7 on June 20, 1982 at Friedericianum, Kassel
Never far away from the art world. Malaria! at documenta 7 in Kassel (1982) | © picture-alliance / Jazzarchiv

Celebrated in English-speaking countries as a “Teutonic band”, the new wave group Malaria! never saw themselves as German – if anything, they were Berliner. Their underground hit Kaltes Klares Wasser, which enjoys cult, Kraftwerk-like status all over the world today, came about purely by chance. And thanks to feminist skills, has been given a second life.

In the 1980s, West Berlin was a grey, walled-in city of ruins. One that smelled of coal and kebabs. A city of pensioners and students, conscientious objectors and politniks, a city that had no curfews and parking tickets were rare. “Berlin was a forgotten island,” recalls Gudrun Gut, drummer of the band Malaria! in the 2021 book M_Dokumente. Malaria! formed there in 1981 following the dissolution of predecessor band Mania D. – the members contractually agreed to start all their music project names with the letter “M” – and toured all over the world. They performed with Siouxsie and the Banshees, New Order, the Slits, John Cale, and with Nina Hagen at Studio 54 in New York. Malaria! taught Nick Cave all about electronic music. It was only in Germany that no one showed any real interest in them – with the exception of Berlin’s pulsating underground scene, which didn’t feel German anyway.
 


The founding members Gudrun Gut and Bettina Köster lugged their own instruments around with them on their endless tours, spent their meagre earnings on telephone calls and froze in draughty old apartments, where the coal-fired ovens never really got going. It was at a moment like this that the idea for the song Kaltes Klares Wasser was born. Bettina Köster was lying in bed in her freezing cold flat, smoking a joint. It made her extremely thirsty, but she didn’t feel like getting up. The words “cold, clear water!” implanted themselves on her brain. As was usual for the punk, new wave and avant-garde-inspired band – Bettina and Gudrun both studied at the art academy – they tried out their songs on live audiences several times before recording them (if at all) on vinyl. This was also the case with Kaltes Klares Wasser, which they spontaneously recorded as a 12” single during two free days in Brussels, to scrape together enough money to pay for the hotel. The result was a dark wave track with a pummelling bass, driving drums and simultaneously apocalyptic and alluring lyrics about cool water. Today’s interpretation, which Robert Defcon recently wrote about on the occasion of the M_Dokumente exhibition at Berlin’s silent green, would undoubtedly have seemed absurd to the band at that time: “Malaria! fuse the cool, crypto-military man-machine style of contemporaries Kraftwerk with an oceanic feel and female physicality.”

„Cold clear water
Over my hands
Over my arms
Over my face“

Although Malaria! had nothing whatsoever to do with the then declining, emotionally charged feminism of the 1970s with its crocheted objects and candles on stage, they were indeed something of a utopian role model for successor bands with their concept of an all-female line-up in prototypical DIY punk style. Kaltes Klares Wasser continued its successful career beyond the lifespan of Malaria! and follow-up project Matador as an underground hit that became an integral part of the global insider-tip pop canon. Around the turn of the millennium, Gudrun Gut once again demonstrated rock-solid feminist wisdom. During Malaria!’s lifetime, no record label was willing to sign up the band – back then, all-male networks cast women at best as girlfriends or fans – but the current head of record label Monika Enterprise took her own musical revival into her own hands. She commissioned the German-based, internationally popular art-pop trio Chicks on Speed to remix the song. With its then highly fashionable, still irresistibly cool electroclash aesthetic, it entered the German charts in 2001, one year after its release, staying there for eight weeks and reaching number 16. The song had a double revival – and inspired more and more feedback loops.
 

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