Falco – Rock Me Amadeus (Live)
The Only German-Language Song To Hit Number One In America
Falco released “Rock Me Amadeus” in Europe in June 1985 as the lead single from his third studio album Falco 3. The song hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 on March 29, 1986, where it stayed for three consecutive weeks—making Falco the first and still the only artist ever to top the American charts with a German-language song. It reached number one in the UK on May 10, 1986, becoming the first single by an Austrian act to achieve this distinction. The song also topped charts in Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, and West Germany. What nobody expected was that a rap-meets-synth-pop tribute to an 18th-century composer would conquer the world—especially since most Americans couldn’t understand a word of it.
The single spent three weeks at number one in the US, peaked at number one for one week in the UK, and dominated Canada for five weeks. The Falco 3 album climbed to number three on the Billboard 200 and, remarkably, reached number 18 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart—unusual for a white European act. The song even peaked at number six on the Billboard Top R&B Singles Chart. His follow-up single “Vienna Calling” reached number 18 on the Hot 100, proving he wasn’t quite the one-hit wonder American radio tried to label him. The album sold over six million copies worldwide, with at least 21 different versions and remixes of “Rock Me Amadeus” released over the years—from the eight-minute Salieri Mix to the American Edit that reduced German lyrics for international markets.
The song was inspired by Miloš Forman’s 1984 film Amadeus, which had won eight Academy Awards and reignited global fascination with Mozart. Falco, born Johann Hölzel in Vienna, wrote the lyrics with Dutch producers Rob and Ferdi Bolland, who also produced the track. The Bollands had just written “In the Army Now” for their own album, which Status Quo would later turn into a worldwide hit. Falco’s lyrics portrayed Mozart as a rock star before rock existed—a musical rebel with an uninhibited lifestyle who loved his hair, elegant clothes, women, and booze. The song’s spoken-word intro delivered a rapid-fire biography: “1756: Salzburg, January 27, Wolfgang Amadeus is born… 1791: Mozart composes The Magic Flute. On December 5 of that same year, Mozart dies… 1985: Austrian rock singer Falco records Rock Me Amadeus!”
The album was recorded in 1985 and produced by Bolland & Bolland, marking Falco’s first work without Robert Ponger, who had produced his previous two albums. The production fused new wave, synth-pop, and rap into something that sounded nothing like anything else on radio at the time. For international release, the Bollands created multiple remixes with English voiceovers, though Falco never recorded a full English version—only the chorus “Come and rock me Amadeus” was in English. The music video, directed by Rudi Dolezal and Hannes Rossacher, mixed 18th-century elegance with 1980s excess—Falco in a tuxedo walking through a masquerade ball of people in period costume, then appearing as Mozart in a pink and blue wig carried on the shoulders of leather-clad bikers. The video aired worldwide despite featuring the full German-language version.
The album Falco 3 was released on October 15, 1985, on GiG Records in Austria, Teldec in Germany, and A&M Records elsewhere. In the US, UK, Australia, and Japan, the album featured extended mixes of both “Rock Me Amadeus” and “Vienna Calling.” The success positioned Falco for a massive 1986 Emotional World Tour across Europe, with concerts in Germany, Austria, and beyond. His November 4, 1986 performance at Frankfurt’s Alte Oper became one of the tour’s most memorable shows, captured in photographs that would later appear in the Live Forever album booklet. The tour featured a 15-piece live band with no studio musicians—all live instrumentation. But homesickness derailed plans for a major US tour that would have cemented his status as a permanent international star.
The song’s cultural footprint is vast. The Simpsons parodied it as “Dr. Zaius” in the episode “A Fish Called Selma” during Troy McClure’s Planet of the Apes musical. German metal band Megaherz covered it, as did power metal band Edguy. The Bloodhound Gang sampled it, and German rapper Fler referenced it in “NDW 2005.” VH1 ranked it number 87 on their 100 Greatest Songs of the 80s and number 44 on their 100 Greatest One-Hit Wonders—though that label always rankled fans who remembered “Der Kommissar” and “Vienna Calling.” In 2023, Rock Me Amadeus – Das Falco Musical opened at the Ronacher in Vienna, telling the parallel stories of Falco and Mozart.
Falco died tragically on February 6, 1998, at age 40, in a bus collision in the Dominican Republic where he’d been living as a tax exile. He was planning a comeback. The irony wasn’t lost on anyone—Mozart died at 35, Falco at 40, both gone far too young. The song that made him an international superstar captured something essential about artistic genius and excess, fame and mortality. For three weeks in 1986, an Austrian rapper convinced America to embrace a German-language tribute to a classical composer. That’s not just a hit—that’s magic nobody’s replicated since.


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