11th August 2024

Titus writes:

This is a slightly unusual story about a band that was formed as long ago as 1980, but who have had two distinct styles.  In its early days, this German band was linked to the avant-garde Neue Deutsche Welle (German New Wave), but since the mid nineties FSK have been associated with Techno & House music, recording in Uphon Studios, Weilheim, Bavaria.  The band is Freiwillige Selbst Kontrolle or F.S.K. as they are generally known these days, and their name translates as “voluntary self control”.
 
From the mid eighties, influential DJ John Peel loved this group right up to his death in 2004, with six sessions recorded.  They put their own distinctive take onto a famous song called ‘My Funny Valentine’ and since this was recorded as part of a session in 1992, John played this track on or around February 14, each year.  FSK were influenced by the indie British music scene at the time.  They were signed to Zickzack records, whose owner was German music journalist and punk rock fanatic Alfred Hilsberg, and they more often than not, played their music with David Lowery of Camper Van Beethoven.  This guy just happened to have his own studio in Richmond, Virginia. 
 
The band’s members consist of Thomas Meinecke, Michaela Melian, Wilfred Petzi, Justin Hoffmann, Carl Oesterheld and as I said above, on occasions David Lowery.  Meinecke, Melian, Petzi and Hoffmann were all contributors to the German underground magazine ‘Mode und Verzweiflung’ (fashion & despair). I won’t painstakingly go through each single/EP/LP they made because they equate to PLENTY, but one is particularly worthy of mention from 2006.  FSK were one of 29 bands to contribute to ‘Silver Monk Time – A Tribute to The Monks’ which was a compilation album about the German-American band, released on the Play Loud label. The album was also a soundtrack to the film ‘Monks – The Transatlantic Feedback’.
 
Some band members of FSK are, as a generalisation, linked to the arts. Thomas Meinecke as a novelist, Michaela Melian as a Professor at the University of Fine Arts of Hamburg, Justin Hoffmann as Director of the Wolfsburg Arts Society and Wilfred Petzi as a photographer. You read previously that the band made six Peel Sessions, and all have since been released on Strange Fruit Records.  JP penned the sleeve notes for FSK’s 1987 LP ‘Continental Breakfast’ and said “ Thomas Meinecke and Michaela Melian once explained FSK’s philosophy to me over a bottle of wine.  Something to do with all of pop music having been already written & performed, leaving deconstruction and reconstruction as the only course forward.   Not sure that I’ve got that absolutely right, but the results that you can hear are most entertaining”. Peel also noted in 1992 that the band had done more sessions for his Radio One programme than any other non-UK band.
 
Personally I find FSK a most entertaining band, both in their former guise and current one, and the track I have requested lex to play is perhaps part of their greatest ever work. It could be described as tongue-in-cheek slant on any non German, wishing to learn that language, and is called ‘I wish I could sprechen sie Deutsch’ (which may be found here).  Some misguided folk seemingly used to insist that the Germans have no sense of humour – nonsense, FSK  and this track are genuinely funny!