|
The
World According
to
Nina
Chatter Magazine -
August 1995
Interview by
Michael Roche
Photos by Lucas Muehlenweg
Recently myself and a small portion of my staff were
abducted by U.F.O.'s and transported to the Hollywood Hills, Where I was
quickly greeted by Miss-Spaced-Out-Cosma-Shiva herself. The first
words out of her mouth were something about meeting-possibly in other
lifetimes. I was going to need a very large cup of coffee. I
tried to keep pace with the interview, but somewhere the conversation just
took on a life of its own:
 
Michael Roche: I'm at Nina Hagen's
home up in the Hollywood Hills.
Nina Hagen: Estate.
MR: Estate!?!?!? You live here with Franck and your son
Otis
NH: Yes, Franck, who is the father, and Cosma Shiva.
She is coming when her holidays start, like in two weeks. She is
fourteen, my Cosma Shiva.
MR: Is Franck your husband?
NH: No. We are not married. He didn't come with me to
India where the real wedding would take place in front of "The Holy Fire."
MR: Why India?
NH: I met my teacher in India. Well, actually I
met him in Europe before I went to India in 1993, to the Himalayas.
And I do have a teacher there and I spend three months there.
MR: Do you call him a guru?
NH:
Well, his name is Muni Raji, and he hangs out at the same area where Babaji
came from. Muni Raji means "Holy One." He came into my dreams, of
course. He has an ashram on the border of Tibet in India, up in the
Himalayas. The little village where this take place is called "Chilanola."
It is a very Italian name. And indeed, you do find very many Italian
young revolutionary people there. And to hang out with these people
was like finding the real Ibiza, because I did spend a couple years in
Spain.
MR: I first met you in Ibiza.
NH: Yeah, I have friends there and I had a couple of
different places there since 1979. I went there first, so that's like
a home island also. Anyway, where were we?
MR: I was asking you...about God knows what.
NH: Oh yeah, we were in the Himalayas, and
then...before...I don't know how all this started. But you asked me what
brings me to Hollywood?
MR: I asked you if you got married?
NH: Oh, married. No, we didn't. I never
got really married. A couple of attempts and stuff, and halfway
through even once. But never really.
MR: O.k. So what brought you to Hollywood to live in
the Hollywood Hills?
NH: O.k. When I came here it was in the end of
November and kind of December-ish. And I was pregnant. I felt so
sick and I went to my doctor who also helped me to give birth to my
first-born daughter. He helped me to escape from going through a whole
pregnancy again. I was able to do an abortion in Los Angeles, right when I
came over from Europe, Which is the reason I came here. The doctor-he
is such a a wonderful doctor-like I said, he was there when I gave birth to
my first-born. He's a fabler mane, and he has children too.
He's just what a doctor should be.
MR: So you came back to Los Angeles not necessarily for
music...
NH: Oh, yes. I was singing during the
procedure. Also, I was singing, 'I go to the dentist
soon--It's going to be even more painful.'
MR: All day long you've been talking about the
dentist. Would you please go get your fucked-up teeth taken care of.
NH: Yeah. Yeah.
MR: I know you've been sucking your thumb for many,
many years. What's that about?
NH: When I was little I sucked my thumb and then
later when my teeth came. When I became an adult I was still sucking
my thumb, occasionally. Here and then, there and that. So
my teeth, they go a little up and down.
MR: When did you stop sucking your thumb?
NH:
I never did.
MR: You're still sucking your thumb?
NH: Occasionally, here and then, I guess. But
not as much as I used to. Especially after India. I found
another thumb, which is called Kriya-Yoga.
MR: And what's that about?
NH: Well, that's a very old technique of these old
yogis there in the Himalaya. They rejuvenate through breathing.
Breathing a certain way every morning, and then they go straight to Nirvana.
they stay there for awhile, it's also called "rebirthing." But in
India they call it Kriya-Yoga since the old times. So it's
like the natural way of being who we are supposed to be.
MR: Who originally inspired you to go towards India?
NH: Well, I met God actually when I was nineteen.
And apparently, by so-called accident, I swallowed my first LSD trip. I did
that because a friend from Poland went to West Berlinand was supposed to get
hashish, but came back with LSD. After I took it, I felt like I have
to die, but I couldn't. And this was going on forever and like being
in hell. And then I was calling God because I remembered all these
stories about LSD. I remembered that I took LSD and that brought me
into those circumstances. So now I know what people, like "nature
people," they don't take LSD, but they take awaska in the rain forest.
So it's like a way of being initiated to all the other worlds and dimensions
out there. And eventually, finally, to the dimension where God
resides.
MR: Do you consider yourself a spiritual person?
NH: Well, yes and no. And like everybody else.
MR: So you're searching? Or are you confused?
NH: No. I'm not confused at all. What I'm
telling you is that I already found God through and out-of-body-experience
after the influence of LSD when I was nineteen in East Berlin, where I came
from. And then much later, many, many years later in 1987, I found
like those books and stories and things about Babaji and Kriya-Yoga.
I know that you do not have to even take a drug or an herb or peyote or
kreyote or whatever, to go out of whatever-you-might-call-it. You can
do it through so-called breathing techniques. You can really go out of
your body and experience Nirvana. Everyday.
MR: You're very much the mother of the whole punk
movement. Were drugs always part of the early days of the punks?
NH: No, but drugs for the humankind--let's say
mescaline or holy mushrooms and things, always played the biggest part in
our understanding of everything.
MR: How do you relate to your music in the nineties?
NH: I don't relate to it at all. I am just
writing all the songs and all the lyrics. And I'm doing this new album
now. Saturn just recently moved out of my Pisces
accommodation-constellation-vibration situation. So there we go.
And now my new album is coming out together with a CD-ROM. I will lead
you all the way to the Himalayan to my new ashram and then one day we gonna
meet up there. Look down on the clouds and think you are in
Heaven. But...you are.
MR: What are you talking about?
NH: The Himalayas.
MR: No, no, no, no.
NH: It's so high that you look down onto the clouds
and you think, 'God, the clouds are below me and I'm in Heaven.' It's
a beautiful place I am talking about.
MR: How do you get up there?
NH: You fly to Delphi, you take a taxi from
Delphi-like a newspaper taxi-it's very cheap. And you drive six yours
through the most beautiful, huge countryside with people and cows and
animals and monkeys outside. And little cities and everything.
You see the whole thing, the walls with the cinema posters and
everything. You go six hours and deeper into the direction of the
Himalaya, which is on the border to Tibet, and there is a city called
Haldwani, and it splits up going directions...
MR: No, no. I was thinking more like--'did you
ride a donkey or a camel up the mountain?' Not specific directions.
NH: Oh, right. You have to meet me in order to
get there, right? Yeah, that's it.
MR: So you give directions to this location?
NH: Well, I went there two times. The next time
Im gonna go there is gonna be in October with my friend Peter Sempel and a
couple of friends.
MR: Who's Peter?
NH: Peter Sempel is a German filmmaker. And
he's making a film about me and my life. This is like a two year
project.
MR: Let's talk about your life in the fashion lane.
I saw you perform at an Aids benefit in Paris.
NH: I was at an Aids benefit and I came out with lots
of other people and I was singing a song about "Move on, time to move".
MR: Did Jean-Paul Gaultier do it?
NH:
Gaultier was in it.
MR: You wear a lot of Gaultier.
NH: Yeah, naturally. Because I met Jean-Paul in 1989,
at a party.
MR: What kind of party did you meet Gaultier at?
NH: He threw a party, and it was a party where he
invited all kinds of friends and relatives and everybody to choose the mot
beautiful mode. And he had old models and young models and male and
female. Everybody was voting for the most outrageous person-model-type
thing. That was when I met him in 1989 in Paris, the same evening
I met Franck, who used to be his assistant and who worked for his press
agency and stuff. And Franck and me, we made Otis. Little Otis
with the bad teeth. The dentist said his new teeth are fine.
MR: So you're all going to have new teeth here in Los
Angeles?
NH: Oh, also. Yeah, I have a wisdom teeth definitely
being pulled out.
MR: When are you having those pulled out?
NH: Um...I got my X-ray picture, which is like a
picture of a gigantic skeleton.
MR: Let's talk about your new band. What's the
name of it?
NH: Um... no idea. N.H.B. or something. I
don't know--we are Nina Hagen. I have a couple of musicians in the
band who are from the all-girl punk band called Snap-Her. And
then I have my old Spock on the keyboards and I have a lead guitar player.
And I'm doing this album now on CD-ROM.
MR: When will the album be released?
NH: O.k. In Europe, it's gonna be out in the end of
the summer, and here whenever somebody ,picks up my English-spoken material.
I am working with somebody, who, even if the record company RCA doesn't want
to bring the English version out in America, I am free to go with another
record company here.
MR: Are you producing this album here in the United
States?
NH: No. We are recording and producing it near
Cologne. It's a studio from Connie Plank. Connie used to make
records with the Eurythmics, Ultravox, and Devo, back in
the eighties. And he died a couple of years ago, but the studio still
has access and that's where we'll do the record. It's a very
beautiful country hangout.
MR: So how long do you think you're going to stay
here in the Hollywood Hills?
NH: I'm going back to the studio. I'm gonna
have a touch-down in Frankfurt and leave here by middle of July. Yeah,
I'm gonna miss it here.
MR: Where do you see yourself in the future?
NH: Well, I see myself touring again all over the
world. Again in Brazil, where I did thirteen cities once upon a time in
1985. I know that now--as I said, Saturn moved out of Pisces--there
will be no more difficulties for me to release my album worldwide again.
Like I used to be able to in the eighties, when I was still with so-called
CBS Records. Then I was three years with Phonogram.
I did three albums with them in the beginning of the nineties until now.
Nothing was being put out here because the "big boss" in New York, Allen
Levy, who is a Frenchman, has hated me since the seventies.
MR: Why does he hate you?
NH: I have no idea. Maybe because he is smaller
than me. And he's Jewish, too.
MR: What does that have to do with...
NH: I have no idea, as I said. But he used to
be "the boss" of CBS France in 1979. That is when I was first
just coming out of East Germany doing my first record and my first tour in
the Western of Europe.
MR: When was the last time you toured?
NH: It was in America. It was last August, and
Canada too and also Europe.
MR: You've been playing at some clubs around
Hollywood.
NH: Oh, yeah. We sure did. We never
stopped. I'm also preparing a little gallery where I'm hanging my
collages up and singing my new songs by myself on the guitar. I do
that too. Now we are putting the big band together for summer open-air
festivals. But just occasional, a couple of them.
MR: You're going to be out on the Lollapalooza
tour also.
NH: Just a couple of them.
MR: Do you know which ones yet?
NH:
No.
MR: Tell me what your philosophy of life is.
NH: O.k. (sings) 'Come with me to India, to be with
Muni Raji. Meet the great master, avoid the disaster.' The
address is...
MR: That's your philosophy of life?
NH: Yeah. You definitely have to see that
place. Then you know where your roots come from. Who we are.
What we are supposed to be.
MR: What's your favorite thing to do in Hollywood?
NH: Um, working. Creating, having fun, and hanging
out.
MR: Where do (you) like to hang out at?
NH: Everywhere. Where somebody who drives takes me.
MR: You don't have a car?
NH: I sure don't. I don't even drive a car.
But I sure play guitar.
MR: It's almost impossible to live in Los Angeles and
not have a car.NH: Well, but not for me, you see?
MR: People escort you everywhere.
NH: Yeah. (sings to the melody of...) 'People. People
who need people to go, are the luckiest people in the world. Who know
people, who love people.'
MR: Let's talk about your great fiends 'Pierret
Gilles'. How did you meet them?
NH: I also met them through Franck and Jean-Paul and
all the friends we have in Paris. I was pregnant with Otis in Paris.
I gave birth to him in suburbs of Paris. and you are incredible,
beautiful boy! (to Otis) He always freaks me out when he comes to me.
Where were we?
MR: 'Pierre et Gilles.'
NH: Oh, definitely met them in Paris, and we became
friends. We don't talk much, because they don't talk too
much English. They do all this incredible beautiful art, as I would call it.
It's so much fun to just look at one picture and think, 'My God, what
happened here?' And so we ended up working together too, you know.
MR: What are the differences between the German club
scene and the American club scene?
NH: I always said, 'I don't know,' when people ask me
'Where is the audience different? There? Or there? Or there?'
People love the same types of music, and there are different clubs for
different kinds of music all over the beautiful fucked-up place. I'm
very concerned about what's going down in china now. Because
this old guy Ding, he has a really strange name, Ding something. He's
like ready to die, and it's like each time a leader in China dies, everybody
goes crazy. And they are expecting big upheavals. Like in
Yugoslavia, they have the atomic power there and everybody is really
concerned. I just wanted to mention that too in the interview.
MR: What does that have to do with the club scene?
NH: No, to be honored. To like, if you have a
dream of a bad earthquake, then just get out of the city because before the
last earthquake, I was here. Franck had a dream two nights
before...
MR: Kent and I met you at the Greenwich Pizza
shop the day of that earthquake. Do you remember?
NH: Yeah. Was that you?
MR: Kent had you sign autographs on the pizza plate.
NH: I was running around with my friend, and I was so
tired of taking pictures.
MR: You were catching a plane back to Paris.
NH:
Yeah, But, I stayed until after the aftershakes were taken. Yeah,
that was great. You know, what I was saying is 'just be alert.'
Because Franck had a dream and in the dream it said like, 'Don't worry, it's
not such a big earthquake.' And so, I believe that somebody in your
surrounding, or maybe yourself, is gonna have a dream about what's happening
and then you escape a dangerous area. Eventually. That's
when God comes into the dream.
MR: To shake up everyone in Hollywood?
NH: No, I mean to get out when the whole place breaks
down. Before the whole place breaks down.
MR: And you can predict this?
NH: Or one of us. Around us. Like we are
a huge group of people, and I think one of us will have a dream and tell us,
'Oh! You guys better get out of here! I had a dream there was a big
earthquake!' Whoever the prophet might be, we don't know. But we
sure know in Hollywood and L.A.--we are a group of very incredible lovely
people. One of us is going to have "the alert" dream. And then
we have to get up in the air.
MR: If it's you, will you call me?
NH: Yeah. Leave me your number.
MR: Thanks, I feel much safer knowing you'll call. |