Sabrina Setlur

Sabrina Setlur
Background information
Birth name Sabrina Setlur
Also known as Sabs, Schwester S.
Born (1974-01-10) January 10, 1974[1]
Frankfurt am Main, Hessen, Germany
Genres hip-hop, pop rap
Occupation(s) rapper, songwriter, actress
Years active 1993–present
Labels 3p/Intergroove
Associated acts Glashaus, Sebastian Hämer, Xavier Naidoo, Rödelheim Hartreim Projekt, Moses Pelham, Cassandra Steen
Website sabrinasetlur.de

Sabrina Setlur (born January 10, 1974), formerly known as Schwester S., is a German rapper, songwriter and occasional actress. Her debut was in 1995 under the guidance of 3p Records executive and mentor Moses Pelham, producer of her breakthrough single "Ja Klar." Following the drop of her pseudonym and a number-one single, "Du Liebst Mich Nicht," in 1997, a series of hit records established her position as Germany's "best known and highest-selling female rap act" to date.[2]

Setlur is the only artist to date to have ever won three ECHO Awards for "Best National Female Artist."[2] According to several sources, she has sold more than two million albums and singles domestically.[2][3]

Early life

Setlur is the elder of two sisters born to Krishnan Setlur, a Kannadiga banker, and his wife Theresa, a Malayali nurse,[4] in Frankfurt am Main, Hesse.[5] She and her four-years-younger sister Yvonne were primarily raised in Bad Soden am Taunus, where Setlur became acquainted with future Rödelheim Hartreim Projekt members Thomas Hofmann and Moses Pelham in her high school years.[5] After a spontaneous performance of Dr. Dre's "Nuthin' But a "G" Thang" in 1993[6] Hofmann and Pelham asked her to contribute a verse to the early Rödelheim Hartreim Projekt track "Wenn Es Nicht Hart Ist." As she had never rapped before, Setlur reportedly hesitated; but soon accepted their invitation into the recording studio.[6] Impressed by her talent, Pelham offered her a record contract with Pelham Power Productions, and as a result Setlur quit studying business administration and instead signed a deal with 3p Records.[6]

Music career

1990s

In 1995, released Sabrina Setlur under her pseudonym Schwester S. the double A single "Hier kommt die Schwester/Pass auf" produced by Moses Pelham. Setlur made her breakthrough with the following single "Ja klar" and in February 1995 released her debut album S ist soweit (ranking #11).[7] In 1996 won Setlur the ECHO award for "Best Female Artist".[8][9] In addition she got from the radio station hr3 her own hip hop broadcast .

After 3p's sudden major label change in 1997 Setlur released her second album Die Neue S-Klasse under her birth name in February of the same year. The album debuted at #10 on the albums chart and spawned Setlur's first and only #1 single "Du Liebst Mich Nicht",[7] whose sales earned her another ECHO and a Comet award for "Best Female Artist" in 1998,[8][9] as well as a golden record for more than 300.000 units sold. In the meantime Setlur was featured on the singles by Faithless' "Bring My Family Back" and then-newcomer Xavier Naidoo's "Freisein".

In 1999 Setlur's third album Aus der Sicht und mit den Worten von... outperformed the success of its predecessors when it peaked at #3 on the German albums chart. Though its singles couldn't link to previous accomplishments, the album's sales earned Setlur her third ECHO for "Best Female Artist" in 2000.[9] A few months later Sabrina constantly hit the headlines when paparazzi revealed her relationship to former tennis star Boris Becker. The couple separated shortly afterwards, but due to conflicting rumours about anorexia Setlur's name maintained popular in magazines and papers. "I was suddenly in the newspaper, not because of my job, only because we were together", said Setlur in an interview with online magazine Spiegel Online. "Suddenly they wrote stuff about me, which hasn't something to do with my job."[10]

2000s

Sabs (2003)

Setlur channeled much of her heavily media-discussed experiences into the production of her fourth studio album Sabs. Released in November 2003, the CD received a mixed reception from most professional music critics, with Laut calling it "a chavvy and antiquated [but] good rap album"[11] and CDStarts declaring it a "insignificant [but] practiced comeback."[12] Promoted by Setlur's engagement as a judge on the third installment of the German reality television series Popstars - Das Duell (which created both the male quartet Overground and the girl group Preluders), the album spawned four moderately successful singles, including "Liebe", a collaboration with Glashaus and labelmate Franziska. Setlur used to contend for the Eurovision Song Contest 2004 in Istanbul. Following several weeks of promotional appearances, Setlur entered the competition on March 19, 2004 with the album's second single, and although considered as a favourite by the media, Setlur failed to place within the top 5, eventually falling against singer Max Mutzke and his song "Can't Wait Until Tonight."

In early 2005 released an best of compilation, titled 10 Jahre Sabrina Setlur.[13] The compilation album features all of her singles (by then fifteen) as well as the album tracks "Ich bin raus" (taken from S ist soweit) and "Ohne Worte" (from Aus der Sicht und mit den Worten von...) but did not include new material. The song "Mein Herz", originally released on Sabs, was used as single to promote the album.

Returning from yet another musical hiatus, Setlur's fifth studio album Rot was released on August 24, 2007. The first single of the critically acclaimed album "Lauta" (which contains a sample of "25 Years" by The Catch) became a modest hit in Germany. After the poor chart performance of the second single I Think I Like It (and even of the album itself) all promotion was stopped, including the announced tour being cancelled.

Kraftwerk

In May 2016, veteran band Kraftwerk finally lost a 19-year copyright infringement legal suit against Setlur, for her use of a sample from their 1977 album "Metall auf Metall" in her 1997 song "Nur mir".[14]

Discography

Awards

References

  1. "Rapperin Sabrina Setlur wird 35" (in German). Hessischer Rundfunk. 2009-01-10. Retrieved 2009-01-27.
  2. 1 2 3 "Sabrina Setlur: Eine Frau sieht rot". Berliner Morgenpost. Retrieved 2007-08-24.
  3. "Rot review". AVIVA Berlin. Retrieved 2007-08-24.
  4. "Becker separated from Setlur?". Rediff. Retrieved 2009-05-11.
  5. 1 2 "Wollt ihr hören harte Storys?". Berliner Zeitung. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
  6. 1 2 3 "Interview #13". Alert Magazine. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
  7. 1 2 "Sabrina Setlur - Songs". Chartsurfer.de. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  8. 1 2 "Echo - der deutsche Musikpreis". Charts-weltweit.de. 2007-08-02. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  9. 1 2 3 "CHARTSSERVICE - Echo-Gewinner". Chartsservice.de. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  10. "Interview mit Sabrina Setlur: "Die Beziehung mit Boris war eine Grenzerfahrung" - SPIEGEL ONLINE". Spiegel.de. 2003-10-22. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  11. "Sabs review". Laut.de. Retrieved 2007-08-26.
  12. "Sabs review". CD-Starts. Retrieved 2007-08-26.
  13. "Sabrina Setlur: „10 Jahre - das Beste von 1995-2004" | Musik / CDs & DVDs | SWR3.de - hier geht das Radio weiter". SWR3.de. 2011-01-22. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  14. "German court hands Kraftwerk its ass, rules sampling is legal". boinboing. 2016-05-31. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
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