Rocking the Stasi
Did music help bring down the Berlin Wall? Chris Bowlby tells the extraordinary story of how music helped changed history accompanied by a stellar soundtrack from the era.
Did music help bring down the Berlin Wall? If that sounds far 鈥揻etched you may think again once you鈥檝e heard this programme. Yes, there was politics, of course, but this is the extraordinary and moving story of how music helped change history.
Since the former East German Police, The Stasi鈥檚, archives in Germany have opened; they are yielding more and more secrets. And one of the most remarkable to emerge is how the East German regime 鈥 and its police 鈥 were obsessed with resisting and clamping down on Western music.
In 1969, just a rumour of a Rolling Stones concert in on a tower block next to the Wall sent the East German Government authorities into meltdown. In the 1970s and 80s a bizarre alliance between East German punks and local churches was seen by the regime as a pernicious challenge. When David Bowie played a gig in the West, across the fearsome Wall, and listened to by crowds assembling in the East caused the Stasi no end of angst. And when the East German Government finally relented and allowed Bruce Springsteen to play in East Berlin in 1988, he used the chance to pump out anti-regime messages, seen as a hugely important moment in hastening the collapse of Communism there.
Chris Bowlby uncovers this unheard part of Cold War history. For the first time, we hear recordings from the Stasi sound archives of secret meetings in which Stasi chief Erich Mielke discussed the threat of punk and heavy metal.
Against the backdrop of a stellar soundtrack we hear from those who organised secret and illegal concerts in the East and from a former member of the Stasi who tried to stop them.
It is a story of obsession, now scarcely believable, and about the role that music played in the Cold War and the people who lived this first hand.
Producer: Jim Frank
(Photo: Original East German military telecommunications equipment lies in the Bunkermuseum Frauenwald near Suhl, Germany. Credit: Getty Images)
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Clips
-
Sixteen-year-old jailed for loving music
Duration: 02:43
-
East German authorities tried to invent a youth culture
Duration: 02:18
-
Dagmar Hovestadt; 鈥淭he thoughts are free鈥
Duration: 00:22
-
The Stasi listened in to all aspects of GDR life
Duration: 00:11
Broadcasts
- Sat 1 Jul 2017 13:06GMT91热爆 World Service except News Internet
- Sun 2 Jul 2017 19:06GMT91热爆 World Service except East and Southern Africa, News Internet & West and Central Africa
- Sun 2 Jul 2017 21:06GMT91热爆 World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Sat 2 Nov 2019 19:06GMT91热爆 World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
- Sat 2 Nov 2019 20:06GMT91热爆 World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Sun 3 Nov 2019 12:06GMT91热爆 World Service