Rampage
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Hostile;2951116 said:Does anyone besides me not know what in the blue hell he is talking about? This is twice today with this crap.
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"Danke Schoen" is a 1962 song first recorded by Bert Kaempfert, however it gained its fame in 1963 when American singer Wayne Newton recorded his version of it. The music was composed by Bert Kaempfert, with the lyrics written by Kurt Schwaback and Milt Gabler.
The song was released when Wayne Newton was 21 years old. Newton's effeminate timbre at the time is often mistaken for that of a female singer by those unfamiliar with the song. It has been featured in many television commercials and motion pictures, such as Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Meet the Parents, Matchstick Men, Vegas Vacation, and Fools Rush In. The Newton version peaked at Billboard positions #13 pop, #3 easy listening.
Brenda Lee recorded Danke Schoen for her 1964 album By Request, produced by Owen Bradley.
In German, "Danke schön" is equivalent to the English "thank you very much". It literally means "Thanks pretty", similar to the English "thank you kindly." The polite response is "bitte schön," which translates roughly and literally to "you're very welcome" and "pretty please" respectively. In English, the German letter "ö" can also be written as "oe" when the umlaut is unavailable.
The word schoen is mispronounced throughout in the song and in general the way it is spoken in English. "Schön" in German is pronounced as [ʃøːn] ("ö" representing a close-mid front rounded vowel), not "shane", although the latter pronunciation is needed to make it rhyme with "pain". There is no precise equivalent phoneme in English