With songs such as “Mir Laungts”, “since a poa Tog”, “Schena Mensch” or “Without Di”, folk aid has sung into the hearts of its fans. On Friday, Florian Ritt, Gabriel Fröhlich and Paul Slaviczek bring out their fifth album “Bunt” with ten new songs. On July 18, it will present the band from Steyr and the Mühlviertel, which was awarded the OÖN-MOSTDIFF last year, at Classic at the cathedral. The show is almost sold out with around 6,000 tickets sold.
OÖN: Your new album is called “Bunt”. Is the name program?
Florian Ritt: The umbrella term for everything that has happened to us in recent years is colorful, from divorce to house construction to children’s wars and huge concerts. Once everything.
The song “Home Dahoam”, which they sing with Avec, is a hymn on the home – but not a small career, but a bilingual, ambiguous. Is it what home means for you?
Ride: We met Avec at festivals and are now good friends. I wanted to write and sing a song with her, she in English, I in the dialect. We just tried, didn’t want to force anything. Writing a song can be like a date: if it doesn’t get anything, something is destroyed that can no longer be reversed. The song has developed on its own. “Home Dahoam” is something that connects us from the house because we grew up globally, as a bilingual song.
Gabriel Fröhlich: At home is where you come to rest, it’s more about people. My home is on the Danube, somewhere on the water.
Paul Slaviczek: First and foremost, it is important who you are where. I feel at home in the Salzkammergut. But it can be anywhere. When we go on tour, I have the feeling that we drive Hoam.
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Image: Volker Weihbold
Source: Nachrichten

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.