Tom Liwa (born Thomas Greiner, 25 October 1961) is a German singer-songwriter who has been performing as a solo artist in addition to being a founding member and frontman of the band Flowerpornoes. While his artistic solo output long went unnoticed by German mainstream news sources and radio stations, he was recognised early on for his work with the band.[1] In recent years, he has been receiving increased attention due both to a steady fan-base[2] and various collaborations and contributions, e.g. to Klee's 2006 album Zwischen Himmel und Erde.[3] Liwa has cited Joni Mitchell's Hejira as one of his favourite albums and as a major musical influence, and has named Neil Young as an early idol.[4][5]
Biography
In 1986, Tom Liwa was a founding member and became frontman of the band, Flowerpornoes, in his native Duisburg.
The four albums released during this period mainly featured English lyrics. Liwa has stated that he had in fact already begun writing German lyrics but that at the time German songtexts were considered "unhip". Although his English texts had received praise in music magazines, the later decision to begin recording songs in German rather than English was made in a conscious effort to address what Liwa perceived as a failure to communicate the deeper meanings in his lyrics to an audience beyond music critics.[4]
After unfruitful attempts to score any major popular success and with mounting tensions between the band members and differing artistic visions, the Flowerpornoes disbanded shortly after the release of the 1990 album, As Trivial As Life And Death. Subsequent bids for a contract from a major record label failed, to Liwa's retrospective relief.[6]
After the breakup, Tom Liwa toured with Blumfeld on their first tour. Other than that, he played only very minor gigs during the time. In his own retrospect account, he states that he considered his career finished at that point.[6]
The Flowerpornoes project was revived in 1993, culminating in the release of Mamas Pfirsiche (Für schlechte Zeiten). Two more albums followed, 1994's Red' nicht von Straßen, nicht von Zügen and Ich & Ich in 1996, before the band members parted ways again.
After the second breakup of the Flowerpornoes, Tom Liwa began work on his first solo album. Due to participation in a number of other projects, it took four years to complete and publish St. Amour in 2000. The earlier Voeding, released in 1998, was a collection of songs released as mailorder only. The final track of St. Amour is a non-musical piece called "Wir haben die Musik" ("we have the music"), spoken by Christian Brückner, whose voice is well known throughout Germany as the dubbing voice for Robert De Niro and other actors.[2][9][10] Also during the time, Liwa featured on Kevin Coyne's Knocking On Your Brain, published in 1997.[11]
More solo albums followed since then, 2004's Dudajim being the latest of those that have not been published as mailorder only.
On 25 July 2005, the Flowerpornoes performed together for the first time since the 1996 breakup. The occasion was a concert in Cologne, organised as part of the campaign "nrw retten, taz abonnieren" ("save NRW, subscribe to taz") by newspaper die tageszeitung's North Rhine-Westphalia edition, which at the time was struggling financially.[12]
In 2007, after a hiatus of more than ten years, a new Flowerpornoes album was released, Wie oft musst du vor die Wand laufen bis der Himmel sich auftut? The album has received considerably greater mainstream attention than any prior work of Tom Liwa.[13][14][15][16]
Two Originals of Tom Liwa (double album with Ich reite ein Pferd auf dem sonst nur Frauen reiten und Nostalgia No Existe)
solo
Normal
2004
Dudajim
solo
Normal
2005
Glauberg/California
solo
Glitterhouse
2005
Ich Könnte Mir Ein Fahrrad Leihen
with Werner Muth
Ludwig
2007
Wie oft musst du vor die Wand laufen bis der Himmel sich auftut?
Flowerpornoes
V2/Rough Trade
2012
Ich Liebe Menschen Wie Ihr
Flowerpornoes
Gim Records/Soulfood
Other featured contributions
He featured as an extra, portraying a musician in the 1999 film Pola X.[18]
The song Julianastraat from the 2000 album, St. Amour, is featured on the soundtrack for the film The Edukators.[19]
Among other prominent German-language authors, Tom Liwa contributed to an anthology called texttourimus (the title being a pun on sex tourism). The entire revenue generated by the volume, published in November 2005 in collaboration with UNICEF, was donated to a charitable organisation.[20]
^Kleofas, Andreas (1 November 2005). "Lesereiseempfehlung" (in German). Visions. Archived from the original on 14 August 2007. Retrieved 14 February 2008.