
His hits "Sikidim"
and "Simarik" made Tarkan a worldwide success and they
put Turkish "pop müzik" on the map. On the road to
becoming a universal pop icon, however, he finds himself increasingly
removed from the banal everyday existence of his fans.
There are romours that Tarkan is planning
on recording an English album and that he might never again sing
in Turkish | For those who don't already know, finding out anything
profound concerning Tarkan is more difficult than uncovering who
really shot J. F. Kennedy. Despite this, or perhaps as a result,
the 32-year-old singer is today the most well-known pop star that
Turkey has ever produced, though not the most significant, as professional
music critics are fond of stressing.
Streamlined qualities
His fans, and they can now be found just
about anywhere on the planet, find Tarkan "sweet" and
that he is "the best." Some fans, though, criticize in
chat forums that "musicians like Tarkan are only in it for
the money."
Tarkan is always friendly to everyone, has
a permanently neutral demeanor, never comments on anything, solicits
donations for tsunami victims on Turkish MTV, is never arrogant
or conceited, and this is why all Turks, from small children to
the elderly, love him.
In Turkey, he is regarded as modern, while
abroad his music attracts listeners with its oriental charm. Few,
however, know precious little about Tarkan Tevetoglu (his full name).
Tarkan is incomprehensible, both in the literal
and in the figurative sense. Of course, there is the official story
of the singer, born in Germany in 1972 to Turkish guest workers,
which has been told a thousand times over.
At the age of 14, he left for Turkey to study
singing. He became a worldwide star with the self-interested support
of Mehmet Sögütoglus and his Istanbul Plak production
company. Otherwise, there is nothing substantial to report. It could
be said that Tarkan truly does has a clean vest.
Rumors, scandals, and the media circus
There was a time in Turkey when he was regarded
as "rebellious," because he frequently talked about illegitimate
passions and he wore an earring. And then there are the two "scandals,"
discussed to the very last detail throughout the global village
– Tarkan's supposed homosexuality and his run-in with the
Turkish army. He is alleged to have tried to avoid military service
by going abroad, yet finally completed his time in the army, although
with a shortened term of duty…
In 2001, he admitted to being homosexual
in order to ward off a horde of Turkish scandal journalists and
a gang of blackmailers. It wasn't really a matter of choice, but
rather a frontal defense strategy. For the last three years, however,
he has been seen with a girlfriend.
A woman. And a Turkish woman, at that. Beautiful
and a lawyer, therefore intelligent. So is everything is back to
normal again? Tabloid journalists maliciously remark that this is
just a public relations maneuver.
Tarkan has since attempted to evade the curiosity
of the world by moving to the labyrinth of the city of cities, the
modern day Babylon, the ultimate melting pot of cultures –
New York, New York.
Speculating about Tarkan
Tarkan currently calls the city his home.
Hardly anyone knows what he is doing, what he is thinking when he
is by himself, if he has other interests besides music, if he is
experiencing a crisis or working out a vision, why he always sings
apparently banal songs about erratic love, or whether he ever gets
upset about anything (other than tabloid journalists).
At the very least, his fans would like to
know if he plans on delighting the world with a live concert in
2005! Yet, his new management, headed by the legendary Woodstock
Festival promoter, Michael Lang, seems to prescribe to the theory
that less celebrity hype means more star quality. On Tarkan's homepage,
one also finds only outdated information and his perfume ad.
Nonetheless, the editors of the Turkish radio
station Metropol FM in Berlin, where Tarkan is also the object of
great reverence, claim that he is currently working on a new album.
He plans on singing in English, "in order to conquer the international
market."
The correct reading of this must be "conquer
once and for all," as "Oynama Sikidim, Sikidim" could
likewise be heard throughout Latin America and Central Asia for
years. It has even been said that he might never again sing in Turkish!
It should be mentioned here for the sake
of balance that Tarkan has also severed his emotional attachments
to Germany. The question arises, however, if his magic on the international
stage will disappear once people can suddenly understand the lyrics
to his songs.
After all, the German gothic rockers "Rammstein"
continue to sell their albums in the USA and Russia with exclusively
Teutonic lyrics. English versions of their songs were unimaginable
flops.
Heartbreak as a recipe for success
Back at Radyo Metropol FM, no one doubts
that the experienced team around Tarkan will be successful. His
songwriters produce lyrics that are "in and focused on the
language of the street" and "sound like slogans."
They are about love, jealousy, desire, and the pain of separation.
"The lyrics stay in your head and are unlike anything else
you've heard."
His biggest hits, "Sikidim" and
"Simarik" (the song with the kissing sound) were written
for him by the Queen of Turkish pop müzik, Sezen Aksu. The
trick here, and one specifically aimed at the masses, is that the
songs are gimmicks, provoking attention via alienation effects and
cross-cultural, easily decodable sounds that are independent of
the lyrics.
In addition, Tarkan's team works exclusively
with renowned artists in putting together the songs. Journalists
have described Tarkan's singing as "pleading." "He
fears the valley of tears upon which surfs his good mood".
Along with the stomping electronic beats, he is accompanied by "swaying
oboes, melancholy Sufi flutes, and rattling tambourines to a disco
rhythm".
Projection screen for "the dreams of
the masses"
Currently, the supply of Tarkan discs in
Germany is running low, because Istanbul Plak has raised the prices
on his albums. Tarkan has thereby become Turkey's most expensive
music export. German wholesalers, however, refuse to play along.
Tarkan once said that he wanted to settle
in Bali after he had achieved success similar to his role model,
Madonna. Ever more godlike, Tarkan removes himself from the banal
everyday life of ordinary mortals.
Catapulted along a trajectory of superlative
clichés, Tarkan is mutating into a projection screen for
the "dreams of the masses" worldwide – for musicians
and producers, who hope to make it big under his name, for homos
and heteros, for young and old, rich and poor. He thereby has what
it takes to climb to the Olympian heights of pop music.
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