From '' Suzy Andrews ''
Label: X Records (Germany)
Catalog#: 6.25387
Format: Vinyl, LP, Clear Pink
Country: Germany
Released: 1982
Tracks
A1 Teenage Iceage
A2 Scandal
A3 Tango 2000
A4 Der Kommissar
A5 Born To Bleed
B1 Da, Da, Da, I Don't Love You
B2 Goldener Reiter
B3 Coming At You
B4 Dreiklangsdimension
B5 King Kong
B6 Monotony In Germany
Engineer -- Andy Lunn, Carmine Di, Jon Caffery
Mixed By -- Andy Lunn
Producer -- Ingeborg Hauke, Peter Hauke
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"Da Da Da I Don't Love You You Don't Love Me Aha Aha Aha" (usually shortened to just "Da Da Da") was an international hit record for German band Trio (sometimes written TRIO) formed in 1980 by Stephan Remmler, Gert 'Kralle' Krawinkel and Peter Behrens.
"Da Da Da" released in 1982 was a hit in Germany and about 30 countries worldwide and sold 3 million copies. The lyrics were written by Stephan Remmler, and the music by Gert 'Kralle' Krawinkel.
"Da Da Da" remains their biggest German hit and their only hit outside Germany, taken from their debut album Trio released in 1982.
Trio disbanded in 1984.
Covers of the German version
The covers of German "Da da da ich lieb' dich nicht du liebst mich nicht aha aha aha"
Frank Zander (1982)
Karl Dall (1982)
Out Of The Ordinary (1990)
Otto Waalkes
Mike Krüger as "Da da da (muh muh muh)"
MC DaDa had a maxi-CD of three versions (1991)
Duo had a maxi-CD single with four versions of the German version (1994)
Re-O-Do feat. CCR (Cecil Carlos Remmler) (1995)
Herbert Grönemeyer released it with various music influences (2000).
The more famous was "Da Da Da" (Brass-Mix)
A shorter "Da Da Da"
NDW 2000 (in 2001)
Soul-O with a version "Da Da Da" (Gorgeous Summer Radio & Video Cut)
Swiss Made
Trimatic titled their maxi-CD release
String Quartet feat. Dr. Pill, a reggae version of the song
H+M had two versions in a maxi-CD (2003) that included Tanzin.
Nefkom feat. DJ Ghandi had a maxi-CD
Ab dafür (2004)
Haax as "Bla bla bla" from a compilation album Krach Bum Bäng Zack Döner Ein Tribut an Trio
Señor Coconut in the album Around the World (2008)
Covers of the English Version
Cover versions of "Da Da Da I Don't Love You You Don't Love Me"
Boriss (1983)
Suzie Andrews (1982) with A-side as "Da da da I Don't Love You You Don't Love Me" and the B-side containing "Der Kommissar (Rap That)"
Martin Judd (1982)
Pinocchio made a maxi-CD with four versions
Cecil Jonni Lauro released a version as a music download. (1995)
Alternative band Elastica[5] recorded it on their album The Menace (1999)
Language Versions
Arabic Abdel Moneim Madbouly Da Da in Toot Toot (Train's Sound) Children Album (1979)
Filipino entertainer Yoyoy Villame made a cover. There were two versions: "Da Da Da (Tsismis)" and a second in Tagalog language, also "Da Da Da (Tsismis)". (1982)
Zam made a French version titled "Da Da Da je t'aime pas tu m'aimes pas" (1982)
Toss made a French cover version as "Da da da est-ce qu'on s'cherche ou est ce qu'on triche?" (1982)
The Spanish disk-jockey Nacho Dogan performed a Spanish version as "Da Da Da", which became hit #2 in summer of 1982 in Spain.
Polish group Formacja Nieżywych Schabuff recorded a Polish version on their album Foto (1998).
Anan Anwa in Thai language (2000)
Mundial in Italian with A-side "Da da da" (Mundial '82) and B-side "Da da da" (Instrumental)
Molotov a Mexican version in Spanish and German released by the band on their 2004 cover album Con Todo Respeto (2004)
Giorgos Alkaios (Γιώργος Αλκαίος) made a Greek version of "Da da da" in 2002.
Use in commercials
An American Volkswagen commercial featured the song "Da Da Da I Don't Love You You Don't Love Me Aha Aha Aha" in 1997.
Pett Productions used "Da Da Da" in the second series of Tittybangbang for the intro to Pete Wade's sketches.
A Pepsi ad for the 2006 FIFA World Cup starred several footballers including Thierry Henry, Raúl, Roberto Carlos, Fernando Torres, Frank Lampard, Ronaldinho and David Beckham playing football inside of an Oktoberfest tent. The ad was dubbed in many world languages and ran in many countries before and during FIFA World Cup in 2006.
Another Pepsi ad used the Mexican band Molotov's version of the song featuring the band and some players of the Mexican National Soccer Team trying to sing or play instruments and getting hit by soccer balls.
Christina Aguilera sang the tune in several Pepsi spots, including duets with Rain and Elissa.
Ariston used the song in their 1987 spots featuring animated white goods, clothing and kitchen utensils forming dancing humanoids.
Interspar ads in Austria feature the song, with the lyrics changed to "alles da da da" ("everything there there there").
Oh, Lord, I HAD this album on vinyl! Translucent pink, right?
crewvj 6 months ago
@crewvj yes
TheCoverHeaven 6 months ago