The seventh album, "Nachtflug", was a significant work for more than one reason.
To begin with, it was marked by yet another return of the Bolland brothers as producers.
Moreover, it brought Falco back to the top of the chartsâalbeit only âat homeââand also provided the opportunity for a new tour, with a series of live shows scheduled in smaller venues than the typical arenas, due to a much smaller fan base compared to that of the previous decade.
It would also, sadly, become known as the last album released during his lifetime.
Once the contractual ties with his historic labels had come to an end, Falco found himself signing a new deal with the major label EMI, thanks in part to the decisive intercession of an executive who was an avid admirer of his work.
Motivated by this latest ânew beginning,â the Viennese popstar managed, among other things, to find the strength, spirit, and a considerable amount of humility to reconnect once again with the beloved-yet-loathed Dutch producers who had brought him so much commercial success in the past.
And the Bollands answered present, crafting for the new LP a sound that was highly dynamic and powerful, with many nods to the established style everyone remembered and probably expected, lyrics included. Sarcasm, cynicism, decadence, and rampant hedonism returned as part of Falcoâs stylistic signature.
The new work was heralded by the impetuous, splendid "Titanic," which, thanks also to a video clip in classic âstile Dolezalâ (director of many of his historic videos), achieved good media and commercial success.
The highly successful Comeback contains many other great tracks, such as a âMonarchy Nowâ that at times stylistically recalls the little-known but bright âGarboâ from the album Wiener Blut, and a sort of Modern-Tango in the relentless âDance Mephisto,â which was boldly chosen as the second single but failed to achieve notable results. Then thereâs the power of âPsychos,â the reggae openness of the sunny âYah-Vibration,â and the intense gem that gives the album its nameâfurther enriching the whole, thus marking Falcoâs grand return to the Pop scene.
Yet too many years had passed since his worldwide triumphs; it was no longer realistically conceivable that a third wave of popularity could happen, after the mega-hits âDer Kommissarâ and âRock me Amadeus.â Falco thus had to settle for a return to success limited to Austria aloneâeven there, the number one spot on the album chart was only nearly reachedâcrowned in 1993 by a massive show during Viennaâs traditional Donauinsel festival, where he performed before more than one hundred thousand people.
An historic concert, subsequently released in the market many times over the years in every possible format (DVD, CD, vinyl in various editions).
Equally memorable was the performance with a Symphony Orchestra, in 1994, with all his old and new songs cloaked in a classicism that both surprised and enchanted.
Those were his last years spent in Europe, before a controversial move to the Caribbean.
Hans Hoelzelâwho in 1993 suffered a devastating blow in his private life, with the news of his ânon-fatherhoodâ of his ex-wifeâs daughterâleft Austria to escape various pressures, seeking peace and inspiration.
Beyond sporadic and superficial appearances, in essence, he found none of this, instead entering a humanly tumultuous period; brief and frustrating relationships, long periods of island solitude, and incessant toxic temptations of various kinds that, as usual, he yielded to with little resistance.
In 1995, there was a final, great intuitionâindeed more commercial than truly artisticâwhich took Falco back to the top of the Central European charts (albeit under the pseudonym "T-MA"): the reimagining of an old German folk song in Happy Hardcore style, a techno subgenre that was all the rage in those years. With "Mutter, der Mann mit dem Koks ist da" Falco once again penned a provocative lyrics on the subject of drugsâin this case, his beloved cocaineâmanaging to make headlines once more, while making new generations of listeners/clubbers/ravers discover him.
A follow-up was immediately put into production, the terrible "Naked," which was released in 1996 as the project's second single under the pseudonym, and garnered little more than crumbs.
Meanwhile, in his home studio in Santo Domingo, Falco was working on lyrics and demos for a future, hypothetical new album under his own name, without much conviction and certainly no clear creative direction.
Some "rough" material was sent to EMI for consideration; other pieces were later discarded by him personally.
His attempts to return to the spotlight as a protagonist of Pop music were constantly foiled by a certain laziness that had always characterized him, his excessive perfectionism, and of course, his ever-present inner demons.
Soon, those demons would lead him into another clashâthe final and fatal one.
The Hawkâs flight was about to end.