Saturday, April 2, 2022

FRAULEIN, FRAULEIN... YOU ARE MY PRETTY FRAULEIN: THE INSIDE STORIES

    Fraulein, Fraulein... you are my pretty FrauleinHave you heard this song before? Perhaps you have; it is still widely sung in karaoke bars, singing competitions, radios, and other venues.

    "Fraulein" is the title of the song. Many believe that the song was written by Lawton Williams, an American country singer and songwriter. He served in the army during World War II. Williams' previous songs were not commercially successful; it is said that he began writing in the late 1940s, but nothing became popular until he wrote the immortal song "Fraulein."

    Fraulein rose to prominence in 1957, when it was recorded by Bobby Helms for the Decca label and released as a single the same year. It was named Country Song of the Year at both the Billboard and Cashbox awards.

    Williams received a star on the Walk of Fame at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville in 1991. He passed away in 2007.

 

THE INSIDE STORIES OF THE SONG


    The term "fraulein" is derived from a German term that refers to an unmarried German woman. 

Photo Credit: Bundesarchiv via Wikipedia

It was an honorific term, similar to Miss. Originally, the word fraulein stemmed from the root word "frau," which was widely used as an honorific term for a married German woman. It was the same as saying 'My lady' and 'Madam'. However, as time passed, the word frau became devalued and less honorific for women in the 1800s. Around 1970, the word was widely regarded as 'diminutive of woman' and came to be regarded as sexist by modern feminism. It later became taboo, leading to the word's prohibition in West Germany by the Minister of Interior in 1972.


    Some speculated that Lawton Williams' friend Hank Williams wrote the song rather than Lawton Williams himself. "Where I loved her and left her But I can't forget her 'Cause I miss my pretty Fraulein," Lawton sang the song, presumably referring to a German woman he yearned for. It should be noted that Lawton was living in Texas at the time and was married to Jeanette Crews, so falling in love with a German woman while married to his wife would appear contradictory, unless he had a secret affair with the woman in Germany. Furthermore, Lawton had never visited Germany, so it would be impossible for him to abandon a woman in Germany when he had never been there in the first place. Hank Williams, on the other hand, stayed there for about a month in 1950.

       Hank Williams wrote the song approximately a year after he went to Germany, but it was kept hidden until his death in January 1952, when it was believed that the band member and Lawton Williams would hand it over to Bobbie Helms some years later, and he had a great hit with it.


    Bobby Helms recorded his own version of "Lonely River Rhine" in 1960, and the lyrics reveal a dark history of the singer: he had a wife, but when he moved to Munich, he "stole love" from a local girl, only to later leave her and learn from the newspapers that she had committed suicide by drowning herself in the Rhine, and that the person was the one he truly loved.

   Title: Fraulein

Far across the blue waters

Lives an old German's daughter

By the banks of the old river Rhine

Where I loved her and left her

But I can't forget her

I miss my pretty Fräulein

Fräulein, Fräulein

Look up toward the heavens

Each night, when the stars start to shine

By the same stars above you

I swear that I love you

You are my pretty Fräulein

When my memories wander

Away over yonder

To the sweetheart that I left behind

In a moment of glory

A face comes before me

The face of my pretty Fräulein

Fräulein, Fräulein

Walk down by the river

Pretend that your hand's holding mine

By the same stars above you

I swear that I love you

You are my pretty Fräulein

 

Source: Musixmatch


 

    Regardless of the song's backstory, it cannot be denied that it still has a positive tone and impact on listeners today, as it evokes old memories and conveys the difficulties of a long-distance relationship, particularly in the days when communication was difficult.

 

      Fraulein, Fraulein.. You are my pretty Fraulein. 

 


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