Name Dschinghis Khan Role Band | Active from 1976 | |
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Years active 1979–mid-1980s, 2005–present Past members Steve Bender (deceased)Louis Hendrik Potgieter (deceased)Leslie Mandoki Members Leslie Mandoki, Henriette Heichel, Edina pop, Wolfgang Heichel, Steve Bender, Louis Hendrik Potgieter Albums Dschinghis Khan, 7 Leben, Die grosen Erfolge, The Jubilee Album, Helden - Schurken und der D Similar Arabesque, Ralph Siegel, Berryz Kobo, Nicole, Karat |
Eurovision 1979 germany dschinghis khan dschinghis khan hq subtitled
Dschinghis Khan (known in some countries as Genghis Khan) is a German pop band originally formed in Munich in 1979 to compete in the Eurovision Song Contest with their song "Dschinghis Khan", which was written and produced by Ralph Siegel with lyrics by Bernd Meinunger.
Contents
- Eurovision 1979 germany dschinghis khan dschinghis khan hq subtitled
- Israel israel performed by german band dschinghis khan
- Career
- Albums
- Singles
- References

Israel israel performed by german band dschinghis khan
Career

The band was formed and managed by Ralph Siegel.

The only native Germans in the group were the bald-headed Karl-Heinz "Steve" Bender, and Wolfgang Heichel, who brought his Dutch-born wife Henriette (born Strobel) with him. Louis Hendrik Potgieter, the impersonator of Genghis Khan, was South African. Edina Pop (Marika Késmárky) was a Hungarian who had started her singing career in West Germany in 1969, while Leslie Mándoki had fled communism in 1975.
In 1980, the band (under their English-language band name Genghis Khan) released the single "Moscow" (the English-language version of "Moskau") which topped the charts in Australia and remained at No. 1 for six weeks. Its success there had much to do with the Seven Network's use of the song as the theme music for their television coverage of the 1980 Summer Olympics. The Australian single was issued in a die-cut Channel 7 sleeve.

In an interview with Russian television presenter Alexandra Glotova, the producer of the group Dschinghis Khan, Heinz Gross, said that in the 1980s, the band was forbidden in the Soviet Union and was accused of anti-communism and nationalism.
While the group broke up in the mid-1980s, the German video for "Moskau" was a part of the show Disco on ZDF, as was the similarly-staged "Dschinghis Khan".
1986 saw a brief reunion as Dschinghis Khan Family. Only Henriette Heichel (vocals), Leslie Mándoki (drums) and Louis Potgieter (keyboards) returned from the original lineup. The song "Wir gehör'n zusammen" led them to a national qualifying round of the Eurovision Song Contest, where they finished in second place.
In 1988, Leslie Mándoki and Éva Csepregi, the vocalist of Hungarian pop group Neoton Família, sang the song "Korea" on the opening of the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul.
Dancer and front man Louis Potgieter died of AIDS in 1993, while singer Karl-Heinz "Steve" Bender died from cancer in 2006.
Albums
Singles
German releases
Australian release
Dutch release
Japanese release
South African release