The 'heavy metal umlaut', or "'rock dots'", is an
umlaut over letters in the name of a
heavy metal band, such as
Mötley Crüe or
Motörhead. The use of Umlauten and other
diacritics with a
blackletter style
typeface is a form of
foreign branding intended to give a band's logo a
Teutonic quality. It is a form of marketing that evokes stereotypes of boldness and strength commonly attributed to peoples such as the
Vikings; author Reebee Garofalo has attributed its use to a desire for a "
Gothic horror" feel.
[1] The heavy metal umlaut is never referred to by the term ''
diaeresis'' in this usage, nor is it intended to affect the pronunciation of the band's name, with the exception of
Green Jellÿ.
Heavy metal umlauts have been parodied in film and fiction. In the
mockumentary film '' (spelled with an umlaut over the ''n''), fictional rocker David St. Hubbins (
Michael McKean) opines, "It's like a pair of eyes. You're looking at the umlaut, and it's looking at you." In 2002,
''Spin'' magazine referred to the heavy metal umlaut as "the diacritical
mark of the beast."
Umlauts and diaereses
The German word ''Umlaut'' roughly means ''change of pronunciation'' or ''sound shift'', as it is composed of ''um-'', "around", and ''Laut'', "sound". Adding an umlaut indeed changes the pronunciation of a
vowel in standard (i.e. not heavy-metal) usage; the letters ''u'' and ''ü'' represent distinct sounds, as do ''o'' vs. ''ö'' and ''a'' vs. ''ä''.
Umlauts, or visually similar
graphemes, are used in many languages, including
Brazilian Portuguese,
Estonian,
Finnish,
German,
Hungarian,
Icelandic,
Spanish,
Swedish and
Turkish.
The sounds represented by the umlauted letters in these languages are typically ''
front vowels'' (front
rounded vowels in the case of ''ü'' and ''ö''). Ironically, these sounds tend to be perceived as "weaker" or "lighter" than the vowels represented by un-umlauted ''u'', ''o'', and ''a'', and thus in the languages which use it normally, the umlaut does not evoke the impression of strength and darkness which its sensational use in English is intended to convey.
The English word ''
diaeresis'' refers to a diacritic graphically similar to the umlaut; the name comes from a Greek word meaning "divide or distinguish". This diacritic is used in languages such as
Greek,
French,
Spanish,
Dutch, and
Brazilian Portuguese with varying purposes. Occasionally
English employs a diaeresis to indicate that two
vowels are to be pronounced separately, as in the name "Chloë" or the word "naïve", or in the obsolete spellings reënact and coöperate.
History
The German
progressive rock band
Amon Düül II (aka Amon Duul II) released their first album in 1969. However, their name came from "
Amon, an Egyptian sun god, and
Düül, a character from Turkish fiction",
[ allmusic (((Amon Düül > Overview))) ] so this use of umlauts was not gratuitous. The third part of
Yes's progressive rock epic "Starship Trooper" is entitled "Würm" (on
The Yes Album, released 1971). However, this again is probably not gratuitous, seemingly coming from the
Würm glaciation.
The first ''gratuitous'' use appears to have been either by
Blue Öyster Cult or by
Black Sabbath, both in 1970. Blue Öyster Cult's website states it was added by guitarist and keyboardist
Allen Lanier,
[ BÖC Retrospectively ] but rock critic
Richard Meltzer claims to have suggested it to their producer and manager
Sandy Pearlman just after Pearlman came up with the name: "I said, 'How about an umlaut over the O?' Metal had a
Wagnerian aspect anyway."
[ HELL HOLES: Spin̈al Tap's main man explains the importance of the umlaut ] In that same year, Black Sabbath's record label, on a rare picture-sleeve 7" single version of
Paranoid (with the b-side
Rat Salad), for no apparent reason, retitled the song "Paranoïd" with a diaeresis above the "i".
[2] (In French, the words ''paranoïa, paranoïaque, paranoïde'' properly have the trema.)
On their second album ''
In Search of Space'' (1971),
Hawkwind wrote on the backside of the cover: "". To add to the variation,
Danish and
Norwegian letter Ø and Danish/Norwegian/Swedish letter Å are added. While the Å being a separate letter sounding like the word "Oh", the Danish Ø is actually pronounced exactly like the German and Turkish Ö. And also the diacritical mark on the last " " is the "Hungarian umlaut" or
double acute accent ( )—two short lines slanting up and to the right rather like a right double-quote mark—instead of dots (Hungarian uses neither the ( ) nor the traditional German umlaut ("Ä") over the letter "A", though, and ( ) is used only on the letters "Ő" and "Ű"). This was before
Lemmy, later of
Motörhead, had become a member of the group.
Motörhead followed in 1975. The idea for the umlaut came from
Lemmy, the group's lead singer, who said, "I only put it in there to look mean."
[3] (Interestingly, the German pronunciation of ''
★ Motör'', a word that doesn't exist in German, would be similar to French equivalent, ''moteur''. "Motor", the correct German spelling, is pronounced similarly to "motor" in English (only with the emphasis on the second syllable), while "
★ Motör" is similar to "mother".) The band
Hüsker Dü debuted in January of 1978, though they were based in
punk and not
heavy metal, and their use of the umlaut was not gratuitous; it affects the pronunciation of the vowels.
Mötley Crüe formed in 1980; according to
Vince Neil in the band's
Behind the Music edition, the inspiration came from a
Löwenbräu bottle. They subsequently decided to name their record label "
Leathür Records". At one
Mötley Crüe performance in Germany, the entire audience started chanting "Meutley Crew-eh" - a pronunciation often used in Hungary as well.
Queensrÿche, who took on that name in 1981, went further by putting the umlaut over the ''Y'' in their name. (In
French, the ''ÿ'' is used very rarely, ''e.g.'' in the placename
L'Haÿ-les-Roses [la'ilɛRoz],
[4] etc. Queensrÿche frontman
Geoff Tate stated, "The umlaut over the 'y' has haunted us for years. We spent eleven years trying to explain how to pronounce it."
In contrast to other examples, the spelling of Queensrÿche was chosen to soften the band's image, as it was feared that the original spelling, Queensreich, might be misconstrued as having
neo-nazi connotations.
[5]

The mockumentary
This is Spinal Tap parodies the Heavy Metal Umlaut by putting an umlaut on the "n" in Spinal Tap
1980s
space rock band
Underground Zerø used a variation on the concept, taking the
Scandinavian vowel ''
ø'' in their name. This may have been inspired by
computer systems of the time, many of which used the
slashed zero as a glyph for the digit
0 (number) to distinguish it from the letter ''
O'' and thus resembled ''ø''. The Dutch band
Bløf also uses ''ø'' in its name, even though the letter is not used in
Dutch; ironically, Bløf is pronounced neither ''blof'' nor ''bløf''.
The
spoof band
Spın̈al Tap raised the stakes in 1984 by using an
umlaut over the letter ''n'', i.e. over a
consonant (it also makes use of a
dotless i). This construction is in fact found in the
Jacaltec language of
Guatemala and in some orthographies of
Malagasy, a language of
Madagascar.
The gratuitous umlaut in popular culture
★ The 1974 film ''
Blazing Saddles'' included
Madeline Kahn's German-accented
Marlene Dietrich-style
chanteuse character "Lili Von Shtupp" (according to the credits). She is announced on a poster outside the music hall as "Lili von Shtüpp"; the film's characters pronounce the name without any change to the vowel.
★ In the mid-1980s, cartoonist
Berkeley Breathed parodied the heavy metal umlaut in the comic strip
Bloom County with the fictional group
Deathtöngue. Breathed eventually had Deathtöngue change their name to the umlaut-free
Billy and the Boingers following pressure from congressional hearings on "porn rock."
★ In 1988,
Jim Henson and
General Foods released a
breakfast cereal,
Cröonchy Stars, based on the popular
Swedish Chef muppet. In addition to the gratuitous umlaut in ''Cröonchy'', most of the cereal's labelling and promotional material used the idiosyncratic spelling ''.
[6]
★ The novel ''
Zodiac'' (1988) by
Neal Stephenson features a fictional metal band called Pöyzen Böyzen, which one character describes as "not bad for a two-umlaut band".
★ In 1997,
parody newspaper ''
The Onion'' published an article called
"Ünited Stätes Toughens Image With Umlauts", about a
congressional attempt to add umlauts to the name of the
United States of America to make it seem "bad-assed and scary in a quasi-heavy metal manner".
★
Journalist and
author Steve Almond coined the term "
spandex and umlaut circuit" in 2002 to describe the heavy metal touring scene.
★ Rock critic
Chuck Klosterman subtitled his 2001 book ''
Fargo Rock City'', ''A Heavy Metal Odyssey in Rural Nörth Daköta''.
★
Webcomic artist
Scott Kurtz drew a series of cartoons about a fake band called ''Djörk'' in his
PvP Online webcomic. Apart from satirizing the heavy metal umlaut (the original band name was to be ''Umlaüt''), this name also refers to the Icelandic singer/songwriter
Björk, whose diacritical marks are genuine.
★ The term
nu metal is sometimes spelled as "nü metal".
★ The video game
Guitar Hero 2 contains the character "Lars Ümlaüt".
★ In the 2006 book "To Air Is Human", ''
New York Times'' writer
Dan Crane describes competing in the 2003 Air Guitar World Championships under the name Björn Türoque (a play on "Born to rock").
Examples of diacritics in band or album name
Umlaut

Mötley Crüe's album Shout at the Devil
★ Glam Metal band
Mötley Crüe[7]
★ Heavy Metal band
Motörhead[8]
★ Comedy/Metal band
Green Jellÿ (pronounced Green
Jell-O)
[9]
★ California thrash-metal band
Beowülf[10]
★
Frank Zappa used an umlaut in the title of the album ''
Läther'' (pronounced Leather)
[11]
Other characters
★ Danish musical project
Leæther Strip
★ German punk band
Die Ärzte used three dots over the "A" in ''Ärzte'' on their 2003 album
Geräusch
★ A three-dot umlaut has also been seen in artwork for
King Creosote, over the i, as ''Ki⃛ng Cresote''.
★ American
jam band Rusted Root uses a three-dot umlaut over the "e" in its logo, as seen on its album covers
[12].
★ American thrash band
Lååz Rockit
★ Death metal band
DÅÅTH
★ French electronica band
Rinôçérôse
★ The dark folk / experimental / occult band
Death In June used umlauts and accented "e"s in the original releases of their albums ''The Wörld Thät Sümmer'' (1985) and ''Thé Wäll Öf Säcrificé'' (1989) - and, on these releases, also in the band name, leading to ''Deäth In Jüne'' and ''Déäth In Jüné'', respectively.
★ the Japanese rock group
BOØWY.
Non-gratuitous umlauts
★ German band
Die Ärzte
★
Rhode Island "futurock" band
Grüvis Malt
★
Rhode Island "Viking Synth Metal" band
Vänhørwick
★ Icelandic artist
Björk Guðmundsdóttir is using her
birth name.
★ Finnish heavy metal band
Teräsbetoni
★
Japanese rock band
Lä-ppisch[13]
★ German band
Einstürzende Neubauten
See also
★
Foreign branding (
Häagen-Dazs,
Fahrvergnügen)
★
Devil horns heavy metal hand signal
★
Faux Cyrillic (Faцx Cyяillic)
★
Kurvi-Tasch
★
Word play
★
Sensational spelling
★
Über
Notes
1. Garofalo, pg. 292 ''Some groups, for example Blue Öyster Cult and Motörhead, added gratuitous umlauts to their names to conjure up a more generic gothic horror, a practice that continued into the 1980s with Mötley Crüe and others.''
2. Paroid/Rat Salad cover
3. Motorhead Madman
4. L'Haÿ-les-Roses in French Wikipedia
5. Queensrÿche FAQ
6. Crooncy Stars Cereal - General Food Corps 1988
7. http://www2.motley.com/
8. http://www.imotorhead.com/
9. http://www.vh1.com/artists/az/green_jelly/artist.jhtml
10. http://www.myspace.com/beowulfbwf
11. http://www.amazon.com/L%C3%A4ther-Frank-Zappa/dp/B0000009TT
12. http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B000001E5Z.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
13. LEO D-E Ergebnisse für "läppisch"
Sources
★
Rockin' Out: Popular Music in the USA, Garofalo, Rebee, , , Allyn & Bacon, 1997, ISBN 0-205-13703-2
External links and references
★
Hell Holes: main man explains the importance of the umlaut (Lisa Gidley, ''CMJ'', 2000)
★
''My Life in Heavy Metal'' by Steve Almond (excerpt)
★
The Döts (Dave Krinsky)
★
Would you like umlauts with that? (PDF) by Bruce Campbell
★
PvP Online: Djörk
★
The Heavy Metal Umlaut in the Liff Dictionary