This interview was broadcasted on CNN's World Beat in 1999. World Beat is a show about world music, which features artists from different countries.
(CNN/August 1999) - Turkish singing sensation Tarkan is hitting the charts in Europe,
with his third album "Ölürüm Sana" ("Crazy
About You"). And the 27-year-old artist has another one in
the works - this time it's in English.
Tarkan sat down with CNN
WorldBeat Correspondent Bruno del Granado to talk about his life
and art: "I was raised in Germany until I was 13, and then
my family decided to go back to Turkey. It was good in a way,
because I studied music. And I went to a Turkish classical music
school and studied music for three years. And then I just
realized that I can't do anything else but singing music. And
everything just happened naturally. "
-How
does it feel to be the first artist of Turkish origin to sell
500,000 albums in France, of all places?
-It feels wild, you know, because in the beginning I never
thought it was going to really happen. It's all in Turkish, you
know, and nobody understands a word. But I think it's a groove.
It's the kisses that are universal.
-How
did you hook up with Ahmet Ertegun, who's also Turkish? (Ertegun,
the son of a Turkish diplomat, is the chairman and CEO of
Atlantic Records.)
-Yes. He was my mentor in a way, as a musician and as a
businessman. He came to Turkey once and saw me on stage
performing, and then he came up to me and said, "You've got
to call me. I'm Ahmet Ertegun." I said, I would love to. And
that was the first thing I did when I came to New York. Then we
did an agreement, a deal, with him for the English albums.
-So
you're going to record in English now?
-Yes. Actually, I've been working on an English album for two
years, and it's almost done. "Sikidim" (the song) is
the hook because "Sikidim" doesn't mean anything
actually. There's a definition I have, but it's a way of moving
in Turkey. It's a very sexy, Oriental kind of moving.
-There
are five million Turkish people in Europe and most of them are in
Germany. Do you feel they've been very supportive of your music,
of you as an artist and everything else?
-Oh, definitely. My fans, when I see them somewhere, outside my
concerts, I get that, that vibe. They're really supporting my
projects and everything, because it's a first time that a Turkish
singer is, you know, able to express himself out of Turkey. And I
think they're proud of me and they're really supporting me. I can
feel that.