Rammstein’s Till Lindemann Unleashes New David Lynch-Inspired Music Video For “Und Die Engel Singen”

**Rammstein’s Till Lindemann Unleashes Surreal David Lynch-Inspired Video for “Und Die Engel Singen”**

 

Rammstein frontman Till Lindemann has once again pushed artistic boundaries with the release of his haunting new music video for “Und Die Engel Singen” (“And the Angels Sing”). Drawing heavy inspiration from the cinematic world of David Lynch, the video is a surreal fever dream—equal parts beautiful, disturbing, and deeply symbolic.

 

Released late last night, the video opens with stark black-and-white imagery: a smoky hallway, flickering lights, and Lindemann wandering through a dreamscape that feels like it could’ve been pulled straight from *Eraserhead* or *Lost Highway*. As the music builds, blending orchestral swells with industrial undertones, fragmented scenes unfold—a masked choir, shadowy dancers, and Lindemann whispering verses into an old rotary phone.

 

The song itself is a stark departure from Rammstein’s usual bombast. Instead, “Und Die Engel Singen” is meditative and melancholic, carried by Lindemann’s deep, gravel-toned voice and lyrics that grapple with mortality, isolation, and transcendence. Its cinematic pacing and lush instrumentation mark it as one of his most personal and evocative solo works to date.

 

Critics have already begun to hail the video as a dark masterpiece, praising its Lynchian influence and emotional weight. The collaboration between Lindemann and director Zoran Bihac, a longtime visual partner, brings out the most enigmatic corners of Lindemann’s creative mind.

 

Though Lindemann is no stranger to controversy or spectacle, this release signals a new chapter—one less about shock and more about inner reflection and art-house expression. With “Und Die Engel Singen,” he’s not just pushing genre limits—he’s crafting visual poetry.

 

As the final scene fades into a static screen and a whispering choir hums into silence, one thing is certain: Till Lindemann has delivered a vision that lingers long after the music stops.

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