Mutter (; English: "Mother") is the third studio album by German Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein. It was released on 2 April 2001 through Motor and Universal Music. The album's cover image is a photograph of a dead fetus, which was taken by Daniel & Geo Fuchs. The album has yielded six singles which, to date, are the most released from any Rammstein album.
From September to December 1999, the band rented the house Weimar in Heiligendamm on the Baltic Sea for pre-production. The sound recordings took place in May and June 2000 at Studio Miraval in southern France. In advance of the album's release, Rammstein released the song "Links 2 3 4" on their website for download in December 2000. The single "Sonne" was released in January 2001.
"Mutter" was released in various versions, initially as a normal CD and, in Germany, also as a vinyl LP. A digipack was also released, which was exported to other countries. Another double CD edition with the video of âÂÂSonneâ and the track Halleluja was released in the USA. The Japanese version contains Halleluja two minutes laterâÂÂas a so-called âÂÂhidden trackâÂÂâÂÂafter the end of the regular CD. The album was later released as a limited tour edition, which contains four live tracks on a second CD. The cover remained unchanged, except for the colour, which became red. <br /> A vinyl pressing of the Japanese version has existed since 2013, but it is merely a bootleg, or more precisely, a counterfeit. It also contains the song Halleluja, but in two different versions: Once as Halleluja (with choirs at the beginning) and once as âÂÂHallelujaâ (without choirs at the beginning).
In 2005, Mutter was ranked number 324 in Rock Hard magazine's book The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time.
In the interview with Noizr Zine, the well-known Swedish producer and musician Peter Tägtgren advised "Mutter" as a reference work for beginner producers: <blockquote>"I think, if you are not into death metal or something like that, but if you are into metal, I would say maybe RammsteinâÂÂs "Mutter" is very good, because it has a lot of different elements, it has orchestra parts, heavy guitars, good drum sound â that could be a good reference."</blockquote>
There are various editions of Mutter, each with different features:
Note: Some copies that have "Halleluja" as a hidden track can not be played for unknown reasons. On 3 April 2010 Rammstein posted a video with an official translation of "Halleluja" on their Facebook page, "in light of recent events".