Peter Rüchel


Peter Rüchel was a German music journalist, producer and founder of the WDR show Rockpalast, which since the mid-1970s has been hosting concerts by national and international bands and solo artists and broadcast them on German and European television.

Life and career

Rüchel was born in Berlin in 1937 as the son of a violinist and a teacher. He grew up in West Berlin and attended a humanities-oriented gymnasium with subjects such as Latin, Greek, classical music, literature and theatre.
At age 16, he was an exchange student for a year in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
After graduating he studied German studies and philosophy. In 1968 he applied to Sender Freies Berlin. Until 1970, Rüchel worked there on the programme SF Beat. A little later, the young editor was discovered by ZDF. In 1970 they brought him for their first real youth programme . In 1974, at a television awards ceremony for direkt, Peter Rüchel met, the then-head of the WDR cultural department. A short time later Rüchel took over the position of the new head of the WDR youth programme. In Cologne, Peter Rüchel met with, then still a student of Filmhochschule München, with whom he worked together in the following years and who made him familiar with the world of rock music.
Together, Wagner and Rüchel invented Rockpalast. Already in 1975, the WDR broadcast 13 live sessions.
At the beginning of 1976 WDR launched a weekly, half-hour youth programme. Once per month they also presented live music under the title Rockpalast. As part of these programmes Rüchel and Wagner became aware of later world stars early on. For example, U2, who gave their Rockpalast debut in the Berlin Metropol on 4 November 1981 in front of 350 listeners, Tom Petty, Meat Loaf and Mink DeVille, Dire Straits, or R.E.M., which appeared in front of 280 paying viewers in 1985 in the Zeche Bochum.
Rockpalast quickly became an insider tip. For the presentation of the show Rüchel soon brought in Alan Bangs and Albrecht Metzger.
On 23 July 1977, the legendary first Rockpalast Nacht with Roger McGuinn's Thunderbyrd, Rory Gallagher, and Little Feat rose in the Essen Grugahalle. Since then, two rock nights took place each year, which in addition to the TV distribution were broadcast over radio in Hi-Fi stereo quality. Up to around 1983 the average number of people reached was around to in the Grugahalle and some 25 million remote listeners off site. Despite their cult status, however, the concerts never became a quota wonder. Even spectacular rock nights such as The Who in 1981 or a concert recording of the Rolling Stones in Paris in 1976 brought it to just five percent viewing audience. The disastrous result of the Rockpalast of 19 October 1985, when The Armory Show, Squeeze, and Ruben Blades drew just viewers into the Grugahalle sealed the fate of the show - Rockpalast was discontinued in 1986.
It took until 1995 before the Rockpalast came back. The broadcasters were looking for ways to bridge the night hours cheaply, so concerts from the Rockpalast archives were broadcast. After overwhelming viewer reactions, Rüchel began to carefully set up his own productions again. Although the first Loreley festival was still a flop in 1995, in the following year the festival was already a major success with David Bowie, Pulp and Iggy Pop. Since then, the annual Loreley festival and have been reliable fixtures in the programme. The same held true for the rock nights in the Philipshalle in Düsseldorf.
Rüchel made friends with some of the music scene's performers over the years, including Pete Townshend, whom he first met in London in 1981, as well as Little Steven.
In 2003 Peter Rüchel left the active role in the show at the Rock am Ring, but continued to serve the Rockpalast as a consultant and editor of the Rockpalast DVD series.
In later years, Rüchel lived with his family in Leverkusen-. He died following a serious illness at age 81, just 17 days before his 82nd birthday. He was buried on the 12 March 2019 at the of in Berlin-Dahlem.

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