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Hang tight...
Loading lyrics
Hang tight...
This song is directly based on "Die gar traurige Geschichte mit dem Feuerchen" from Heinrich Hoffmann's 19th century children's book "Struwwelpeter," a classic piece of German cautionary literature where a little girl plays with matches while her parents are away and burns to death. Rammstein takes that story almost word for word and turns it into something far more psychologically layered. A child is home alone, finds a box of matches, lights one the way they've watched their mother do, and the fire quickly consumes them entirely. The imagery of fire attacking like an animal, grabbing with claws and biting, makes the flames feel predatory and almost intimate rather than accidental.
What Lindemann adds that the original story doesn't have is that haunting chorus, "Immer wenn ich einsam bin, zieht es mich zum Feuer hin," which translates to "Whenever I am lonely, fire draws me in." That transforms it from a simple warning about matches into something much darker, a compulsion tied to loneliness and a desire for warmth or connection. The unanswerable questions in the chorus, why is the sun round, why don't I get better, give the song a childlike confusion mixed with genuine anguish. Fire here becomes a stand-in for anything destructive that we reach toward when we feel isolated, love, addiction, self-destruction, the things that feel warm right up until they ruin you.
The ending is where it gets really interesting. The child rises from the ashes into the sunlight, declaring that fire does love them after all, while the backing vocals keep insisting it does not. That contradiction is the heart of the song. The person consumed by something destructive still tells themselves it loves them back, even as they're being destroyed by it. The final desperate cries of "Hilf mir," help me, suggest the delusion doesn't actually protect you. It's classic Rammstein, using something childlike and even playful on the surface to deliver a genuinely bleak emotional truth underneath.