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Hang tight...
Loading lyrics
Hang tight...
This song is directly based on the real case of Armin Meiwes, a German man who in 2001 advertised online for a willing victim to be killed and eaten. He found one in Bernd Brandes, who genuinely consented to the act. The case was widely covered in Germany and shocked the world, and Rammstein wrote this song as a response to it. The title "Mein Teil" literally means "my part" or "my piece," which is a darkly literal reference to the body part that was consumed first. The chorus line "du bist was du isst" is a play on the German proverb meaning "you are what you eat," twisted here into something genuinely disturbing.
What makes the song so unsettling is how it shifts between two perspectives. The narrator describes being cut with a blunt blade, bleeding, fighting off unconsciousness, yet continuing to eat through convulsions, which places you inside the perspective of Brandes, the willing victim who actually participated in consuming his own flesh. Then the description flips into something almost elegant, with fine wine, candlelight, porcelain plates, and careful seasoning, capturing Meiwes's own accounts of the act being almost ceremonial and intimate. Rammstein leans into that contrast hard, and it is genuinely nauseating in the best way the band intends.
The final verse pulls back into something more surreal and poetic, with a scream rising to heaven, cutting through angels, and feathers raining down on childhood. It reads like a shattered innocence image, the kind of Gothic Romantic flourish Lindemann uses to close out the literal horror with something more abstract and spiritual. The "nein" responses in the chorus feel like a kind of crowd recoil or moral objection being steamrolled by the relentless beat. The emotional tone overall is provocative and cold, but there is something almost operatic in how seriously it takes its grotesque subject matter.