A native of Freiberg, Germany, born in 1973, Tanneberger started his career in the early '90s, forming Euro-house group Sequential One in 1993. The band were moderately successful in Europe, releasing three albums and over a dozen singles until their dissolution in 1999. In the wake of remixes for acts including the Outhere Brothers, Technotronic, and Haddaway, Tanneberger began using the name ATB for his original solo material. He scored a major hit with 1998's "9 PM (Till I Come)," which hit number one in the U.K. and went gold or platinum in a few other countries. The similar-sounding 1999 follow-up "Don't Stop" nearly duplicated the success, and full-length debut Movin' Melodies arrived later that same year. The album also featured the single "Killer," a remake of the Seal and Adamski hit, with Drew Williams on vocals. The song was another smash hit, and began ATB's successful run of vocal trance anthems.
At the end of October 2000, Tanneberger released his sophomore album, Two Worlds. For the record, ATB collaborated with Heather Nova, Enigma, and the Canadian rock band Wild Strawberries. The release was a double CD, the first consisting of more dancefloor-friendly tunes and the second featuring more downtempo/ambient tracks. Following a few more hit singles, third album Dedicated appeared in 2002, featuring a hit cover of Olive's "You're Not Alone." Fourth album Addicted to Music arrived in 2003, along with a DVD of the same name that collected his music videos to date along with a U.S. tour documentary, interviews, and other content. Toward the end of the year, he also released The DJ in the Mix, his first of many continuous mix CDs.
Fifth studio album No Silence was released in 2004, featuring another DVD in its bonus edition. The year 2005 brought ATB's first retrospective compilation, Seven Years: 1998-2005, which featured all of his hits from that period as well as six new songs. The 2007 album Trilogy contained two discs, the first being more pop/rock-leaning and the second more ambient. Future Memories followed in 2009, and also featured separate uptempo/downtempo discs, but this time the uptempo disc featured tracks with higher BPMs influenced by drum'n'bass. The 2011 release Distant Earth expanded the format, not only featuring pop-trance songs on the first disc and downtempo/ambient tracks (including an Armin van Buuren collaboration) on the second, but also a club-centric third disc with the album's bonus edition. The set was followed later in the year by the two-CD remix collection Distant Earth Remixed. Contact, ATB's ninth studio album, continued his tradition of two discs focusing on dance and chillout tracks, as well as a bonus version featuring a third disc of remixes. Released in 2014, Contact peaked in the Top Ten of the German and Polish charts. Under the Stars, a mixed compilation of ATB's ambient tracks, was produced for a pair of concerts at the Planetarium Bochum in 2016, and only made available at these events.
ATB returned in 2017 with his tenth effort, neXt. Like many of his albums, the first disc contained radio-friendly vocal dance-pop tunes, and the second focused on ambient and downtempo pieces. A brief EP titled A New Love was released in 2019. Under the Stars 2020 was made available at another Planetarium Bochum concert early in the year. In 2021, Topic and A7S collaborated with ATB on a vocal remake of Tanneberger's iconic debut single. "Your Love (9PM)" became ATB's first single to reach the German pop charts since 2009. ~ Jason Ankeny & Paul Simpson, Rovi