His celebrity now kick-started, he took his act on the road: Guildo Horn die Orthopädischen Strümpfe, the latter a five-man backing group. It wasn't long before a major label came knocking, namely Electrola, a division of EMI, and Sternstunden der Zärtlichkeit was issued in November 1995. The album includes humorous parodies like Ich Find' Schlager Toll (a send-up of Joan Jett's I Love Rock N' Roll) and Ich Mag Steffi Graf (the Bee Gees' How Deep Is Your Love) -- both of which were released as singles, the former charting in the Top 100 -- in addition to original material. Horn's recording career was now off to a promising start, and he went about recording another album, Danke! (1997), which peaked, rather amazingly, at number three and spent a long 35 weeks on the album chart. Such success set the stage for his Eurovision Song Contest run in 1998 with Guildo Hat Euch Lieb!, itself a number four hit.
After such dizzying heights, particularly for a novelty act, it was inevitable that Horn's career would take a downturn, and indeed it did. His next album, Schön! (1999), reached only 64, and its biggest single, Berlin, only 82; the one after that, Der König der Möwen (2002), saw a further drop off in commercial interest, barely registering on the Top 100 (at 99) and spawning no significant hits. A few years later Horn's major-label days came to an end with Essential (1995), a compilation of 18 of his best recordings for Electrola. However, he'd already begun moving on with his career, shifting his focus from schlager to theater, appearing in such musicals as +Kiss Me, Kate (2005) and +Paradise of Pain (2006). He did acknowledge the cultish remains of his fan base on occasion, however, for instance issuing Die Rocky Horny Weihnachtsshow (2005), a CD that smartly synthesized the old ironic Horn with the new theatrical one. ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi