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Kraftwerk, the concept and the first albums
In early 1970 the electro-pioneers Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider started the project Kraftwerk and established their own Kling Klang Studio in the centre of Düsseldorf. Here they developed the audiovisual concept and composed the music for all the Kraftwerk albums. The cover of the first album showed an image of a traffic cone, which was a trademark of this initial phase of the group, integrating the influence of the industrial environment in which they lived. The album was recorded and mixed later in the year with two different drummers in a few night sessions. The music was dynamic and very intense. The album "Kraftwerk 2" was recorded by the duo and released in 1971, reflecting more the harmonic and athmospheric side of their music. In later years this musical style was called “Ambient Music”. For the first time Ralf integrated his electronic drum-machine to his keyboard patterns and Florian's repetitive melodic lines, creating the meditative Klingklang Sound. For the co-production of these two albums, Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider relied on the collaboration of the engineer Konrad Plank. During the years 1970/1971/1972 Kraftwerk continued their live activities all over Germany, cooperating with many different musicians and artists. In february 1973 the duo Ralf and Florian played their first shows outside of Germany in Paris, France. The audio-visual concept included coloured neonlights and the famous neonsigns with their names and slide projections by Emil Schult. |
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Autobahn |
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Radioactivity The concept for “Radioactivity” referred to the ambiguity of the term "radioactivity", contrasting the more immediate meaning (radioactive waves) to the implicit meaning of the album's lyrics (radio waves). The cover artwork by Emil Schult showed the stylized image of a 1930's radio, and inside was an image of a broadcast antenna with the lyrics and radioactive stickers. It is interesting to emphasize that "Radioactivity" was released with bilingual lyrics of the songs, in german and english. The lyrics were again co-written by Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider and Emil Schult. |
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Trans Europe Express At the same time the hypnotic quality of “Trans Europe Express” fascinated the early hip-hop community in America and the new DJ-culture, inspiring Afrika Bambaataa and Soul Sonic Force to record “Planet Rock” five years later in 1982. The cover photo of the group was a retro-futuristic statement. Other prominent songs were "The Hall of Mirrors" and "Showroom Dummies", where Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider introduced a new artistic concept, that was to be used more frequently in Kraftwerk's future shows, the presentation of mannequins on fotos and in videos and later on stage, the famous "dummies". |
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The Man Machine The mechanical appearance with red shirts and black ties, featured on the cover, was clearly related to the characteristics of the group's automated electronic music and totally sequenzed rhythm tracks. "Metropolis" was a clear allusion to the Fritz Lang classic, the German forerunner of science fiction films, while “Spacelab” had a more scientific approach. "Neon Lights" was a romantic and lonely walk through the streets of Düsseldorf at night, while “The Model” reflects the fast consumer mechanisms of the fashion world. The compositions "The Robots" and "The Man Machine" became a worldwide trademark and a synonym for Kraftwerk. |
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Computer World During this period Kraftwerk also reconstructed their Kling Klang Studio, making it modular with racks, ready to be transported for their next tour. The idea was to play “Live Electronic Studio Music”. For five years since 1976, it had been technically impossible for Kraftwerk to play their music live in concerts. They only did videos and TV shows. After the release of "Computer World" 1981, Kraftwerk undertook their first world tour, playing in Europe, United States, Japan, Australia and even an unexpected concert in India and for the first time shows in Hungary and Poland. Kraftwerk transported tons of equipment. The stage now containing the modular Kling Klang Studio, arranged in an impressive "V" structure behind the musicians. Florian Schneider also using multitrack tapes to reproduce the sequenced rhythms and the drum tracks. Four screens showed films and animations that were controlled by the video-operator Günter Spachtholz. "Pocket Calculator" became another highlight, especially when played live in their shows. Kraftwerk operated mini-keyboards, toy instruments, pocket calculators and stepped closer to the stage-front, so that the audience also got a chance to play these instruments. |
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Tour de France Simultaneously Florian Schneider experimented with his first digital sampling unit. Cycling noises, human breath and other sound sources were used to create the dynamic sequencer rhythm tracks. The title track was recorded and mixed at Kling Klang Studio and released as maxi single with the start of the Tour de France in July 1983. Later in the same year a remix was done by Francois Kevorkian in New York and this remix was featured in the soundtrack of the movie “Breakin’” (european title: “Breakdance”). At the same time work was done for the album "Technopop". Therefore the "Tour de France" album remained an unfinished project until 2003. |
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Technopop / Electric Cafe The changes did not only occur in terms of digital sound, Kraftwerk also digitized their own images. The cover of "Technopop" showed the digitized faces in computer graphics, developed at the New York Institute of Technology. The video of "Music Non Stop"is a tremendous example of virtual modeling and was created by Rebecca Allen and the team of NYIT Computer Graphics Laboratory. The pioneering work of developing these 3-D computer animations took more than two years to be completed. |
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Analog to Digital |
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The Mix Kraftwerk updated their material with new mixing techniques, ("The studio is our instrument"). The way in which they used these techniques in the studio and on stage, mixing sampled elements and sequenced synthesizers in real time with human and synthetic voices, was in fact very similar to what is known today as "Live-PA" in the DJ culture. Kraftwerk launched a big tour in 1991 with a series of very successful concerts all across Europe. They brought their new digital Kling Klang Studio setup on stage. All these sound machines were being operated by Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider, Fritz Hilpert and Henning Schmitz, who had already worked with Kraftwerk as a sound engineer on "The Man Machine" and "Technopop" albums. One of the highlights of the shows were the four remote-controlled robots, who replaced the musicians. They were Kraftwerk lookalikes moving to the rhythm of the music in a kind of mechanical ballet with impressive light effects. Synchronized video images and midi controlled computer graphics were projected on four screens. With this new multimedia performance Kraftwerk had placed their feet in the Nineties. During the following years they supported Greenpeace at the "Stop Sellafield" concert, and participated in the "Ars Electronica" festival with the Balanescu Quartet and appeared at the "KlangArt" festival. In 1992 Kraftwerk composed the title track for the “MTV - Music Non Stop" show. Kraftwerk made a surprise live appearance at the legendary Tribal Gathering 1997 in Luton Hoo, England. They were wearing synthetic wireframe suits using ultraviolet lights. With this futuristic look and the spectacular visuals they were welcomed back by the worldwide techno music scene. In 1998 they went to Japan, United States, Europe, and for the first time in their history, played in South America, with concerts in Brazil and Argentina. The concerts in Brazil took place in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, as part of the Free Jazz Festival. These were the last shows that had the impressive structure of the Kling Klang Studio on stage, a trademark of the group's shows since 1981, the technology being constantly upgraded and modified. The producer Pena Schmidt, who brought the group to Brazil in 1998, gave his impressions of the structure: "Their stage, after it was set up, looked like a NASA laboratory. I'm sure that, as the years pass, this stage will be considered a form of 20th century art". |
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2000 |
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The 21st century saw the Kraftwerk Robots presented at the "Haus der Geschichte" (House of History) in Bonn, the former capital of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland. At the beginning of 2002 they were also in the "ex machina" exhibition at the Museum of Arts in Cologne. In october 2002 the Robots were part of the "Electric Body" exhibition at the Musée de la Musique in Paris. |
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World Tour |
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Tour de France Soundtracks In July 2003, as the famous race was completing its 100th anniversary, the moment was perfect for the release of the single "Tour de France 2003". Kraftwerk were invited by the directors of the "Tour de France" to follow the legendary stage in the alps to "Alpe d'Huez" as guests by car and helicopter. With these impressions they returned to the Kling Klang Studio.They finished the final mix of the album at the same time when the race ended on the Champs-Elysées in Paris. "Tour de France Soundtracks" was a totally conceptual album with mostly french lyrics. The themes of the new tracks were inspired by the world of cycling such as "Prologue", "Chrono", "Vitamin", "Aero Dynamik" and "Elektro Kardiogramm". For that last song, they recorded the sounds of heartbeats and used them as a base for the rhythm. All tracks are minimalistic in their rhythmic structure with continuous movement and a fantastic flow of melodies. An electronic work produced with impeccable sound quality. "Tour de France Soundtracks" was well received by critics and the public, and repositioned Kraftwerk in the headlines of the planetary media, with various reports and analyses. After 33 years of the Kraftwerk history they had their first Number One album in Germany, this was like the Yellow Jersey. |
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Minimum Maximum The world tour was recorded on audio and video for documentation. In June 2005 the live double CD "Minimum Maximum" was released. After the summer tour of the USA, Kraftwerk participated at the contemporary art exhibition "Biennale di Venezia" with a concert at the Lido. Concerts in Belgrade, Sofia, Skopje Thessaloniki, Athens and Istanbul were followed the"Rock Werchter", "Eurockéenes de Belfort" and the famous Montreux Jazz Festival. The world tour ended with three shows in Milano, Ferrara and Napoli and the "Electric Picnic" Festival near Dublin. The first Kling Klang Musik Film "Minimum Maximum" of the world tour was relased in december 2005 as double DVD with DTS 5.1 surround sound. A special designed "Notebook" includes the double CD, double DVD and 88 page book with photographs from the world tour 2002 - 2005. |
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The Catalogue During the tour more news were announced about the remastering of all the albums. "Autobahn", "Radioactivity", "Trans Europe Express", "The Man Machine", "Computer World", "Electric Cafe" (now with the original title "Technopop"), "The Mix" and "Tour de France" (new title) and released in october/november 2009 as a special box set named "The Catalogue" (Der Katalog) and separately in CD, vinyl and download formats, in english and german versions, all with the original extended artwork inside. The first three albums ("Kraftwerk," "Kraftwerk 2," and "Ralf and Florian") also will be released, though in a separate package. Those three albums were never officially released in CD format. For a group that helped to write the history of modern electronic music, elevating it to the category of art, that was both sophisticated and popular, the 21st century has enormous possibilities. Dante de Conti Neto, Marcelo Duarte, Dirk Matten
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