Header-Logo Ultraorange.net

Popol Vuh – Aguirre I (L’acrime di rei)

Just start the player, lean back, close your eyes and enjoy …

orangeguru (11-22 1:17) | No Comments | Permalink
BBC Music Documentary Krautrock

Great documentary about the alternative German music scene. The Brits named these great experimental category “Krautrock“, which is basically a reason to start another war.

But the documentary is brilliant! Now you see what David Bowie got from being in Berlin and that Kraftwerk is hardly the oddest German music formation from that era …

orangeguru (11-21 23:45) | 3 Comments | Permalink
Brett Domino you are totally Kraftwerk 2.0

Yes, Nerds can make music … all they needs is some gadgets to get rappin’. Brett Domino and his crew are brilliant. Make sure to visit his website or his YouTube channel.

Uh, all this nerdy excitement and brilliance makes me giggle like a little girl!

orangeguru (10-14 18:12) | 3 Comments | Permalink
Tim Exile – the Master of Sampling

Most musicians use samplers to sample other people’s performances or bits of their songs. For them a sampler in combination with a sequencer is just a rigid "LEGO" music system. They are unable to adapt and really make free flowing music with this exciting technology …

Tim Exile is a Master of Music and Technology. He not only knows how to sample, but how to make music from his own samples. He is an instrument, performer and composer in a brilliant package.

orangeguru (10-11 23:14) | 2 Comments | Permalink
iNudge for Friday – Happy Frog

This is fun …

orangeguru (10-09 20:03) | No Comments | Permalink
iNudge Music for Friday

orangeguru (09-25 20:06) | 1 Comment | Permalink
Pizzaman – Sex on the Streets (1995)

One of the many great songs by Fatboy Slim. I just love the groove – it just makes me want to dance and have sex …

orangeguru (10-10 18:07) | No Comments | Permalink
The Orb – Little Fluffy Clouds 1991

Don’t we all love little fluffy clouds? Especially 5 am in the morning, still drugged and excited from a whole night of clubbing and dancing? That was the good unhealthy life back then …

orangeguru (06-30 23:06) | No Comments | Permalink
Kraftwerk

music_kraftwerk_mensch_maschine

There are not many German bands that achieved such a cult status like Kraftwerk. Today electronic music is everywhere – with any cheap computer you can create Kraftwerk-like music. But there is more to Kraftwerk than simply beeps and zaps.

The first big song ‘Autobahn’ from 1974:

Starting 1974 (with Autobahn) till 1986 (Electric Café) they released a string of albums that defined the electronic music scene for decades to come. Many great artists like Bowie were big fans and many house & techo musicians were heavily influenced by their sound.

music_kraftwerk_expo_2000

This is one of the newer pieces – a theme song for the Expo 2000 in Hannover:

Their synthesizer music sounded so different from eletro pop, disco or synthesizer artists like Jean Michel Jarre or Tomita. Kraftwerk didn’t try to make electronic music ‘nice’ or more like old instruments. They quite liked the harsh purity of their machines.

‘Taschenrechner’ (Pocket Calculator) from ‘Computer World’:

But also Kraftwerks minimal lyrics about the digital future were right on target (from ‘Computer World’ the song ‘Computer Love’):

Computer love
Computer love
Another lonely night
Stare at the TV screen
I don’t know what to do
I need a rendezvous
Computer love
Computer love
I call this number
For a data date
I don’t know what to do
I need a rendezvous
Computer love
Computer love

Their use of computer animation for music videos and cover art was state of the art at the time. Also their usage of robot like makeup and later real robots for their live performances just pushed the Kraftwerk-style further ahead.

Mensch-Maschine – Wir sind die Roboter 1978

Electric Café – Musique Non Stop 1986

Kraftwerk’s last album ‘Tour de France’ in 2003 was certainly in line with their style – but it was no longer a unique experience, since techno, house music, trip hop and electronica all were built on the Kraftwerk sound and therefore Kraftwerk itself was just another bleep on the market. Nevertheless it was good music.

One cultural note: Kraftwerk has always released it’s albums in German and in English for the foreign market. I consider their German albums and lyrics the original versions.

German dudes singing in English with a terrible accent might have been avantgarde in the 70’s and 80’s to non-german ears – but for me their songs in German are often rather melancholic or satirical. It rather feels like a commentary on the Zeitgeist and the Zukunft (future) instead of trying to be arty farty.

But I guess that gets lost in translation.

orangeguru (01-20 12:07) | 2 Comments | Permalink
Opus III – It’s A Fine Day

It’s more like a party or summer anthem … but never mind. I think she is cute and so is the song. It has this wonderful ignorant candy attitude to life … everything is gonna be good … somehow …

orangeguru (12-25 5:35) | No Comments | Permalink



copyright 2005 - 2009 for all entries dieter mueller or the respective copyright holder