----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 5:12
PM
Subject: [Kraftwerk] FM article
The following are 2 articles from the August
edition of the British dance music technology magazine, Future Music. Thought
you'd like to read them.
NEW KRAFTWERK ALBUM SHOCKER!
They invented music today, don't you know. Well
OK, they've certainly been cited by many a cutting-edge musician as being THE
most important and most influential band ever...which isn't bad considering
they haven't written any original tunes(?) for well over 15 years and aguably
done nothing half decent for two decades.
So when news came through to theFuture Music
office of a new Kraftwerk album we...well...didn't really do much, as it looks
like yet another ruddy rehash of old stuff. It's going to be based around the
Tour De France (these people love cycling more than music, you see) so
willfeature a new version of that single plus, by all accounts, some new
versions of other Kraftwerk songs. So all a bit of a letdown really, and we
had to laugh when we read somewhere that it's a rush release! We presume that
means 'rushed' as in how The Blue Nile and Peter Gabriel rush
out albums.
Anyway this leaves us asking more than a few
questions. For instance, how can a band seem to get more and more important,
the less new music they actually release? And what can they possibly release
to live up to the hype? Will they ever release anything ever again? Answers on
a post'kard' The hype and the emperor and his new clothes march
on...
REVISITING GROUNDBREAKING ALBUMS OF OUR
TIME...
With news of a new album (OK, a rehash of old
stuff) elsewhwere on these pages, it seems appropriate to revisit the German
pioneers to question why it is they've reached the godlike status and muse
over one of their best offerings from days gone by.
When tackling the 'Gods' bit it's all quite
simple really. Kraftwerk pretty much invented pure electronic music, electro
pop and dance music as we know it today.
They also produced some classic moments in the
70's and 80's leaving us with a couple of masterppieces of which 'The Man
Machine' is one. The fact that they haven't made any decent music for nigh on
20 years has meant that dewy-eyed musicians (not to mention dewy-eyed music
technology journalists) always cite them as THE band. They have the mystery
(they don't talk) they have the studio (Kling Klang and it's closed doors) and
the prolonged silence (both in words and music). All these have helped keep
the icon status going, so God help them when they actually release a new album
proper. Will we see them as charlatans they really are at last!?
Anyway, back to to the good stuff. The Man
Machine was pure electronic cheese, but in the nicest and cleanest of ways. It
had Sci-Fi (The Robots, leading to another common theory that Kraftwerk are
indeed robots), space (Spacelab), high camp (just look at all the pictures),
neon lights (er, Neon Lights) and an accidental Number 1. Yep, three years
after it's release, The Model snuck into the the top of the UK charts and took
everyone by surprise (although not me because I was in 'the know' and even had
the German version of 'The Man Machine' by this time, I was so
cool).
If kraftwerk are, as some now believe, a big
teasing wind-up joke, sent to us by beings from the future - and I'm beginning
to be the main exponent of this theory - then 'The Man Machine' was their
punchline and they've been laughing at us ever since. Andy James
Shaun
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