It is inevitable and
it happens to everyone. James Brown's new bag is now full of holes. David
Bowie, a former ideas factory, is reduced to shoplifting second hand jungle
rhythms to plaster his corny cockney choruses to. And Stevie Wonder? Lost
to mindless swingbeat, the last time he made a good record we were all
in short trousers. But Kraftwerk? Not Kraftwerk. Could the pioneers of
an elusive electronic future have run out of steam? Could the leaders of
a rhythmic revolution be content to provide a sideshow to the cutting edge
innovations of a new generation of technology obsessives with fresh agendas
which make Ralf and Florian's pocket calculator nursery rhymes seem like
a sealed compartment of the past? Could the group who once seemed so far
ahead they must have needed binoculars to see the rest of us, now be cruising
their own creative autobahn?
Ralf Hutter and Florian
Schnieder are about to play in a tent in Luton. Their appearance at this
year's Tribal Gathering is being seen as a celebration of their all-pervading
influence. There are rumours that their eight hour show will include cameos
from vogueish figures on the house and techno scene, pupils and relative
showroom dummies in truth not fit to share the same synthesiser.
Time was Kraftwerk were
so far ahead; so confident of their ability and the potency of their vision
that they had no time for tents. In 1975, David Bowie, having just completed
the Young Americans LP and on a scarily creative pharmaceutical roll, spent
most of his time driving around Germany in a Mercedes listening to Autobahn
and very little else. Obsessed, legend has it that he virtually begged
Kraftwerk to work with him. It apparently took them some time to return
his calls. Kraftwerk had already proved themselves light years ahead with
the still unique Trans Europe Express in which they almost condescendingly
namecheck their famous fan.
Kraftwerk, like perhaps
only The Beatles before them, had proved themselves a truly influential
group.
Later and more amusingly
the group recieved a series of telephone calls from a stricken Michael
Jackson suggesting mind boggling collaborations and requesting the multi-track
tapes of The robot-fixated Man Machine LP to muck about with. Hutter remembers
a subsequent meeting with the moonwalking barmpot and remarked that his
apparent obsession with robotics was 'very Kraftwerkian'
Perhaps they will be
flattered that the Detroit techno tent at this weekend's Tribal Gathering
will, as an over-serious mark of respect, be empty for the duration of
their performance. In the seventies and eighties, busy making the records
of the decade, they would hardly have noticed or cared.
In a memorable 1975
interview with the group Lester Bangs tries to empathise suggesting that
in the future we might be able to fit electrodes to the brain for a more
direct man/machine communion. Ralf Hutter matter of factly points out that
as far as he is concerned, this is not a distant solution but the next
step. When asked about others using electronic instruments at the time
Hutter disdainfully points out that people like Rick Wakeman are not concerned
with electronic music but' 'circus tricks on the synthesiser'. He adds
that the only other groups Kraftwerk really respected were the MC5 and
The Stooges. With this in mind, it is no surprise to find out that the
"ein zwei drei vier" count in on Showroom Dummies was inspired by their
love of similarly rigourous idealists The Ramones
Its clear now that by
the mid 1970s Kraftwerk, regardless of their almost academic experimentalism
were, to those in the know, the hippest thing around. Alan Vega of electronic
punks Suicide (themselves steeped in the influence of Kraftwerk) describes
driving through Harlem in the late 70s and hearing their music bleeding
out of tenement blocks. While doing nothing more than pleasing themselves,
Kraftwerk laid the roots of several revolutions. A whole school of European
industrialists like Front 242 took the Metal On Metal sections of Trans
Europe Express to forge a scary new shop-floor sound. American dance producers
like Arthur Baker were transfixed by the effortless binary funk which characterised
other sections of the record. Kraftwerk, like perhaps only The Beatles
before them, had proved themselves a truly influential group. Singular
sparks from their phenomenal machine generated new musical movements in
much the same way as the Fabs' Helter Skelter single-handedly 'invented'
heavy metal.
The subsequent Man Machine
(1978) and Computer World (1981) albums underlined their unique vision.
But the five year gap between Computer World and 1986's Electric Cafe LP
suggested all was not well. It's now clear that Electric Cafe was one brush
stroke too many on a painting by then complete. Kraftwerk had begun to
repeat themselves seeming to have been so precise, so clever and so driven
that they had actually arrived somewhere near the goals they had originally
set themselves. There are few artists who can claim that. Perhaps more
importantly, the rest of the world, and dance music in particular, had
started to catch up.
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Before the release of
Electric Cafe, Kraftwerk, devoted clubbers for some time, had been flattered
by the adoring attentions of the New York dance scene. They called New
York remixer Francois Kevorkian after seeing his name crop up on 'twenty
or thirty' 12" dance records they had bought and enjoyed. Kevorkian, who
had cut his teeth DJ-ing and remixing some of the great Prelude label disco
records was flattered and, while mixing tracks planned for the aborted
Techno Pop LP during the period before Electric Cafe, showed the group
around clubs like The Loft and The Paradise Garage. Much has been written
since this period about Kraftwerk being the originators of house. This
was (and is still) a nice idea but the truth is far more complex. Due to
the relatively cheap availability of drum machines and synthesisers from
Japanese companies like Roland (the feted 808 and 909 drum machines both
originated in this period) something was bound to happen anyway. Add to
this the fact that many of the early DIY house records were electronic
by default- made by disco-obsessed producers who would really have preferred
a 50 piece orchestra had they been able to afford it. A misleading but
nonetheless appealing picture started to build up. In 1987, enjoying the
association and, for the first time in their career following instead of
leading, Kraftwerk's 12" US release of The Telephone Call contained an
unremarkable remix called Housephone.
Electric Cafe itself
followed, banging an at length about the telephone and making musical use
of dialling tones and exchange voices. For once Kraftwerk seemed adrift,
unoriginal and unable to match the genuinely humorous and ironic absudity
of something like The Robots or Computer World. The trademark rhythms now
seemed just clever; no longer the breathtaking mesh that had hypnotised
dance producers in the past. To date this is the last genuinely new record
Kraftwerk have made.
The five year period
after Electric Cafe was taken up with retreading old ground, endlessly
remixing their own music for 1991's The Mix- a thinly veiled greatest hits
project. During this time they lost long standing (but never more than
junior) group members Karl Bartos and Wolfgang Flur. Bartos freely admitted
to frustration and boredom as computer disc after computer disc filled
up with miniscule changes and re-edits of old music. Apart from a general
house-friendly sheen to proceedings, you will need a good ear to pinpoint
the real changes made to the originals on The Mix. Emil Schult, an artist
and friend who had contributed to the phenomenal visual impact of Kraftwerk
since 1974 (he was instrumental in the design of the stage shows, did most
of the sleeves and even wrote some of the lyrics) had disappeared too.
Pointing out that he had not really lost touch with Ralf and Florian ("they
know my telephone number and I know theirs") he commented that he wasn't
sure about the value of The Mix. Quoted in Pascal Bussy's useful biography
of the group, Man, Machine And Music, he remarked, "Would Leonardo Da Vinci
have taken the Mona Lisa back and painted over it? I guess not. Autobahn
didn't need a remix by Kraftwerk". Interviewed around the time of the release
of The Mix, Hutter himself, questioned about the by then 'commonplace'
nature of their working methods sounds exasperated. "How can we change
now ? We've put twenty years into this kind of thing". This is really the
response of a man trapped by his genius a unique ability.
Despite this, fuelled
by nostalgia and the desire to construct a history for recent electronic
music, we are desperate to see things in Kraftwerk that may not be there
anymore. Tribal Gathering and the expected robot fest that the stage show
will once again inevitably consist of, underlines their latter day role
as icons for those who believe that old keyboards and drum machines are
a real expression of some vague techno/futurist ideal.
As someone remarked
on the release of The Mix, "Kraftwerk should be astounding". With the best
will in the world and even a commited fan's blindness, you would have to
concede that, for the time being, they are no longer that. Perhaps their
performance at Tribal Gathering will prove otherwise. It would be great
if it did. My money is however on electronic circus tricks for an audience
awestruck in advance.
1. Joe
Meek by John McCready.
2. Dance
Music Resources.
3. IDM
Mailing List.
4. A
list of Kraftwerk websites.
5. Unofficial
TB303 homepage.
links to other pages........
-
10
years of house
-
Patrick
Adams
-
Bluffers
Guide to Dub
-
David
Bowie review
-
Bristol
Rising
-
British
Films
-
Dawn
of Detroit Techno
-
Depeche
Mode
-
Drawn
Slippy - 70's British comics
-
Bruce
Forrest
-
Guide
to 808,909,303
-
Hacienda
club
-
Jane's
Addiction
-
Marshall
Jefferson
-
Chaka
Kahn
-
Kingbee
Records
-
KLF
-
Kraftwerk
-
Krautrock
-
The
La's
-
Manic
Street Preachers
-
Massive
Attack
-
Joe
Meek
-
Miami
Bass
-
Moog
Synthesizer
-
Northern
Heroes
-
Paradise
Garage
-
The
Pet Shop Boys
-
Punk-Funk
-
Scallies
rally to Pink Floyd
-
Yes
-
Kenneth
Williams
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