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philippe View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Essay about Schulze
    Posted: July 27 2004 at 13:05

Hey guys, here an interesting essay by K D Muller about Klaus Schulze, the german father of electro ambiant prog music.

Written in 1978, just after the release of the seminal "X" (electro structures meet classical music).

Klaus Schulze's first works, IRRLICHT and CYBORG, were
results from intensive study of classical music.  At this time,
1971/72, Klaus Schulze's music was absolutely new and unknown,
just as synthesizers were a novelty.  This didn't make his work
much easier at the time.  But after ceaseless work and the release
of now ten solo productions, as well as ten concert tours through 
Western Europe, has the position towards his electronic
instruments and his music become more tolerant and receptive.
        Even today, Klaus Schulze sees himself as "classical"
composer and musician, yet his understanding of classical music
deviates from its conventional perception.
        Apart from church music, every type of music that is today
being praised or dismissed as being "classical" was at the time of
its creation entertainment.  Today it is even more so, in spite of
all attempt to label it with the image of "Ernst" (with capital E)
[German for "serious"].  This says nothing about qualities, only
about forms of contemporary reception.
        Classical music is for our ears and our consciousness,
especially among the younger generation, musically outdated. 
Those who believe this focus on such quantitative things as
instrumentation or the form of composition and presentation. 
Those forms, especially the form of presentation, are certainly
antiquated.  Those forms have only minute influence on the quality
and the message of the music, to which they only block access.  If
we ignore these external features, we discover quality behind
them, expression of emotion; often packaged in daring combinations
of theme, instrumentation and rhythmic variety.  It was not Zappa
who invented this.  And in contrast to today's "serious
avantgarde" musicians, the historic composers did not forget about
the listener (just like Klaus Schulze).  In spite of all the
daring, there remains a melodious sound, an internal coherence,
which opens up to the listener (sometimes after a certain amount
of time which he needs to clean his ears).
        "An artist is never ahead of his time, but most people are
far behind the time."  Edgar Varese
        Marshall McLuhan has determined that the history of mankind
is characterized in a sequence of acts of technological extensions
of human capacity.  The effects of these technological
achievements generate a radical transformation of our environment
and of the patterns of our thinking, feeling and judging.  In this
process surfaces the tendency to elevate the past into an artform
(see above, classic), while simultaneously the new conditions are
regarded as corrupt and degrading.  Only few artists in each epoch
have the strength and the boldness to live and work in direct
contact with the environment of their time.
        Klaus Schulze makes his music with currently available
technological means.  His instruments are synthesizers and modern
recording studios.  Those manmade means are neither corrupt nor
degrading, are neither better nor worse than a violin or a piano.
A synthesizer is not a "synthetic" instrument.  The meaning of the
word "synthesis" lies elsewhere; in the "combination to union".
Logic, a discipline which is not unimportant to music, knows a
"synthetic judgment": the subject states something new, something
that cannot be deducted from its descriptive name.  "Synthesis" is
a higher form in which contradictions (thesis and antithesis) are
resolved.  Thus it is a rather positive term, which has more to do
with "artistic" than with "artificial".
        Klaus Schulze bases his music - most likely not consciously
-on the classical understanding of today's music that is described
above.  It is known that the great masters of the past liked to
improvise, and it lies in the nature of the matter that there are
no records of this.  Klaus Schulze improvises in a comparable
manner.  Through the daily confrontation with one's own music it
is inevitable that patterns, structures and themes evolve, which
ultimately are incorporated in a composition.  While in the past
compositions were transferred to the then latest medium, the
printing press, today's technological level allows publication in
the form of records or tapes.
        The printed musical notation enclosed with this album are
intended for those who need it, who enjoy it, or simply those who
didn't think Klaus Schulze could do this. Due to above mentioned
reasons this is obviously an anachronism, though.  [the album
shows 8 pages of handwritten notation for a symphony orchestra,
also a graphical chart for the synthesizers].
        Be it written notation or modern media - the understanding of
Klaus Schulze's music is no easy task, mainly because of the lack
of a general consciousness for this type of music, and with it for
example the missing motivation for the purchase of the necessary
means of reproduction [i.e. go buy a fancy stereo, you Schulze
lovers].  But, even the imitators, the plagiarizers, are out there
already...
       

       

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2004 at 04:51

I love Schulze's music - but the author of this essay makes some very extravagant claims, and is wrong/contradictory on the points he makes about form! Form is all-important in music in order to give a structure to hang ideas from - just like a building requires a framework, or at least foundations. Without form, music tends to end up a shapeless, directionless blob. Even if it is not intentional, any coherent work will have some form, much of which may be traced back to traditional forms.

Like any kind of construction, a bottom-up methodology tends to work better than a top-down, if only one is used. Most composers try to use both approaches (whether intentionally or not!); a song writer will decide on a verse/chorus approach before writing chord progressions. For "free-form" instrumental work, the acknowledged way to maintain coherence is to repeat entire sections - albeit with variations in style, orchestration or both.

To underline my points about form in contrast to the points made here, consider the forms explored by John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen and compare them to Schulze. I won't go into them, as one could write an entire essay on both just on the aspect of form! An example closer to home might be "Rainbow Dome Musick" by Steve Hillage, which is very close to being without form, just a never-ending organic growth of delicate sound, yet cohesive and with direction - albeit at a very slow pace. It's not like Schulze's music, but provides the necessary contrast in approach!

The point about presentation is no less wrong - nowadays presentation is what sells. Even with a lot of so-called prog - the production is the first thing you notice that makes you go "Wow!". Once you start digging around in the music for interesting ideas, many bands just fall flat and become exposed as simple rock groups with interesting styles rather than actually being progressive.

...

Apart from that, an interesting article about an interesting composer - good find!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2004 at 07:44
Interesting...but I'm not sure that Schulze always took an importance on the form...you talk about never-ending organic  growth of delicate sounds...have you ever listened to Schulze first organ experiences in Irrlicht and Cyborg?...for me it's sometimes near to some contemporary classical composer's works, I think of the minimalist La MONTE YOUNG and Parmegiani... 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 14 2004 at 17:26

I've listen To K. Schulze for many years I have most of his albums.The albums I enjoy are from 1975 - 1990 . Moondawn and Mirage being my favorite.

K. Schulze is no doubt a pioneer in the electronic-newage-progrock type of sound along others like Tangerine Dream and Jean Michel Jarre.

I must admit I have lost interest in his music because I find it too repetetive to my taste almost like a "mantra" ( you know, like the buddist chanting oummmmmm for half an hour)  . I just find that I can't listen to his music anytime ; I have to be in the right mood to listen to it. ...anyways thats my 2 cents worth...      

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2004 at 20:03

The amazing thing about KS's music is that even if "mantric" there is always the magic element in there. I could agree that you dont listen to KS all day long 7 days a week. This means that KS is music for given moods and selfendulgements. My absolute favorites are TIMEWIND, DREAMS and MOONDAWN. Now 30some years listening to KS among many others, I still have a great respect for the man...

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Music Is The Soul Bird That Flies In The Immense Heart Of The Listener . . .
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 07 2004 at 10:23

Jean Michel Jarre, a pioneer of electronic music? certainly not!! contrary to Schulze, Kraftwerk and Cluster he brought nothing new to the genre. Moreover he rised on the scene after that the first wave passed.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 13 2004 at 07:50

DAMN...I GOT ALL EXCITED JUST THEN..!!

I THOUGHT THIS THRAED WAS GOING TO BE ABOUT SERGEANT SCHULZE......YOU KNOW.............FROM HOGANS HEROES!!

what a bummer

as for klause....I know NNNNOOOTHING!!

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