Krautrock |
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kirk782
Forum Groupie Joined: September 06 2024 Location: India Status: Offline Points: 80 |
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Posted: 13 hours 10 minutes ago at 07:40 |
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Is krautrock a valid genre or more an umbrella term for all kinds of sounds coming from bands from West Germany in the 70s? It has both the eclectic style of Can, the electronic hymn of Kraftwerk, the motorik beat in Neu! and La Dusseldorf, the experimental nature of Harmonia and Faust, the guitar based Guru Guru and so on. With everything from meditative sitars [like Yath Sidhra ] to Cluster to Ammon Duu; isn't this too vast an umbrella term?
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15412 |
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To begin with, I think that it has been wisely of PA to distinguish between Krautrock and Progressive Electronic. Edited by David_D - 11 hours 25 minutes ago at 09:25 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14950 |
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The genre definition used by PA is here: https://www.progarchives.com/subgenre.asp?style=17
The genre originates from Germany, but not all German bands are listed as Krautrock (German bands feature also under Progressive Electronic - including Kraftwerk, Symphonic - e.g. Grobschnitt, , Jazz Fusion - e.g. Embryo, Psychedelic/Space - e.g. Eloy etc.). Krautrock is meant to refer to a distinctive musical style (even though still somewhat eclectic), and there are also non-German bands listed under Krautrock, most of them from more recent times.
Edited by Lewian - 10 hours 44 minutes ago at 10:06 |
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Jacob Schoolcraft
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 22 2021 Location: NJ Status: Offline Points: 1162 |
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Yes...logically it could be conceived as an umbrella term..
During the late 60s it began as a movement to make a new Germany. The German youth rebelled against the old Germany..to the extreme measures of burning down buildings in Berlin. Imagine being a teenager and waking up to the realization that your parents were once Nazis.. They wanted to build a new Germany and they resented the fact that their parents were quiet about Hitler and the Jewish people. They wanted honest answers not lies or resistance to their normal inquisitive nature. A situation that the American youth never dealt with short of your grandparents being slave owners in the South. The music labeled as Krautrock by a British journalist or DJ, ( can't recall?), contained a wide variety of genres. Electronic Music, Space Rock, Jazz Rock etc and it all ended up being classified under one term. Back in the 70s I recall people in the states acting confused about Tangerine Dream being labeled part of Krautrock. It probably all fell together under a term because it had not been planned as a marketing process. Because it derived from a movement invented by a rebellious German youth. Though several Krautrock bands were signed to American record labels such as United Artists, Passport, Billingsgate, Atlantic Records etc....sales were obviously not accommodation to the investment in the U.S. Tangerine Dream had success in soundtracks beginning in the late 70s and throughout the 80s...but short of that most of the German bands seemed unheard of or unwanted in America. |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14950 |
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^ I think that originally the term Krautrock was used in a somewhat derogatory manner (by the anglophone press), and probably applied to everything German and rock with little respect for genre differences (the word "Kraut" says nothing about music). But some in Germany and elsewhere embraced it to refer to the movement you mention, starting to employ some musical criteria as well when it came to classification (Tangerine Dream are not Krautrock now on PA, and probably haven't been listed as Krautrock in many places in the last 40 years; they can be counted into the "movement" though if there ever was a well defined one).
Edited by Lewian - 9 hours 58 minutes ago at 10:52 |
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Jacob Schoolcraft
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 22 2021 Location: NJ Status: Offline Points: 1162 |
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Yes!! Interesting insight on the subject matter! |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36547 |
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I consider Tangerine Dream's debut to be Krautrock at least. Or I could call it psychedelic experimental rock.
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presdoug
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 24 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 8665 |
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Two of my favourite bands, Germany's Triumvirat and The Pink Mice, are from the place and era that the term krautrock came from, but are not so, being Symphonic Prog groups embracing classical music in a more direct way.....and I concur as has been pointed out that the term krautrock was initially any German rock music of any type, but then evolved into what it is known as today.
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Jacob Schoolcraft
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 22 2021 Location: NJ Status: Offline Points: 1162 |
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Peter Hetch is a brilliant keyboardist! My favorite Pink Mice album is IN ACTION. I have the 2 on 1 cd released years ago. It has a glitch or perhaps the original recording had a defect and was never corrected. It's a whole of 3 or 4 seconds. It's never been properly released and it would be nice if Esoteric did it. The first 2 Lucifer's Friend albums were decent...but the most progressive sounding is Where The Groupies Killed The Blues. Back in the 80s I heard a bootleg cassette tape of Lucifer's Friend performing live in the 70s. They had a piano on stage and they played Rose On The Vine, Prince Of Darkness, Mother and also tracks from their first album. The sound quality was good and the band were tight. Supposedly it had been recorded in a club in Germany. However it is written that Lucifer's Friend didn't do much touring or live performance...unless of course they mixed a fake audience in not unlike Omega did in the early 70s or perhaps Kayak on Witness... |
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presdoug
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 24 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 8665 |
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Jacob Schoolcraft
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 22 2021 Location: NJ Status: Offline Points: 1162 |
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Jurgen Fritz it seems grew up in Cologne...a place where Edgar Froese was from and a kind of development of Electronic Music existed there during the Krautrock movement OR....the German youth movement expressing their anger about the old Germany through music. Jurgen Fritz being more of a Classical player began fusing it with a Rock style. Tales Of Mediterranean follows that path. In a sense I see Triumvirat as Classical Rock. It's a strange album. I get a strange vibe from Illusions as well. Spartacus and what followed sounded further into a progression of style that was developing alongside slightly more commercially viable type songs...although they were not....for example Old Loves Die Hard . But enter Curt Cress and now you've got an amazing drummer in the band who is a monster player alongside people like Billy Cobham, Simon Phillips, Carl Palmer, Bill Bruford etc...but is less known in America just as PASSPORT were less known. Lucifer's Friend...Where The Groupies Killed The Blues featured piano playing in a style like Vincent Crane, Rick Wakeman ( on "Mother"), and Classical Rock style. "Prince Of Darkness ", "Where The Groupies Killed The Blues" , "Mother" and "Rose On The Vine" fall into a Progressive Rock territory more so than their debut album. "Summerdream" adapts a Bella Bartok piece . I'm not fond of it's vocal melody, but the instrumentation is interesting. The musicianship sounds very skilled particularly on "Rose On The Vine". Sometimes they are mistaken for Uriah Heep because of the John Lawton delivery but I can't see the Demons And Wizards incarnation playing the aforementioned L.F.songs without struggle based on the indication that L.F. were more skilled. Ken Hensley was a fine keyboardist and Gary Thain was a decent player but the rest of Heep were not skilled like Lucifer's Friend. Lucifer's Friend just decided to be more progressive for this one album. They sometimes drift into King Crimson territory on drums ,guitar and bass along with a kind of creepiness on Mellotron. This was the only Lucifer's Friend album to sound like this. The debut had similarities to Deep Purple and Uriah Heep. In Vineland, New Jersey the Menantico Cult were preparing to repeat the "One Hundred Year Ritual " and were interested in hiring Lucifer's Friend to perform after the ceremony. Lucifer's Friend were The Pink Mice... Certain German bands which fell under the term Krautrock may have engaged in Space Rock temporarily or rather periodically throughout their albums. Eloy being one of these groups. They were more Symphonic Prog and didn't rely on Space Rock. Unlike Can , Neu, etc. and several Eloy albums revolved around Sci-Fi stories as such concepts...fantasy. Jane had similarities to Pink Floyd and they sometimes layered their music in slow motion. Guru, Guru in the early days had a Space Rock style that sometimes crossed over into a Hendrix, Redding, and Mitchell style. Instrumentals like "Spaceship" were more in the style of Hawkwind. Of the early albums I like Kanguru the best. I felt they found the right sound by then. On albums like Guru,Guru, Don't Call Us, We Call You, Dance Of The Flames, and Mani and Some Friends ...each is an experiment in a different direction and they all differ from each other. "Another World" is a revisit to Electric Ladyland while "Woodpecker's Dream" reminds me of P.F. "Grandchester Meadows" The Jazz Rock side to Mani und Some Friends was a major change in style that surfaced on Tango Fango, Globetrotter, Live 78' and the style was...many times...reminiscent of PASSPORT. Klaus Dolinger was an amazing musician and writer. This part of Guru Guru's career I was intrigued by. Their musicianship proved to be dimensional to me. To go from being a 3 piece Rock band to sounding off in the style of PASSPORT was mind blowing to me . Ash Ra Tempel and Popol Vuh I followed for decades. Ash Ra Tempel later known as Ashra were more Electronic than Space Rock. Popol Vuh had a completely different style from anyone in Europe..and having a unique originality with their sound as a band and their style of improvisation. I often visualized the Himalayas and their natural meditative sound was spiritually sophisticated in a strange way...creating a dreamy affect in my mind.. Edited by Jacob Schoolcraft - 1 hour 24 minutes ago at 19:26 |
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