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Krautrock '70's: your favourite bands/authors?

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Poll Question: Chose three bands/authors
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
2 [3.64%]
10 [18.18%]
0 [0.00%]
10 [18.18%]
3 [5.45%]
2 [3.64%]
2 [3.64%]
1 [1.82%]
4 [7.27%]
2 [3.64%]
8 [14.55%]
2 [3.64%]
1 [1.82%]
0 [0.00%]
1 [1.82%]
0 [0.00%]
1 [1.82%]
0 [0.00%]
2 [3.64%]
0 [0.00%]
0 [0.00%]
0 [0.00%]
3 [5.45%]
0 [0.00%]
1 [1.82%]
You can not vote in this poll

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Logan View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 07 2024 at 14:58
Originally posted by jamesbaldwin jamesbaldwin wrote:

I'm not a an expert of krautrock.

My opinion about the bands I know isnt definitive, I should relisten to them in a more scientific way.

I just know Can, Faust, Ash Ra Tempel, Neu!, Popol Vuh, Amon Duull I and II, Cluster, Guru Guru. 
Voted for Faust (my fave), Popol Vuh and Amon Duul II. 
In my opinion Faust are underrated.

Surprised that until now Popolo Vuh got zero votes.

I've done this poll to study the situation and find some band to discover.



I don't know if you saw the topic, Lorenzo, and it probably won't help but I made a recent topic on German 70s albums in response to another such topic by highlighting different options (despite loving all of the options in the former topic). For that I made a playlist which might give you a taste of some albums to check out.



I go into making playlists due to your Interactive series after George (mathman) starting making them. I find the exercise in choosing and album and one track per album, and putting it together strangely satisfying.

As a lover of Krautrock/Kosmische music, it's been very nice for me to see several recent polls on the topic, and all of the appreciation that has been expressed. :) It's a little light in a rather dark world for me.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote jamesbaldwin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 08 2024 at 14:50
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Originally posted by jamesbaldwin jamesbaldwin wrote:

I'm not a an expert of krautrock.

My opinion about the bands I know isnt definitive, I should relisten to them in a more scientific way.

I just know Can, Faust, Ash Ra Tempel, Neu!, Popol Vuh, Amon Duull I and II, Cluster, Guru Guru. 
Voted for Faust (my fave), Popol Vuh and Amon Duul II. 
In my opinion Faust are underrated.

Surprised that until now Popolo Vuh got zero votes.

I've done this poll to study the situation and find some band to discover.



I don't know if you saw the topic, Lorenzo, and it probably won't help but I made a recent topic on German 70s albums in response to another such topic by highlighting different options (despite loving all of the options in the former topic). For that I made a playlist which might give you a taste of some albums to check out.



I go into making playlists due to your Interactive series after George (mathman) starting making them. I find the exercise in choosing and album and one track per album, and putting it together strangely satisfying.

As a lover of Krautrock/Kosmische music, it's been very nice for me to see several recent polls on the topic, and all of the appreciation that has been expressed. :) It's a little light in a rather dark world for me.

Oh, yes, thank you for the playlist.

Surely I'll listen to Dom, Gila, Agitation Free and Brave New World albums (and others)ù




Edited by jamesbaldwin - November 08 2024 at 14:51
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Lewian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 08 2024 at 17:04
Can and Amon Düül II are the big ones, no way can I not vote for them. For third place there are many candidates, Agitation Free, Faust, Popol Vuh,..., but I'll vote for Guru Guru as "most underrated"; they have a lot of great material (not all of it though), always happy to see Mani play. Also only one vote until now.

Albums:
Soon Over Babaluma
Yeti
Guru Guru Live (another great German live album, should be rated higher than 3.85)  


Edited by Lewian - November 08 2024 at 17:05
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 08 2024 at 22:50
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

...
Guru Guru Live (another great German live album, should be rated higher than 3.85)  
...

Hi,

Especially their early material which I like to say was the Jimi that we never heard ... and will continue not hearing!!! 

I find their first albums (all the way to Flames) excellent, but for some reason, it seems to never had taken to a lot of fans ... Not sure why we love the antics Jimi and others did, and then think that what Ax Gernrich did was not very good ... the context with which it was done, was way more interesting and far out ... at least a couple of those pieces are still played by GG in their shows ... and probably will continue until Mani stops playing, if he ever does.

The changes they made, though are really tough ... After KANGURU (their 3rd album), they changed really hard to a guitar player that was Jon McLaughlin inspired, and it actually was a very good album with 2 long cuts that were outstanding ... but never played, or sort of like ... did anyone hear that? And, of course, the jazzier, and more KRAAN minded next album (TANGO FANGO) kinda took away the "progressive" feeling around GG for me ... even though there were some things in it that were outstanding ... but will never have the appreciation or the listen it deserves. The most impressive one is the one that is ignored which is also a satire on East German music at the time (schlagger) and a very obvious statement that the new inspiration was rock music, not the old crap. "Das Liebendige Radio" was done way before the Wall came down in Berlin, and it really shows what folks thought of a lot of the arts and politics before the Wall came down ... and it has been stated that this was a part of GG that was not appreciated by a lot of authorities in Germany ... the political tone was a problem, and I think that Mani had a hard time with it, and used a lot of his antics and fun for some political moments. Had he stuck to the guitar stuff, or his playing, things might have been easier ... but getting folks to listen to the stuff, nowadays, is a HUGE hassle ... folks pass up stuff left and right ... as is the case in the dramatic thread, where it was very obvious that the comment about one album meant the person likely did not listen to the album at all, or the comment would have been different, I think!

This is the sad part of listening to the earlier stuff in the annals of progressive music, and even the rest of "krautrock" that is being treated as a bunch of meaningless songs, with people really having bizarre statements about AD2's first album, as it is ignored that the whole thing is an attack on what the "commune" thing (that created AD1 from which came AD2), was simply an excuse to jump all the women, in these events and daily/weekly parties ... and though some had politics showing, in general, the "commune" simply was an open door policy to free use. Something that also started in SF, but did not end up well when everyone showed up with flowers in their hair!

CAN was better setup than AD2 and GG ... they were from the music school and were appreciated for their music knowledge and ability, which is not something new in "krautrock" ... there were many others including the band Agitation Free getting money to go abroad to create "new music". And several members of that music school that were graduates and later the professors ... something that rock music disdains horribly .... in "progressive" and "progrock" you can't have intelligent folks that know a heck of a lot more than a small staff and song! In this sense, both AD2 and GG were, or could be thought of, as being more representative of the populace than the idea of the well educated folks kinda becoming the main drive for what became "krautrock", which was extremely evident in the theater and film, which is very clear ... though completely ignored by the fans these days, it seems.

The most important part of "krautrock" is that this is not about "songs" ... it's about a new experience ... and I think we need to express that better ... and that might mean we have to stop thinking of these folks/bands as hit makers and industry darlings ... all of them had serious release issues .... and were (eventually) first appreciated outside their country which says a lot for the media and its politics after WW2 ... it did not want to go "forward" and change with the times ... but it was a bunch of film makers and musicians that stood up and made it happen ... and for this, they all deserve the credit.

There ia a book about all this ... and the fact that there were at least 5 or 6 DIFFERENT areas with very different music and ideas, that became, ultimately, a part of the "krautrock" thing, even if some of them couldn't give a damn about it. That book makes a suggestion that the whole thing can only be one, in our minds, as the ideologies in each different area was much more prevalent, than any ideal that we might wish to think about ... it is a very good read, but it kinda makes for the whole "krautrock" thing seem to be just an accident on our parts in discovering it ... and not give the German folks credit for their creativity ... and new freedom that helped bring about a lot of the arts!


Edited by moshkito - November 10 2024 at 07:35
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Lewian View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Lewian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2024 at 16:57
Outstanding posting Pedro!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote I prophesy disaster Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2024 at 18:12
I'm not very familiar with Krautrock. I do have Faust IV and am somewhat familiar with Brainticket - Cottonwood Hill (an album I think everyone should listen to at least once in their lifetime, but not more than once a day Wink). I have listened to some other Krautrock albums, though I don't recall which albums or even which groups.
 
So, I won't vote.
 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Starshiper Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2024 at 19:11
Cluster gets a second vote, which they really deserve. For real, because of their astonishing cosmic structures and otherworldly soundscapes, Cluster should get a lot more votes!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2024 at 07:47
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

Outstanding posting Pedro!

Hi,

Thx so much ... it's nice to be appreciated for posting meaningful stuff. The part that is sad is when some folks gang-up to make bad comments that are not even a part of the discussion or subject matter, and get completely ignored by the powers that be.

I try hard to stay on par. To me, it is important that folks see "the art" ... and the saddest thing about SF is that no one has written about "the art" over there, and I'm not quite well versed enough to be able to do it, even with some studying. There are things there, within the scene, that make it very different, however, I think that the media spent so much time putting down SF, for being ugly and dirty, to the point of making sure that history looked at it badly ... but its creativity managed to live, and that is a really neat bit of inspiration ... a lot of which is meaningless beyond the "hit songs" ... so folks can post/discuss war songs, but "Foreign Son" is not important ... or heck ... The Edgar Broughton Band ... was incendiary ... (American Boy Soldier/Out Demons Out and other pieces) and a part of many demonstrations.


Edited by moshkito - November 10 2024 at 07:48
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