Karl Bartos book (ex-Kraftwerk): The Sound of the Machine

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I just finished Karl’s massive book. This is the one to get if you want to know about how the classic Kraftwerk albums were made.

A few quick tidbits:

- The flickering synth sound on “Neon Lights” was created by Florian plugging Ralf’s Polymoog output into a Minimoog to process it and triggering the Minimoog with a sequencer.

- The strange, watery drum sound on Numbers was created by sending the drums (programmed by Karl) through a Bode Frequency Shifter.

- Ralf and Karl co-wrote most songs from the Man-Machine through Electric Cafe. Florian took care of speech synthesis and sound effects. Wolfgang didn’t do much in the studio other than building the cabinets for the synths. He did play live though.

- If you’ve ever felt stuck working on music, the saga of making Electric Cafe (aka Techno Pop) is the ultimate worst case of this! Multiple trips to studios in Germany, the UK, and New York working with different engineers and multiple equipment upgrades across 5 years to produce an album that no one was happy with. :o

The 600 page book covers his entire life in exhaustive detail, much more than Kraftwerk - his parents, his classical training, playing in cover bands, being a professor, his solo work, etc. Before he tells you how he composed a song, he feels compelled to give you the history of Western music from Bach to Stravinsky. So if you do get this, be prepared it is incredibly long winded.

I listened to the unabridged 19.5 hour English-translation audiobook which presented its own minor challenges. The reader is a native German speaker who flew past German names and phrases too quickly and mispronounced some English words. However, it was still pretty listenable.

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Frantz wrote: Tue Sep 19, 2023 12:19 am - If you’ve ever felt stuck working on music, the saga of making Electric Cafe (aka Techno Pop) is the ultimate worst case of this! Multiple trips to studios in Germany, the UK, and New York working with different engineers and multiple equipment upgrades across 5 years to produce an album that no one was happy with. :o
This crushes me. I absolutely love Techno Pop (the proper name to go with. They got it right with the 2009 reissue).
This album is on my top 3 Kraftwerk albums:
1. Radio Activity
2. Techno Pop
3. Computer World
CW is number 3 because it's too damn popular.
Ask not what your DAW can do for you, but what you can do with your DAW

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musique

non stop

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boing boom tschak

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? ? ? wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:45 am This album is on my top 3 Kraftwerk albums:
1. Radio Activity
2. Techno Pop
3. Computer World
CW is number 3 because it's too damn popular.
Oddly enough your top 2 are their least commercially successful albums from their peak years. Karl called them "flops" if I remember correctly. I would put T.E.E. at #1 but I like some songs on all of their albums.

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T.E.E. is good just for the whole extended ride with Metal on Metal and Abzug, and the continuity between Europe Endless and Franz Schubert.

I'm pretty fond of Radio-Activity and The Man-Machine. And even Tour de France.

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raiderpdog wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 9:05 pm boing boom tschak
:tu:

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Frantz wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 12:31 am
? ? ? wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:45 am This album is on my top 3 Kraftwerk albums:
1. Radio Activity
2. Techno Pop
3. Computer World
CW is number 3 because it's too damn popular.
Oddly enough your top 2 are their least commercially successful albums from their peak years. Karl called them "flops" if I remember correctly. I would put T.E.E. at #1 but I like some songs on all of their albums.
Who was it that said geniuses rarely appreciate their best work? Some get to appreciate and realize the genius behind what they have accomplished way later in life, many don't.
Who knows, maybe one day Neil Young will appreciate Trans.
Ask not what your DAW can do for you, but what you can do with your DAW

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