Other German Prog/psych which I reviewed :

private     Cactus Cooper : Gentlemaniac (D,2002)**°
on http://progressive.homestead.com/progressive.html#anchor_52

Black Rills Rec.     Werwolf : creation (LP reissue + 3-track demo) (D,1982,1979)***°
on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog.html#anchor_54

PlopF.S.Blumm & Friends : Sesamsamen (D,2004)***°
reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog13.html#anchor_164

Nasoni Rec. Zone Six : Live Wired 2004 (D,2005)****
is reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog15.html#anchor_158

Nasoni Rec.    Sula Bassana and the Nasoni Pop Art Experimental Band : vol.1 (D,2006)*** is reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog20.html#anchor_197

Elektrohash     My Sleeping Karma (D,2005)***'
is reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog21.html#anchor_229

Sulatron-Rec.   Electric Orange : Platte (D,2003,re.2007)**
Sulatron-Rec.   Electric Orange : Morbus (D,2007)****
are reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog21.html#anchor_245


related album :
Finders Keepers Rec.  Bruno Spoerri : Glückskugel (CH,rec.1971-1978, pub.2006)****
from Switzerland, he worked with Brainticket ; his solo release
is reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/prog16.html#anchor_157
Spalax  Manuel Göttsching : E2-E4 (1982)****'
MG-Art    Manuel Göttsching : E2-E4 live -mcd- (2005)****

Manuel Göttsching founded in 1970, Ash Ra Temple with Harmut Enke and Klaus Schulze,in a time where labels changed strategy by having a more idealistic mentality and were willing to have try-out sub-labels with more improvised and experimental music. Thanks to that the birth of cosmic music had free road for development, with Ashra Temple as one of the first groups, with several releases, followed by the related studio project Cosmic Jokers which is a kind of DJ studio mix of previously recorded stuff, and Tangerine Dream (which at first still had Klaus Schulze), and another side-project by Walter Wegmüller with Cosmic Couriers (which included M.Göttsching) called Tarot. Ashra Temple recorded a lot more, which was later published as the private tapes. In 1974, Manuel Göttsching recorded his first solo album, 'Inventions for Electric Guitar', while Ash Ra Temple still existed but soon would change its name to Ashra, changing a bit their style.

I read about Manuel Göttsching’s 1981 album called “E2-E4”, which caused quite a stir especially much later, when electronic rhythms were used by DJ’s in dance music, the album was rediscovered and was seen as a pioneering work that predated the whole techno scene. How Göttsching came to these ideas on this album is logical because also in Ashra Temple they have been experimenting to produce a kind of trance state effect with use of sequencers. On "E2-E4" this is done in combination with guitar, also without drums but with extra use of programmed rhythms. The result is in fact so much techno it became one of the most used albums for techno that in fact wasn’t techno.

In 2005 Manuel Göttsching got the idea of using the composition for a different, chamber music version. It was the 10-piece group Zeitkratzer (string trio, accordion, brass quartet, drums) who performed this live with Manuel Göttsching on acoustic guitar. Instead of techno it sounds more like classical music with something that could be minimalism, but that originally as a piece wasn't meant like that. In fact it still sound more like danceable rock music with at times, a kind of Penguin Café Orchestra touch. Manuel Göttsching plays an acoustic guitar improvisation on the theme. The music surely has kept its attractive danceable swing, and shows classical variation.

In the radioshow I said about it : "Like with “In C” from Terry Riley, this piece could inspire to develop different and simultaneously interesting other versions."

Audio E2-E4 : "Ruhige Nervosität"/"Quiet Nervousness", "E2-E4 "video : "metamorphose"
Info E2-E4 : http://www.ashra.com/disco/1841e2.htm
& http://cdbaby.com/cd/gottsching84 & http://www.ashra.com/disco/1a53e2.htm
Other articles : http://remixmag.com/mag/remix_manuel_gottsching/
Dutch article : http://www.ashra.com/press/pics/nrc_handelsblad_2006.jpg

Other review : http://www.soniccuriosity.com/sc235.htm
Homepage Zeitkratzer : http://www.zeitkratzer.de/
with info on release on http://www.zeitkratzer.de/...
Concert review : http://www.tribute-to-ashra.de/Gallery/ReviewE2E4live2005.htm#eng

Info on Götsching : http://www.starsend.org/ashra.html
& http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_G%C3%B6ttsching
Reviews of many Ahra/Götsching related items : http://gnosis2000.net/reviews/ashra.htm
Interview : http://www.eurock.com/features/ashra/index.html
& http://www.tokafi.com/15questions/interview-with-manuel-goettsching/view

Homepage : http://www.ashra.com/
& with audio : http://www.myspace.com/manuelgoettsching
& on http://www.myspace.com/manuelgoettschingofficialfansite

Info on Klaus Schulze : http://www.klaus-schulze.com

Grading of albums I have with Klaus Schulze or M.Götsching :

Tangerine Dream : Electronic Meditations (1969)***°°
Ashra Temple : Ash Ra Tempel (1971)****'
Ashra Temple : Schwingungen  (1972)****'
Ashra Temple : Seven Up  (1973)**°°
Ashra Temple : Join Inn  (1973)***°°
Ashra Temple : Starring Rosi (1973)***° ?
Walter Wegmüller : The Cosmic Couriers present : Tarot (1973)***°'
The Cosmic Jokers : Gilles Zeitschiff (1974)***° 
The Cosmic Jokers : Sci Fi Party (1974)***° 
The Cosmic Jokers : Galactic Supermarket (1974)***°
The Cosmic Jokers : Planeten Sit In (1974)****' 
The Cosmic Jokers : The Cosmic Jokers (1974)****° 
Klaus Schulze : Blackdance (1974)****°
Klaus Schulze : Timewind (1975)****°
Ashra : Le Berceau de Cristal (1975)****? -(still on my wishing list, but I heard it well)-
Klaus Schulze : Cyborg (1975)****°
Klaus Schulze :"X" (1983)***°°
Klaus Schulze, Rainer Bloss, Ernst Fuchs : Aphrica (1984)**°?

My personal top 17 of Krautrock related albums :

Gila : Bury My heart at wounded knee
The Cosmic Jokers :The Cosmic Jokers
Amon Düül II :Tanz der Leminghe
Amon Düül II :Phallus Dei
Emtidi : Saat
Popol Vuh : Hosianna Mantra & Tantric Songs
Hölderlin :Hölderlins Traum
Brainticket :Cottenwoodhill
Kraftwerk : 2
Deuter : D
Witthüser & Westrup : Trips & Träume
Dom
Yatha Siddra : Yatha Siddra
Embryo : Opal
Embryo : Rache
Embryo : Rocksession
Xhol Caravan : Motherfuckers Gmbh
     
Spalax  Manuel Göttsching : Inventions For Electric Guitar (1975)***??

Göttsching’s album sound as if it is built up by echoing repetitions and loops, but it’s made entirely of multitrack guitar. The effect is also as if this is electronic music (with the same kind of result big synthesizers produce, with sequenced variations), but it isn’t..

(full review might be added later)

Audio : "Echo Waves", "Quasarsphere", "Pluralis"
Info : http://www.ashra.com/disco/1751in.htm

Reviews of many Ahra/Götsching related items : http://gnosis2000.net/reviews/ashra.htm

There is also a helppage with a bit more on Krautrock.
       and a seperate page on German Speaking Rock : Deutschrock.
       There's also a separate page on German Prog Folk.
       Psych Folk group Fit & Limo has a seperate page.
humor musician Harald "Sack" Ziegler has a separate webpage as well


Go back to the Prog/Psych Rock index
Go back to the main index of the Radio Program


Spalax Rec.   Popol Vuh : Sei Still Wisse Ich Bin (1980)****°
Spalax Rec.     Popol Vuh : Sinaï Desert -VHS- (1980,pub.1996)***

Introduction to the works of Popol Vuh :

Popol Vuh’s repertoire is impressive, almost from start to finish. The band’s first album was very different, with more moog electronic music, and is the only album I don’t have yet, for various reasons. After that, Popol Vuh’s repertoire has a more “recognisable” character with many variations, forms and inspirations. “In Garten Des Pharaos”, like the first album, also has moog improvisations (which were later used in different forms for the “Nosferatu" soundtrack). “Yoga” (1976) is different as well, but was in fact not a Popol Vuh album, but some Indian musicians who Florian Fricke produced. Also beware of some of the last albums under the name of Popol Vuh ; also these were no Florian Fricke albums, but contains very different music from his son (I think these are “City Raga” and “Shepherd's Symphony”), but were also produced by him. Last album which I think still is from Florian is “Messa Orfeo” (1998), a very different, soundtrack kind of concept, with some boring spoken word and accompanying music ; it is for me less rewarding compared to all other works. A few are more (calm) progressive albums (like “Das Hohelied..”), of which I think “Einsjäger,Siebenjäger” might be one of the highlights in that direction. Therefore he had his crew of participators of which two people most often became an inevitable part of the sound, with Daniel Fichelscher on guitar and drums, providing the progressive touch and Djon Yung on vocals confirming the eastern religious touch. There are also many religious inspirations with preference to some different, not obvious combinations of religions and music (with references to Old Egypt, Aztec culture and Indian music) and more often with Biblical inspirations. (like “Seligpreisung”). Favourites in the Indian/Christian combinations are “Hosianna Mantra” & “Tantric Songs”. Another highlight of religious aspirations, with some overtone choir arrangements is “Sei Still..”. All music, from start to finish sounds “timeless”, with no stylistic directions or much differences referring to when it was recorded. They have some kind of meditative power outside everything (in time and style), with a style which is like a genre of its own. Some people started to say how much Popol Vuh’s music predated New Age before it existed, with completely integral musical inspirations, but also such a category hardly grabs the music. Surely, it can be regarded as ‘meditative music’. All was created after having ‘calmed down’ and ‘brought to some essence’ through meditation before the studio work. Master film director Werner Herzog became a big fan of Florian Fricke’s music and used it in many of his films (but rarely was it ever composed for it). The choice of music for certain movies made these albums like different concepts on their own.

The name Popol Vuh refers to the only saved book from the huge library of the Aztecs, which was burned down by the Spanish, because it was easier to conquer a destroyed high society. They might also have been afraid of the darker sides of the Aztec religion. The naïve ideas of Christianity was like a dark shadow giving them a way to overpower others with self-confirming excuses.

One side-project of Florian Fricke is also very special, and has beautiful piano by him. It is Gila’s first album, a concept around the “Wounded knee” massacre. I don’t know of any other album that showed, with so much power and vision, the dignity of native Indians and its culture, even more than from any expression I’ve heard so far before from direct native Indian sources or origins ! (review on next page).

Review of the CD :

From the whole repertoire of Florian Fricke, I think that this album more or less resumes the religious aspirations put into a musical scenery, in some kind of ecstasy form thanks to really impressive choral arrangements, and a kind of Tibetan percussion. I have no idea where Florian Fricke got or learned his musical and spiritual backgrounds for this, because the harmonies presented here, assume some great deeper knowledge or understandings. The music sound like religious music as if from some hidden past life origin, as if referring to a more common source for various cultures (native American, African?, Eastern, far-eastern, Byzantine,..) with the addition of a contemporary touch with electric guitar and percussion. Also Renate Knaup (Amon Düül II) sings with it. It was especially the choral arrangement which impressed me very much when I first heard this. Once, I fell asleep with it, and I dreamed about a really impressive religious and “magical” ritual. The choral harmonies contain many overtones, and have a repetitive (religious) rhythm in them that builds up a more communal secular energy, uplifting the energy to certain heights. This is alternated with some guitar passages which have a more calming-down nature. The main theme is a song led by Florian on vocals, and refers to the title “be quiet, I am”. This has once more biblical references (to the passage of the last supper). Last guitar track in that way sounds also like a perfect goodbye.

Even when the album is only a bit over 34 minutes, the score showed a whole process of saturation and liberation, and in that way is completely satisfying. 

Review of the VHS :

It took a while before I was able to see the video of this short film, because not many people still have VHS (it was not re-released on DVD yet). The movie of accompanying images presents the music in a perfect environment of slowly moving and changing views, recorded in the Sinai desert, starting the music and the first images with the rising and falling of the sun. The visions follow a prophet dressed in white moving slowly through the desert while others, also dressed in long white clothes follow him, and surround him, watch him meditate or sing, now and then seen from different angles or with the prophet in close up. For the prophet a girl with bright eyes has been taken, with additional beard, making him look like a transcendent looking creature that is moved, and is one with the greatness of the environment while singing. The moving figures through the landscape give something majestic, unusual, mystical spirituality that fits with the environment and still is independently human. The sunlight makes long shadows. At times when the circle closes around the prophet it is as if he is like the sun for the environment and where the shadow of each member that followed him became like the presentations of the ray of sun. Even when the whole concept and images are simple and almost amateur-like they are convincing in giving the message of the music a serene presentation.

PS. I also learned from the video that the involved choir was the Choir Ensemble from the Bayrische State Opera.

Audio : "Wehe Khorazin"
Info : http://www.venco.com.pl/~acrux/synai.htm & here
& http://musicforyoureyes.blogspot.com/2007/01/sei-still-wisse-ich-bin.html
Review and audio on amazon.com
Fan pages : http://www.popolvuh.nl & http://www.popolvuh.it/
Intro on Popol Vuh : http://www.ambientmusicguide.com/pages/P/popolVuh.php
& http://www.scaruffi.com/vol3/popolvuh.html

Personal gradings of Popol Vuh albums :

Popol Vuh : In den Garten des Pharaos (1971)****°
Popol Vuh : Hosianna Mantra (1972)*****
Gila : Bury my heart at wounded knee (1973)*****
Popol Vuh : Sing, for song drives away the wolves (1974)***°
Popol Vuh : Seligpreisungen (1974)****°
Popol Vuh : Einsjäger Siebenjäger (1975)*****
Popol Vuh : Das Hohelied Salomos (1975)****°
Popol Vuh : Aguire + Spirit of Peace,part 2 (1976)****°
Popol Vuh : Letzte Tage, Letzte Nachte (1976)***°
Popol Vuh : Coeur de verre / Herz aus Glas (1977)***°°
Popol Vuh : On the way to a little way (Nosferatu - soundtrack)
                (=Brüder des Schattens, Sohne des Licht) (1978)*****
Popol Vuh : Bruder des Schattens (1979)***°°
Popol Vuh : Tantric Songs (= Die Nacht der Seele) (1979)*****
Popol Vuh : Florian Fricke (1979)****°
Popol Vuh : Sei still, wisse ich bin (1980)****°
Popol Vuh : Agape Agape (1983)***°°
Popol Vuh : Spirit of Peace (1985)***°°
Popol Vuh : Messa di Orfeo (1989)*°°
Dred Fox Prod      Taras Bulba : Von Der Wahrheit (2004)*'?

review might be added later

German info : http://www.shackmedia.de/music/pro_taras.html
German review : http://www.musikzirkus-magazin.de/dateien/Pages/CD_Kritiken/rock/taras_bulba_von_der_wahrheit.htm
Info : http://www.sireena.de/dredfox.html
Captain Trip Rec.    Zweistein : Trip/Flip Out/Meditation -3cd- (1970,re.2007)**°°°

What started in Germany as an underground experiment with mostly underground labels quickly became a movement called Krautrock, explosively experimental, as its name suggests. It is incredible how out of a cover-based entertainment industry serious fundaments were taken for granted. In no time the whole society was busy with looking for new foundations, no matter how weird experiments to be explored. It was the most adventurous times for Germany, incomparable to any other time or place anywhere else.

Suzanne Doucet, a popular pop singer and TV actress and hostess, living within the early changes of the times, also felt a need to express something of what she had in mind, an avant-garde project based upon sound collages and sound paintings. She had produced her first pop hits entirely herself with her own 4-track recorder. In the meanwhile she recorded sounds everywhere she could, mostly in Munich and Prague. And with her sister she experienced and built up a world based upon sound discoveries that developed with it a creative process based upon 'hearing' only. Somewhere around this time she also had her own experiences with LSD. In 1969 she sat in a studio with recording engineer Peter Kramper (engineer for Liberty Records) to edit and recollect the sessions. There were added effects that came up almost completely spontaneously, something which gave an alienated effect as if things appeared that weren’t heard to come from anywhere at all. She called the result of a 3 albums full of material, “trip”, “flip out” and “meditation” which was related with the idea of what she thought this generation was heading to, of course combined with her own experiences, and conclusions, in a similar natural and spontaneously developed order.

The recording sessions were liked very much by the label Phonogram who was fascinated with the music. The label had tried before strange music with early Cluster and Kraftwerk (and also in France Philips had their own section of contemporary avant-garde records). The final album sold 6000 copies, which I think still is relatively good. Not to associate this with her pop/TV status she disguised herself under the name of Jacques Dorian, and under the group name of Zweistein (=“twostone”), a name which seemed to have been inspired from Einstein (=“onestone”), a disguise name for a visionary mind behind the music, no matter how primitive the skills she exposed, or deliberately held back, were to some degree a certain idea of a first step towards a “milestone”.

The triple CD like the title assumes, has three different sonic concepts. This can be read into the evolution, but then it also confuses a bit because there still is a certain randomness in how the material is collected, and then sonically connected by extra effects : such a context does completely reveal its possible purpose, and then it seems as if a certain amateurism and lack of architectural plan leads the concept, as if it is only in a state of creative becoming. Within its pure spontaneity it still is hard to imagine how to give more structure to this without losing its spontaneity, which reaches unique proportions amidst what is happening. As three different phases in this creative process however it makes perfect sense.

It is as if disc one experiments like an innocent child, and in that way remains deliberately naïve without falling back to skills or patterns, discovering essences of sounds, and let the creative discovery develop its own stories. The voice is explored carefully with mouth clicks, gurgles, laughs, breathing, the making of strange sounds, rhythms are clicked directly on the recording device, and a guitar is discovered with early improvisation as if one never touched a guitar before, and also the editor, sound engineer or producer are like entering a new world where one is meditative with sound and thus also with production effects, which are added sporadically and with small exaggerations they form islands of sounds and colouring on its own, becoming effects like feedback winds. On side B environmental sounds are also adapted, as well as the “Very Simple Song” from Zweistein’s only single, in a more simplified detached form. And also the production effects form a world of sounds on its own, with switched intermissions of sound-manipulation, and more exaggerating effects.

On the second LP a recording of children, many and few, are in a completely flipped way stuffed with speeded up effects and reverses, becoming a noisy exaggerated soundtrack, which is noisy, aggressive, and completely alienated. It is not the easiest album, and is a bit long and is more linear in its concept compared to the other two albums. It is adventurous but has a certain simplicity that does not look back on its growing form of alienation.

On the third disc however it is as if all such ideas are at ease with each other and became synthesized to a new world of expressions, of performance combined with found sound, experimenting effects, and this within a soundtrack structure sounds extremely logically conceived. The binding island-like effect sounds this time are bird-sound like electronica. Keyboard themes come and go, along with clocks in mind, a barrel circus organ recording, and acoustic improvisations with flutes, percussion and harmonica or mouthflute, as well as electrified and acoustic guitar, which seem much more sensitive and embedded in a richer environment. As a bonus track the only Zweisten single is added, which more or less concludes the triple album even better, because they sound as a slight return of real themes that were hidden in the concept, as those with more directed compact focus on real songs. It becomes a conclusion which brings the weird facts to the plane of normal reality, which is a welcome return after a weird concept like this.

The reissue by Captain Trip is really done with an eye for perfection. The original mirror effect of the cover is reproduced as well as the glossy silvery inside cover. It is done in a nice mini-LP format package. Recommended.

Audio & info : http://www.myspace.com/zweistein1970 & http://cdbaby.com/cd/zweistein
Info : http://www.geocities.com/krautrockgroup/articles.html
Label entry : http://www.captaintrip.co.jp/ger96.html
Review : http://www.tonevendor.com/item/25997
& http://www.volcanictongue.com/?p=175
& on http://www.waysidemusic.com/...
& http://www.forcedexposure.com/artists/zweistein.html
Fallout Rec.     Joy Unlimited (1970,re.2007)**°

Since the late ‘60s many Western countries tried to launch some psychpop/rock groups with strong female vocalists (Earth & Fire, Circus 2000, Analogy,…). In its early days the influence of mainstream pop had its equal share of influence, something which we, when looking back to “progressive” bands don’t always expect to hear, except when bluesrock is in focus.
For Joy Unlimited you can find a soulful rock form influenced by 60s pop (Dusty Springield can be recognised in at least one track), blues (Janis Joplin might be an influence, also for the way Joy Unlimited’s approach seems to try to create a more “black” power in the music, more than once), and soulfunk (screaming at times just a bit like Tina Turner as a matter of speaking). While having a certain range in her voice, Joy Fleming isn’t always as convincing as the bigger examples of her time, also because the songs seems often to be written more for the effect and general approach, the music in general has all the right feelings for such a powering approach. And although you can notice the potential of the group that should be able to have a more progressive or psychedelic approach, which makes that little extra, the band remains in this first album in the poprock field, but with a certain power brewing underneath. The second album, “Schmetterlinge” (1971) therefore is more known. Nice to hear is a string arrangement to the rock track “I feel no Grudge”, one of the stronger tracks I believe.

Label info on http://www.soundlinkmusic.com/...
Info on group : http://www.gepr.net/j.html#JOYUNLIMITED

GERMAN PROGRESSIVE : KRAUTROCK, ...
review page 2


Manuel Götsching ('75,'83,'05)
(&Tangerine Dream, Ashra Temple, Klaus Schulze, Ashra) (...)
Popol Vuh (...,'80,'80/'96)
Taras Bulba ('04)
Zweistein ('70/'08)
Joy Unlimited ('70/'07)