With that out of the way, here's two albums (and one further archival album) by the bleep & tweak master of Cluster, and the sound sculptor whose importance is impossible to overestimate - Moebius & Plank. Their original records of the early 80s proved that the offbeat, accessible-avant-garde spirit of krautrock was still alive, and they began with Rastakraut Pasta.
The September 1979 downtime in Conny's Studio that created the first Moebius & Plank album was an exercise in just having fun with strange sounds, and sculpting them over chugging, wheezing rhythm tracks - dub by any other name. By the third track, Holger Czukay has dropped by to add fitting spare basslines to the next three songs. And it's the second side of Rastakraut Pasta that I love the most - vocodered nonsense reggae, then a gorgeous melodic call & response with a stunning Rother-esque coda, and ending with two more experiements in mixing simple sounds into deepest outer space.
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pw: sgtg
The follow-up to Rastakraut Pasta was the more streamlined, uptempo Material. Its first side, only two tracks long, was dominated by the lengthy motorik groove of Conditionierer, in which layers of guitars were accompanied by the occasional sax squak and fun little bits of percussion. In creating more danceable music, Moebius & Plank were on the way to their spectacular collaboration with Mani Neuemeier, Zero Set - which previously had its own post here. The next track, Infiltration, returns to slower, dubbier waters, with bits of morse code, wispy synths and other sounds swimming around in the mix.
On Material's second half, Tollkühn is a neat distorted sequencer vehicle, then Osmo-Fantor is another pulsing soundscape that sets up for the gorgeous finale of Nordöstliches Gefühl. A slow rhythm track carries along beautiful synth work that could've almost sat on one of the Cluster/Eno records. Overall, Material is an even more minimalist record than Rastakraut Pasta in terms of ideas, but in Moebius & Plank's hands the ideas on each track are never less than brilliant.
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Moebius & Plank's final duo album was shelved after recording for whatever reason, and first saw the light of day in 1995. It was recorded in 1986, a year before Plank's death, so may have been abandoned due to his declining health - or perhaps 1983 if you believe one of the reissues, but as all the others state '86 the odd one out is most likely a typo.
In any case, the sound has certainly been updated from the two official Moebius & Plank albums, opening with a nice electronic groove, before a sharp left turn into almost EBM harshness. There are still more ambient experiments in sound, such as Echaos (although even that gets taken over by synth stabs towards the end), but overall this is the brightest and most upbeat Moebius & Plank record.
Muffler A in particular is a nice guilty pleasure that comes with a ghostly dubversion in Muffler B that ends the album before three slightly unneccesary remixes...YMMV. Even if En Route is an archival release that lacks the feel of a coherent, finished album, there's still lots to love - the little bits of vocoder in The Truth, the crazed sequences in Pick The Rubber; there's more than enough flourishes of Moebius & Plank individuality to give En Route a deserved place in their slim discography.
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Alan, happy new year, extremely grateful for bending our ears in so many wonderful directions, and thanks for going strong for five years.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteExcellent as usual.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot
Regards
musicyoucan
You're the first site I go to in the morning. We like so much of the same stuff that if you post something I haven't heard of, I get pretty excited. Thanks. I appreciate you!
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year Alan thanks for all the great music!
ReplyDeleteNever heard any of these releases except for RastaKraut which I own.
Any chance for a request? Been looking for this Catero release from the 80's Daniel Goldberg & Pino Marrone – Metropolis have had zero luck finding it....
Don't have it I'm afraid, but will definitely keep an eye out - looks great!
DeleteAll great. But Material is the one. Recorded in that almost unfathomable year of 1981.
ReplyDeleteHere's a little scenario that I've often conjured in my mind around the recording of "Tollkuhn". The setting : Conny's studio, in the summer of that year. Dieter drops by one night to hang out...
Dieter : "So what have you been working on?"
Conny : "Oh, some different stuff. Here, I'll play you some of it."
(Plays him some works in progress from Ultravox, Eurythmics and - most of all - DAF)
Dieter : "Hmmmm. Nice.(...walks over to nearby synth...) So let's see here...roll some tape for a minute..."
When I was first undergoing musical mind expansion via German psychedelic rock I listened to Rastakraut Pasta and found it sort of laughable and wondered why on earth Julian Cope would include it in his top 50 krautrock albums list. After getting more into NDW music and realizing that Conny Plank was one of the main bridges between the two genres, I really dig it now... and having been unaware of its 2 companion albums, this is a real treat. Mixing dub reggae with krautrock might initially seem silly, but funky beats and heavy herbal consumption are often common elements, so why not?
ReplyDeleteThe compilers of The Crack in the Cosmic Egg were a little off base comparing this music to techno... maybe Art of Noise's experimental New Wave, but these albums also have more in common with Can's experimental grooves from 1975 onward than any techno I can think of.
Great post, one of your best! Thanks.
Source escapes me now, but I remember a retrospective review of Soon Over Babaluma saying that its dubbiest moments were "not inspired by, but contemporaneous with developments at King Tubby's place"... definitely an interesting kinship between dub reggae and krautrock, both real "mixing desk as instrument" genres at their boldest.
DeleteAs for techno... sounds like the Freeman brothers reaching beyond their area of expertise there! Crack, Krautrocksampler and England's Hidden Reverse are three things I always feel like I've read, even though I haven't, due to them being excerpted/referenced so often...
Speaking of Moebius & Plank: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D2ZWXnibjfk
ReplyDeleteI'm going to give 'Material' a listen on the strength of your reference to 'Zero Set', an album I enjoy a lot. Many thanks! And five years sounds good to me. But do whatever need to, I'll be here.
ReplyDelete-Brian