Showing posts with label Zeitkratzer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zeitkratzer. Show all posts

Monday, 20 September 2021

Reinhold Friedl / Zeitkratzer - Kore (2016)

German new music ensemble Zeitkratzer were previously featured here tackling early Kraftwerk - see link below.  Here they perform a work composed by their director Reinhold Friedl, which he created as a homage to Iannis Xenakis - always good news to my ears. With Zeitkratzer having already tackled Xenakis in the past, they perform this noisy tribute with aplomb.

Kore is a 53-minute work in four continuous sections, scored for six amplified wind and string instruments plus piano and guitar, and was recorded live in Hamburg in January 2013.  Straight away the Xenakian roar of works like Persepolis comes to mind, as well, as the queasy, slippery strings of his work in that format.  The second (and initially the third) sections are only slightly more restrained, and the remainder picks up the intensity again, like towards the end of La Légende D'Eer, before dropping away to an eerie finale.  The close-miked instrumentation and high-quality sound allow for microscopic detail as well as the thrill of the full-on sonic assault, and the whole composition is a worthy homage whilst displaying the power and intensity of Friedl and his ensemble.

pw: sgtg

Zeitkratzer at SGTG:

Wednesday, 29 November 2017

Zeitkratzer plays Kraftwerk, live at Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (2017)

Berlin-based new music ensemble Zeitkratzer have been around since the late 90s, releasing numerous albums of work by Stockhausen, Cage et al, as well as two volumes of tracks by Whitehouse, and even a fully scored version of Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music.  Artistic director Reinhold Friedl jokes that "everybody thought Zeitkratzer is a cover band" following the success of the latter, which made a friend suggest to him that they should cover some early Kraftwerk, leading to an album earlier this year.

I don't have any of those albums at present, but I'm definitely keen to stock up on the evidence of this concert held on 18 November, as part of the 40th Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival and broadcast live on BBC Radio 3.  How about this for a setlist, Kraftwerk fans: Harmonika, Stratovarius, Wellenlange, Vom Himmel Hoch, Atem, Ruckzuck.  Half of those didn't feature on the album, hopefully suggesting a second volume to come.

Friedl agreed with his friend that early Kraftwerk would be a good idea, and an important one, given the continued absence of their first three records on any official reissue - he wryly takes Ralf & Florian to task here for "a falsification of their history".  No disagreement from me there, but most importantly, how does it sound?  Pretty damn good on this evidence.  The material taken from the first Kraftwerk album is inventively arranged whilst sticking faithfully to the structure of the originals.  The stuff from Kraftwerk 2 however is in a different league.  Always Kraftwerk's most experiemental record, this leaves plenty of room for Zeitkratzer to take the sparse source material somewhere unique - in particular, the lazy jamming of Wellenlange being transformed into a thing of understated beauty (just listen to that piano part!) was a revelation to me.  Highly recommended.

link