Name | Neu! |
---|---|
Caption | Klaus Dinger and Michael Rother by Hadley Hudson, 2004. |
Background | group_or_band |
Origin | Düsseldorf, Germany |
Genre | KrautrockExperimental |
Years active | 1971–19751985–1986 |
Label | Brain Records |
Associated acts | KraftwerkLa DüsseldorfLa! Neu?HarmoniaDie Engel des HerrnConny Plank |
Website | neu2010.com |
Past members | Klaus DingerMichael RotherEberhard KranemannUli TrepteThomas DingerHans LampeConrad MatheiuGeorg Sessenhausen |
Neu! (trademarked NEU! in block capitals, , ) was a German band formed by Klaus Dinger and Michael Rother after their split from Kraftwerk in the early 1970s. Though the band had minimal commercial success during its existence, Neu! are retrospectively considered one of the founding fathers of Krautrock and a significant influence on artists including David Bowie, Brian Eno, Iggy Pop, PiL, Boredoms, Joy Division, Gary Numan, Ultravox, Simple Minds, Negativland, Stereolab, Radiohead, The Horrors, Electrelane, and much of the current electronic music scene.
Drummer Klaus Dinger had joined Kraftwerk midway through sessions for their eponymous debut album. Guitarist Michael Rother was then recruited to the Kraftwerk line-up on completion of the album. (Rother had been playing in a local band called The Spirits of Sound, the line-up of which also included drummer Wolfgang Flür, who would himself go on to join Kraftwerk two years later.)
Kraftwerk founder Ralf Hütter left the band at this point and, for six months, Kraftwerk consisted of a trio of Rother, Dinger and Florian Schneider. This line-up played sporadic gigs and made a live appearance on German TV programme Beat Club (recently made available on DVD). Attempted recording sessions at Conny Plank's studio were unsuccessful ("a difference of temperament", Rother was later to remark), and Dinger and Rother parted company from Schneider and began a new project with Plank: Neu! (Schneider rejoined Hütter and the pair continued recording the second Kraftwerk album with Plank.)
Their eponymous first album sold very little by mainstream standards (though 30,000 records was a lot for an "underground" band), yet is today considered a masterpiece by many, including influential artists such as David Bowie, Brian Eno, Iggy Pop and Thom Yorke of Radiohead. It included the Motorik benchmark tracks "Hallogallo" and "Negativland" (the band Negativland took their name from this track), and bizarre "songs" like "Sonderangebot".
Their second album, Neu! 2, features some of the earliest examples of musical remixes. The band, excited to record another album, decided to expand their limits by purchasing several instruments. With the money they had left as an advance from the record company, they could only record half an album's worth of material. The company would not increase their advance because the first album did not sell anywhere close to well and the label did not see a reason to further finance what was most likely to become a flop. To rectify the lack of material, the band filled the second side with manipulated versions of their already released single, "Neuschnee"/"Super", playing back each song at different speeds and sometimes warbling the music by messing with the tape machine or placing the record off center on the turntable. The song "Super 16," unwittingly, became the theme song to the 1976 martial arts cult classic Master of the Flying Guillotine by Jimmy Wang Yu. This film was later referenced by Quentin Tarantino in Kill Bill (Volume 1) by also featuring the track "Super 16".
Dinger and Rother were both very different when they were left to their own devices, and this led to their final album of the 1970s, Neu! '75. Side One was Rother's more ambient productions which were similar to the first album, albeit more keyboard driven. Side Two (particularly the song "Hero") was acknowledged as important influence by many later involved in the UK's punk rock scene, with Dinger's sneering, unintelligible vocals searing across a distorted Motorik beat with aggressive single chord guitar poundings.
To aid with performing on the album, and more importantly, live, Hans Lampe and brother Thomas Dinger were enlisted to help execute more music than was possible by two men. Upon its release, and arguably to this day, Neu! '75 is the most diverse record available from the Krautrock scene. While this can be seen as a positive point, the differences in musical direction (as well as personal issues) not only isolated the Dinger/Rother duo, it isolated their already small fan base. Neu! broke up after the release of Neu! '75.
Neu are highly praised in Julian Cope's "Krautrocksampler", along with other great Krautrock artists such as Kraftwerk and Can, and Cope has also written a song called "Michael Rother" which appears on CD2 of the Deluxe edition of the album Jehovahkill.
The two Dingers and Lampe formed La Düsseldorf, who were equally cited as influential by David Bowie in a 1979 interview with a music magazine. Their first album; La Düsseldorf was released in 1976.
An example of the sharp contrast between Dinger and Rother was evidenced by such tracks as "Crazy", Rother's attempt at pop, and "'86 Commercial Trash", a Dingerian collage of dialogue and sound effects from Germany's television commercials of that year. The work that took place in these sessions would resurface in late 1995 as Neu! 4, see below.
Conny Plank died in 1987.
A 1999 tribute album, entitled A Homage to Neu! (Cleopatra Records) features covers from artists by bands including the Legendary Pink Dots, Download, Autechre, Dead Voices On Air, Khan, System 7, and James Plotkin, as well as an original track from Rother entitled "Neutronics 98 (A Tribute To Conny Plank)".
This situation was finally resolved in 2001, when Rother and Dinger put aside their differences and entered a studio to transfer the three Neu! albums to CD, from the original master tapes (reportedly mastering each album three times). These were then released on the Grönland Records label in the U.K. and the Astralwerks label in the US, packaged with stickers featuring rave reviews by notable artists, including Thom Yorke. Following the release of the first three albums Dinger and Rother entered negotiations to legally reissue Neu 4! Rother has called the failure of those negotiations "unfortunate" but has left open the possibility of at least some Neu! 4 material as well as additional material from the 1985–86 recording sessions.
Neu! did not recorded anything new after Neu! 4. Rother has said that he and Dinger had been considering recording a fifth Neu album, but the idea was aborted after personal problems arose between them. Dinger died of heart failure on March 21, 2008. Rother also said that he was unaware of Dinger's illness until just before Dinger died.
Rother writes and produces solo albums. Before his death, Dinger was a member of the band La! Neu? as well as collaborating with Miki Yui and band Sub-tle in a project that is unreleased to this date.
In interviews conducted in the summer of 2009, Rother announced that he is working on a box set that will include all of Neu!'s recordings including material that appeared on the Neu! 4 album (which Rother refers to as Neu! '86). "I’m investing a lot of time and effort into the Neu! vinyl box set, which we hope to release later this year," Rother explains. "It will contain all of Neu!’s recordings, also the ones that were illegally released by my Neu! partner, the late Klaus Dinger, in the Nineties." Plans also are to include a thick booklet filled with rare photos and new text. Rother also mentions the possibility of live recordings appearing in the box set.
In 2010 Rother teamed up with Steve Shelley (of Sonic Youth) and Aaron Mullan (of Tall Firs) for Hallogallo 2010, a live project to present Neu! music and some new pieces.
In terms of traditional western and rock music harmonic form, Rother would complement Dinger's rhythm by eschewing chord changes, and instead opting for a harmonic drone – a single chord, layering numerous electric guitar overdubs. Timbral change takes over from harmonic change as the main focus of interest. Conny Plank was renowned as a producer for creating a working environment where musicians could be free to explore such experiments, and also as a master of timbral texture and spatialisation. Many other Neu! tracks are very slow and gentle, sketching out traces of a song in what might be called an ambient style.
Artist | Neu! |
---|---|
Studio | 4 |
Live | 1 |
Compilation | 2 |
Tribute | 2 |
Singles | 3 |
References | Yes |
Year | Title | Notes | |||
1972 | * Label: Brain Records | ||||
1973 | * Label: Brain Records | ||||
1975 | * Label: Brain Records | ||||
2010 | * Released: | * Label: Grönland Records | * Authorised re-release of NEU! 4 with a different track listing. |
Year | Title | Notes | |||||
1982 | Black Forest Gateau | * Label: Cherry Red | * Compilation album | * Contains 2 tracks from NEU! and 4 from NEU! '75 | |||
1995 | * Released: | * Label: Captain Trip Records | * Studio out-takes album | ||||
1996 | * Label: Captain Trip Records | * Rehearsal recording | |||||
2009 | Avantgarde History | * Released: | * Label: Eberhard Kranemann self-release | * CD-R compilation | * Featuring 3 unreleased NEU! tracks recorded in the tour that followed the recording of NEU! '72. | ||
2010 | * Released: | * Label: Grönland Records | * Box set | * Contains the all three studio albums, out-takes album NEU! '86, NEU! '72 (live 18 minute maxi-single). | * 36-page picturebook, stencil, NEU! t-shirt, and digital download code. |
Category:Astralwerks artists Category:Musical groups established in 1971 Category:Musical groups disestablished in 1975 Category:Musical groups established in 1985 Category:Musical groups disestablished in 1986 Category:German musical groups Category:Krautrock Category:Pre-punk groups Category:Musical groups from Düsseldorf
de:Neu! el:Neu! es:Neu! fr:Neu! gl:Neu! ko:노이! it:Neu! nl:Neu! ja:ノイ! no:Neu! pl:Neu! pt:Neu! ro:Neu! ru:Neu! fi:Neu! sv:Neu! uk:Neu!This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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