26 June 2020

Kraftwerk "Trans Europa Express" (1977)

2009 cover
Trans Europa Express
release date: Mar. 1977
format: cd (2009 remaster)
[album rate: 4,5 / 5] [4,28]
producer: Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider
label: Kling Klang / EMI - nationality: Germany

Track highlights: 1. "Europa Endlos" (4,5 / 5) - 2. "Spiegelsaal" (4,5 / 5) - 3. "Schaufensterpuppen" - 4. "Trans Europa Express" (5 / 5) (live) - 5. "Metall auf Metall" - 6. "Abzug" - 7. "Franz Schubert"

6th studio album by Kraftwerk following Radio-Aktivität (Oct. 1975) is the band's second album in their most classic and longest-lasting line-up. Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider, who are credited the majority of the tracks are both credited on vocals, synthesizers and 'electronics'. Additionally, Hütter plays on 'Vako Orchestron' and 'synthanorma sequences', while Schneider also handles vocoders and 'votrax'. Apart from the two 'band leaders', the two remaining members are percussionists Wolfgang Flür and Karl Bartos, who are solely credited 'electronic percussion'.
At first, the album sounds much like a close progression from the '75 album, but new electronic instruments add completely new possibilities and sound bits to the band's electronic soundscape. With the use of especially sequencers, vocoders and electric percussion, the band once again marks itself out as musical avant-garde and perhaps takes a larger leap in the electronic genre than the one you find from Autobahn (1974) to the predecessor. Kraftwerk has now moved away from the small electronic quirks we find on the '75 album, and instead they have in a way focused the musical expression - made it more rigorous without simplifying - and at the same time they have created the band's most coherent album to date.
The highlighted tracks above are seven out of eight from an album with no fillers - last composition is the 47 seconds "Endlos Endlos", which basically only serve to resume the album's main theme and melody from track #1, so that the album ends the way it starts. In fact, there are fluid transitions between many of the tracks, even though they appear as distinctively different compositions.
Trans Europa Express was (as the second of the band's classic albums) released in both a German version and in a versioned English album with translated song titles and lyrics titled Trans Europe Express. The album landed at number #32 in Germany, but peaked at number #2 in France, and as number #8 in Italy. Two selected tracks: the 4th and 3th tracks, respectively, were released as singles without charting.
The album was released to generally positive reviews, but over the years it status has heightened to one of modern music's most significant cornerstones. In retrospect, it has achieved finer status than Autobahn and is naturally included in countless lists of the best albums of all time, e.g. "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time" (Rolling Stone), "The 100 Greatest Albums Ever Made" (Mojo), "Top 100 Albums of All Time" (NME), "The 50 Best Albums of the 70s" (Q Magazine), "The 20 Most Influential Albums" (The Times), etc. etc. - just as the album is naturally found in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die".
The album has been released in several first editions with different front covers. The first German and some European editions came with a black and white cover with Hütter and Schneider flanked by Bartos and Flür (original Kling Klang / EMI releases), and a (second) colored cover with Schneider and Hütter on the right of the picture (Capitol editions) released in the UK, Scandinavia, and in the Netherlands, and with Kraftwerk's own 2009 remastered edition, the album was launched with a brand new cover without the four band members.
Trans Europa Express is possibly Kraftwerk's finest and greatest achievement. Autobahn, with its groundbreaking form, upholds a very special positions, and Die Mensch-Maschine and Computerwelt have their obvious individual strengths, but both lack a tiny bits in absolute coherency, which the band's brilliant 77 album contains.
Personally, I didn't listen to the album until sometime in the 80s, and unfortunately only after becoming acquainted with bands and artists who have clearly been heavily inspired by Kraftwerk and this very album. Imho, the album is of huge importance for the musical heritage - for the development of synthpop, new romantic, and other related styles. It's hard to imagine the distinctive sound of many artists from diverse styles without thinking of Trans Europa Express. When not counted among my top three favourites from 1977, the album is only absent because of the fact that I wasn't exactly enthusiastic about the electronic genre until much later. Back then, I focused on punk rock and post punk during this period, and here are three albums with three of my biggest favorites from the time: The Ramones, The Clash, and The Jam - artists I listened to far more than the brilliant German band. By detours I discovered Kraftwerk's music and the band's enormous musical influence - and it's for that reason alone I pay tribute to the band and this album. Another note of interest, is the colossal difference in sound production quality when comparing releases by the aforementioned punk bands to that of Kraftwerk releases from the same period. In this way, Kraftwerk stands out as a band from an almost distant future. The album is also demanding to listen to if you subsequently listen to (perhaps) more popular releases from bands such as Human League, Devo, Yellow Magic Orchestra, New Order, Depeche Mode, Per Shop Boys, and then it even seems obvious to compare with much later releases from artists like The Orb, Sigur Rós, Mogwai, The Chemical Brothers, etc.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone, Mojo, Q Magazine, Uncut 5 / 5 stars ]


    
1977 org. cover
l-r: Bartos, Schneider
Hütter, Flür
  1977 UK cover
l-r: Flür, Bartos
Schneider, Hütter

Note the two founders of Kraftwerk, Hútter and Schneider
are in grey suits, while the two newcomers, Flür and Bartos - by the way
not credited one single track - are dressed in black suits.

20 June 2020

Morrissey "I Am Not a Dog on a Chain" (2020)

I Am Not a Dog on a Chain

release date: Mar. 20, 2020
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,66]
producer: Joe Chiccarelli
label: Étienne / BMG - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Jim Jim Falls" - 2. "Love Is on Its Way Out" - 3. "Bobby, Don't You Think They Know?" - 5. "What Kind of People Live in These Houses?" (4 / 5) - 6. "Knockabout World" - 9. "The Truth About Ruth" - 11. "The Secret of Music"

13th studio album by Morrissey is the collection of eleven tracks with a duration at just below 50 mins, and it follows less than a year after his so far least favourable studio release, the covers' album California Son (2019) - and once again with producer Joe Chiccarelli.
Musically, it's a return to form with songs written and composed with either guitarist Jesse Tobias or multi-instrumentalist Gustavo Manzur, and the compositions are in the traditional pop / rock / indie pop style that is associated with his music as solo artist. Sometimes he adds elements from alt. rock, chamber pop or synthpop, and it's the small stylistic differences that mark each of his so far thirteen studio albums. As usual, there's also room for sing-a-long pop songs - here, the fine "What Kind of People Live in These Houses" and pompous ballads like "The Truth About Ruth".
The album falls closely in the neighbourhood of the fine World Peace Is None of Your Business (2014) and distances itself from his most recent album of own material, the lesser Low in High School (2017). Basically, it's surprising how relevant the lyrics appear and the general quality he throws at us - also seen in the light of his last two albums proved, and which, to me, signalled he had come to the end of his musical career - but here he once again demonstrates his ability to return with significant music.
Personally, I must confess that I thought he had passed into anonymity - especially after tasteless political statements, but this is a rather fine collection of songs.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, NME 3 / 5, The Telegraph 4 / 5 stars ]

14 June 2020

Lightning Bug "October Sky" (2019)

October Sky
release date: Sep. 6, 2019
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: Lightning Bug
label: selvudgivet - nationality: USA

2nd studio album by Lightning Bug is like the debut Floaters (2015) self-released and may be found on bandcamp. The band consists of songwriter and vocalist Audrey Kang, who also handles bass and drums, Kevin Copeland on guitar, and with Logan Miley on synthesizer and as sound engineer.
Stylistically, Lightning Bug lands somewhere in an indie pop sphere with a distinct shoegaze / dream pop touch, which brings to mind artists such as My Bloody Valentine, Cocteau Twins, and Flaming Lips without being a mere copy.
October Sky is quite an exciting and original release.

06 June 2020

Cornershop "England Is a Garden" (2020)

England Is a Garden
release date: Mar. 6, 2020
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Tjinder Singh
label: Ample Play Records - nationality: England, UK


9th studio album by Cornershop following five years after Hold on It's Easy (2015) is the band's first album with new songs in eight years as the 2015-album presented acoustic versions of songs from the debut album Hold on It Hurts (1994) making Urban Turban - The Singhles Club (2012) their so far most recent album with new material.
The band primarily consists of the two founding members: vocalist, multi-insrumentalist, songwriter and composer Tjinder Singh and multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Ben Ayres. The two are here supported by the two guitarists Adam Blake and Pete Downing, bassist James Milne, drummer Nick Simms and percussionist Peter Bengry. Also former keyboardist of the band Anthony Saffrey, guitarist Duncan Whyte and keyboardist Alan Gregson participate on the album, and the official line-up remains a bit of an uncertain issue. When visiting the band's Facebook-account the band photo consists of only Singh and Ayres, and it seems the two represent the band and invite various stable musicians to assist when recording new songs and also to make up the band while touring.
England Is a Garden has been released to mostly positive reviews, and it appears to be a collection of songs that more or less sum up most of their career. It's a nice return to the more simple fusion of indie pop, rock & roll with bits of traditional Indian folklore world-music that you also find on the band's 1997 breakthrough album, and it's basically a nice coherent release with good vibes and some fine lyrics.
Recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, The Independent, 👉The Guardian 4 / 5, musicOMH, NME 3 / 5 stars ]