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Kraftwerk’s co-founder Florian Schneider has died, aged 73. Since their formation in 1970 the electronic group are credited as of one music’s most influential â impacting pop music, hip-hop, post-punk, techno and beyond.
Revisit our rankings of all the Kraftwerk albums â from their 1970 debut to their most recent, 2003’s ‘Tour De France’ soundtrack
âElectric CafĂ©â/âTechno Popâ (1986)
If a âmojoâ isnât too rockânâroll, Kraftwerk appeared to lose theirs here on the last album to feature the classic line-up of Ralf HĂŒtter, Florian Schneider, Wolfgang FlĂŒr and Karl Bartos. FlĂŒr would leave soon after the release of âElectric CafĂ©â (renamed âTechno Popâ for the 2009 boxset reissue), with Bartos following as 1991âs âThe Mixâ neared completion. This is no swansong. âTelephone Callâ is a quirky bit of fun, while âBoing Boom Tschakâ and the title track play around with the âTour De Franceâ single released three years earlier â but thatâs just it. For the first time in their history, Kraftwerk sounded behind the beat. No matter, thatâs out of the way.
âKraftwerkâ (1970)
Kraftwerkâs debut album barely exists â itâs been quietly ushered out of the official records by de facto leader HĂŒtter. A pity, really. Itâs not tearing up any trees in the 31st century electronica stakes, but itâs still a fascinating record. More of a full band at this point, Kraftwerk are skirting around the edges of free jazz on âRuckzuckâ â with Schneider mucking about on the flute, of all things, and not for the last time â and getting motorik on the epic âStratovariusâ. Hardly surprising with future Neu! drummer Klaus Dinger providing the propulsion. Electronics are limited to effects, phasing through âMegaherzâ and dropping Spectrum bombs on âVom Himmel Hochâ.
âKraftwerk 2â (1972)
Another one swept under the carpet, âKraftwerk 2â sees the line-up whittled down to the engine room of HĂŒtter and Schneider. Itâs not too distant stylistically from the debut â embellishments are pared down, but flute and surprising freak-folk excursions remain â but advance is palpable. âKlingklangâ (later adapted for the name of their legendary studio) wrings 17 minutes of beauty out of ambient electronic washes and occasional pitch shifts, while iron-lung interlude âAtemâ sounds like an ultra-slow âTour De Franceâ, 10 years ahead of schedule. Even further ahead, the intricate, hollowed-out âWellenlĂ€ngeâ is a clear forerunner of Arthur Russellâs 1986 suite âWorld Of Echoâ.
âThe Mixâ (1991)
A compilation but not a cop-out. By 1991, techno had comprehensively infiltrated the mainstream and Kraftwerk were back in the game to collect their props. With FlĂŒr gone and Bartos on the way out, Fritz Hilpert was new in town (and still in the band today). Kraftwerk souped up their sound for the 90s market accordingly, remixing favourites and ensuring everything had a kinetic dancefloor makeover, reflecting the evolution of tracks when they played live. âRadioactivityâ and a slimmed down âAutobahnâ stand out in whatâs still a handy Kraftwerk primer.
âRalf Und Florianâ (1973)
âRalf Und Florianâ is the last of the âforgottenâ Kraftwerk, and an absorbing study of the bridge between their pastoral and industrial guises. If âElektrisches Rouletteâ sounds alarmingly like 70s glam-pop duo Sparks, thatâs just a sign of the times, but there are harbingers of a distant future in the proto-Detroit techno of âKristalloâ â with its throbbing synthesized bass and cascading harpsichords â and the tropical idyll of âAnanas Symphonieâ where, in Balearic style, spacey synths meet slide guitars and vocoder-warped voices. Voices! Yep, âRalf Und Florianâ is where Ralf and Florian finally discover vocals.
âTour De France Soundtracksâ (2003)
Poor Fritz Hilpert. Joins Kraftwerk in 1987 and has to wait 16 years before his nameâs on an album of original recordings. Still, âTour De France Soundtracksâ is an awesome conceptual piece â man, machine and bicycle frame in perfect symbiosis as our heroes revisit 1983 hit single âTour De Franceâ and stretch its central idea over 54 lush, danceable minutes. The centrepiece of Kraftwerkâs 2004 tour, this comeback album saw them freewheel effortlessly into the 21st century. Letâs be honest though â they were there already.
âRadio-Activityâ (1975)
And hereâs where Kraftwerk comprehensively jettison all âorganicâ instruments, except voice. The results are suitably brutal on glitchy opener âGeiger Counterâ, but sweeter on âOhm Sweet Ohmâ (spot the intro to The Chemical Brothersâ âLeave Homeâ) and cyborg-ballad âRadiolandâ. HĂŒtter, Schneider, FlĂŒr and Bartos are in harness â perfect synthetic harmony â for the first time and celebrate with morbid symphony âRadioactivityâ, where you can hear the synth-pop boom of the early 80s unfolding throughout its seven minutes. Whether you want to thank them for that is entirely up to you.
âAutobahnâ (1974)
Itâs 1974, concept albums are cooler than an iced Fonz, so Kraftwerk are just going with the flow. Nothing bloated about this, mind, even if the title track is pushing 23 minutes. No, HĂŒtter and Schneider (with FlĂŒr on board now) are almost down to the bare electronics, although Schneider canât quite put his flute away and Klaus Röderâs in the room, adding some violin. From the ignition of the still-astonishing title track to the bucolic birdsong of âMorgenspaziergangâ, this is the official first leg of a journey that took music to an unthinkable beyond.
âThe Man-Machineâ (1978)
Hit factory! âThe Man-Machineâ pushed out some of Kraftwerkâs most enduring singles in âThe Robotsâ, âNeon Lightsâ and âThe Modelâ â a UK No.1 three years later when DJâs flipped it from âComputer Loveââs B-side â all belated proof that Kraftwerk could pen pop songs with the best of them. All this and the dreamy electro of âSpacelabâ, a six-minute excursion beyond the ultraworld, and âMetropolisâ â an odyssey to compare with old spars Tangerine Dream.
âComputer Worldâ (1981)
A rich hunting ground for hip-hop and early techno, âComputer Worldâ boasts the most descriptive of titles â within youâll find âHome Computerâ, âComputer Loveâ (the source for Coldplayâs âTalkâ), âItâs More Fun To Computeâ and âComputer Worldâ parts one and two â but itâs more than a celebration of contemporary technological advances. As a unified whole, propulsive and looped, itâs a perpetually satisfying document of a band at the peak of its powers.
âTrans-Europe Expressâ (1977)
Everyoneâs got a favourite, but for completeness, for pioneering spirit, for sheer breadth of influence, âTrans-Europe Expressâ is tough to beat. The eerie synth riff driving the title track â and rearing up here and there on âEurope Endlessâ and âAbzugâ â stamped its mark on hip-hop and electro, notably on Afrika Bambaataa and Soulsonic Forceâs âPlanet Rockâ, and the spidery fingers of âThe Hall Of Mirrorsâ had similar reach. But above all, âTrans-Europe Expressâ felt â feels â like a carefully constructed symphony and, in âEurope Endlessâ, it produced perhaps their most gorgeous track.
Originally published in 2013
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