Title:

S/T

Artist: Neu!
Release: 2010
Neu!

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Genre

INFORMATIONS

Artist

Neu!

Label

Grönland Records

Release Date

2010

Catalog

LPGRONI

Additional information

Weight 0,280 kg
Format

EULP

State

Artist

Neu!

Label

Grönland Records

Release Date

2010

Catalog

LPGRONI

Description

Neu! is the debut studio album by German krautrock band Neu!, released in 1972 by Brain Records. It was the first album recorded by the duo of Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger after leaving Kraftwerk in 1971. They continued to work with producer Konrad “Conny” Plank, who had also worked on the Kraftwerk recording sessions.

Upon release, the album was largely ignored internationally but did well in West Germany, selling 35,000 copies.

Having broken off from an early incarnation of Kraftwerk, Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger quickly began the recording sessions for what would become Neu!. The pair recorded the album across four nights in December 1971 at Star Studios in Hamburg with producer and engineer Conny Plank. Dinger noted that Plank served as a “mediator” between the often disagreeing factions within the band.

According to Dinger, the first two days were unproductive until he brought his taishōgoto (“Japanese banjo”) to the sessions, a heavily treated version of which can be heard on “Negativland”, the first of the album’s six tracks to be recorded. It was during these sessions that Dinger first played his famous “motorik” beat, as featured on “Hallogallo” and “Negativland”. Dinger claimed never to have used the term “motorik” himself, preferring either “lange gerade” (“long straight”) or “endlose gerade” (“endless straight”). He later changed the beat’s “name” to the “Apache beat” to coincide with his 1985 solo album Néondian.

The band was christened by Dinger (Rother had been against the name, preferring a more “organic” title) and a pop art style logo was created, featuring italic capitals. Dinger recalled Neu!’s logo:

“… it was a protest against the consumer society but also against our “colleagues” on the Krautrock scene who had totally different taste/styling if any. I was very well informed about Warhol, Pop Art, Contemporary Art. I had always been very visual in my thinking. Also, during that time, I lived in a commune and in order to get the space that we lived in, I set up an advertising agency which existed mainly on paper. Most of the people that I lived with were trying to break into advertising so I was somehow surrounded by this Neu! all the time.”

Grönland Records ‎- 2010