Flammende Herzen

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 51:30

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Once you've played out Neu

SlappHappy

Once you've played out your first 3 Neu albums, as well as your La Dusseldorf, Thomas Dinger, and Harmonia records, get the first three Michael Rother. Avoid the bonus tracks completely. Some might feel these get a little too AOR/new agey, but if you're a fan of all these bands, the first 3 albums (Flammende Herzen, Sterntaler, Katzenmusik) have a similar sonic palette.

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those are the memories

klausw

I listened to that vinyl album and Sterntaler a hundred times during my last year at school in 1979/80. I am glad it's now available in electronic form online since I was looking for this for a number of years now. But just get the original album songs and skip the bonus tracks at first to get the real late 70s feeling. The bonus tracks are from the early 90s.

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They Say All Media Guide

Michael Rother was the guitar and keyboard playing half of the groundbreaking Krautrock group Neu, and earlier, a founding member of Kraftwerk. Flammende Herzen (Flaming Heart) is his first solo album, recorded by and produced by Conny Plank in 1976 and issued at the dawn of punk in 1977. Flammende Herzen is, in a sense, the complete and utter flowering of a vision Rother held from Kraftwerk through his work with Klaus Dinger in Neu and through his short-term collaboration with Moebius and Roedelius in Harmonia. Rother’s signature guitar sound is twinned with an analog delay, the simple mechanical or “motorik” percussion all wound around simple, yet transcendent, melodies that are nearly anthemic in their strident execution. With percussion assistance from Jaki Leibzeit of Can, Rother crafts a driving, soaring ride into the sonic abyss that is rich with melody and rock & roll rhythm. For Rother, music is a thing filled with light, and tracks such as the title, “Zyklodrom,” and “Karussell” feature a cylindrical weave of electronic and organic percussion, opaque but insistent synthesizers playing chord progressions, and, of course, acoustic and electric guitars either chiming in single- and double-string Brucknerian motifs or churning on two or three chords hypnotically into the ether. While some of the themes presented here later became the foundation for a ponderous kind of new age disc music, there is plenty of spaced-out psychedelia and churning rock & roll ellipsis here (“Feuerland”) for fans of early Krautrock. This remains one of Rother’s strongest and most visionary records. The CD reissue features two remixes of the title track from 1993. – Thom Jurek

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