Sterntaler

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (22 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 52:49

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One of Rother's Best....

Muse8

The musicianship is understated but right on. Meditative while still groove-oriented, electronic without sounding dated, rocking without destroying the tranquility.

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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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70's German Classic

lowbot

After getting into Krautrock in the early 2000's (and scouring ebay for hard-to-find vinyls), I got my hand on this record. There are some tunes on here that bring tears to my eyes (in a good way). Too bad Rother's work is so easy to purchase now, but thank god for eMusic.

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those are the memories 2

klausw

I listened to that vinyl album and Flammende Herzen 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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Beautiful and insistent

dan'schic

Any Neu! fan worth his or her salt should own tracks 1-6. Some of these songs have the same motorik pulse, and some are a bit more ambient, but they all contain the same beautiful, smooth shimmer as Hallogallo, Fur Immer, etc. The last three tracks, on the other hand, are strangely synthy and don't really belong. You might want to skip those.

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They Say All Media Guide

Sterntaler marked the beginning of Michael Rother’s deep preoccupation with introspective melodies projected outward. Where Flammende Herzen was full of anthemic instrumental rock that was constructed to be just that, Sterntaler is more reflective even if its drive is as insistent and mechanically accurate. Again collaborating with producer Conny Plank and Can’s drummer, Jaki Leibzeit, Rother set out with Sterntaler to create true electronic rock music — even if what he came up with was the first real ambient trance music. Unlike his former bandmates in Kraftwerk and Harmonia who had wholeheartedly embraced electronic music as an end in and of itself, Rother was deeply entrenched in the idea that the entire idea for synthesizers and drum machines was to make rock & roll itself more futuristic. What’s so odd about that notion is his method of composition. On the opener, “Sonnenrad,” his signature electric guitar sound plays melodies that are almost folk-like in their simplicity over his trademark Motorik percussion and rhythmic churn. On “Blauer-Regen” Leibzeit’s cymbals mark the simple chord changes on an introspective ballad filled with the sounds of falling rain cascading down through the guitars. “Stremlinien” and the title track are more hypnotic rock tracks with veritable choruses of guitars all playing the same notes in harmony over a cut-time drumbeat and Leibzeit’s percussive embellishments. Keyboards swim through the mix, creating a chords progression — though it feels like one phrase over and over again — and Rother concentrates on using a slide guitar to control and advance dynamics in the swirl. This is awesome driving music, perfect maybe for the Autobahn, but certainly for American two-lane blacktops during the first flush of fall. – Thom Jurek

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