KLAUS SCHULZE
'Klaus Schulze' is a German electronic music composer and musician. He also used the alias 'Richard Wahnfried'. He was briefly a member of the electronic bands Tangerine Dream and Ash Ra Tempel before a solo career of more than 40 albums (more than 110 CDs) lasting over than 3 decades.
| Contents |
| History |
| Discography |
| Studio and live albums |
| Richard Wahnfried albums |
| CD Box Sets |
| ''The Dark Side of the Moog'' series |
| Other collaborations |
| Lone tracks |
| Samplers and promos |
| See also |
| External links |
History
In 1969, Klaus Schulze was the drummer of one of the early incarnations of Tangerine Dream for their debut album ''Electronic Meditation''. In 1970 he left this group to form Ash Ra Tempel with Manuel Göttsching. In 1971, he chose again to leave a newly-formed group after only one album, this time to mount a solo career. In 1972, Schulze released his debut album ''Irrlicht'' with organ and a recording of an orchestra filtered almost beyond recognition. Despite the lack of synthesizers, this proto-ambient work is regarded as a milestone in electronic music. The follow up, ''Cyborg'', was similar but added the EMS Synthi A synthesizer.
He has had a prolific career, with more than 40 original albums to his name since ''Irrlicht'', some highlights being 1976's ''Moondawn'', 1979's ''Dune'', and 1995's double-album ''In Blue'' (featuring one long track with electric guitar by his pal Manuel Göttsching of Ash Ra Tempel). He often takes German events as a starting point in his compositions, particularly on his album ''"X"'' (the title signifying it was his tenth album) in 1978 which was subtitled "Six Musical Biographies", including such notables as Ludwig II of Bavaria, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Wilhelm Friedemann Bach. His use of the pseudonym Richard Wahnfried indicates his interest in Richard Wagner, which also informs other albums of his music, notably ''Timewind''.
Throughout the 1970s he worked mostly in the musical vein of the above-mentioned Tangerine Dream, albeit with far lighter sequencer lines and a more reflective, dreamy edge, not unlike the ambient music of contemporary Brian Eno. Some of his lighter albums are appreciated by new age music fans, but Schulze has always denied connections to this genre.
Klaus Schulze had a more organic sound than other electronic artists of the time. Often he would throw in decidedly non-electronic sounds such as acoustic guitar and a male operatic voice in ''Blackdance'', or a cello in ''Dune'' and ''Trancefer''. Schulze developed a Minimoog technique that sounds uncannily like an electric guitar, which is quite impressive in concert.
In the 1980s Schulze moved from analog to digital instruments, and his work accordingly became less experimental and more accessible. Although the switch to purely digital recording and instruments is evident in the style of ''Dig It'' (1980) It was not until the release of ''Trancefer'' (1981) that the shift in style became evident. ''Trancefer'' was far more obviously reliant on sequencers than previous recordings, and the resultant affect transformed Schulze's style from gentle melodic journeys to and ever growing crescendo of music consisting of multi layered rhythmical passages. This is particularly evident in the ''Trancefer's first track "A few moments after Trancefer", although the second track "Silent Running" is more reminiscent of Schulze's earlier works.
This newer style can also be found in Schulze's next release ''Audentity''. Both "Cellistica" and "Spielglocken" are composed in a similar, sequencer based, style as ''Trancefer'', but this is certainly not the case of all of ''Audentity's tracks, indeed "Sebastian in Traum" hints towards the Operatic style to be found in some of Schulze's much later work. The predominance of sequencing can also be found in the follow up live album ''Dziekuje Poland Live '83'', although it should be noted that many of its tracks are re-workings of those to be found on ''Audentity''. Schulze's next studio-based album ''Angst'' (soundtrack to the namesake 1983 film) moved away from the harshness of sharp, heavily sequenced style of the 3 previous albums and, once again, had the more "organic feel" of earlier recordings.
Another highlight of this era was ''En=Trance'' with the dreamy cut
"FM Delight". The album ''Miditerranean Pads'' marked the beginning of very complex percussion arrangements that continued into the next two decades.
Starting with ''Beyond Recall'', the first half of the 1990s was the notorious "sample" period, when Schulze used a variety of pre-recorded sounds of screeching birds and sensuous female moans in his studio albums and live performances. Sampling was such an unpopular diversion that when ''In Blue'' was released in 1995 without samples it was hailed as a return to form.
The decade also saw the release of copious amounts of previously unreleased material, of varying quality, in several limited-edition boxed sets. Some live recordings were discovered on pristine but forgotten reels of tape which had been used to provide echo in concerts.
Recently Schulze began incorporating elements of jazz and classical music, working with more contemporary techno dance music such as trance, and creating two opera, the second still awaiting release. Also, in 2005 he began re-releasing his classic solo and Wahnfried albums with bonus tracks of unreleased material recorded at roughly the same time as the original works.
Discography
Studio and live albums
Schulze's concert performances are original compositions recorded live and thus listed as albums:
★ 1972 ''Irrlicht'' - Re-released 2006
★ 1973 ''Cyborg'' - Re-released 2006
★ 1974 ''Blackdance'' - Re-released 2007
★ 1975 ''Picture Music'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1975 ''Timewind'' - Re-released 2006
★ 1976 ''Moondawn'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1977 ''Body Love'' (soundtrack) - Re-released 2005
★ 1977 ''Mirage'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1977 ''Body Love Vol. 2''
★ 1978 ''"X"'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1979 ''Dune'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1980 ''...Live...'' Re-released 2007
★ 1980 ''Dig It'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1981 ''Trancefer'' - Re-released 2006
★ 1983 ''Audentity'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1983 ''Dziekuje Poland Live '83'' (live) - Re-released 2006
★ 1984 ''Angst'' (soundtrack) - Re-released 2005
★ 1985 ''Inter
★ Face'' - Re-released 2006
★ 1986 ''Dreams'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1988 ''En=Trance'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1990 ''Miditerranean Pads'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1990 ''The Dresden Performance'' (live)
★ 1991 ''Beyond Recall''
★ 1992 ''Royal Festival Hall Vol. 1'' (live)
★ 1992 ''Royal Festival Hall Vol. 2'' (live)
★ 1993 ''The Dome Event'' (live)
★ 1994 ''Le Moulin de Daudet'' (soundtrack) - Re-released 2005
★ 1994 ''Goes Classic''
★ 1994 ''Totentag''
★ 1994 ''Das Wagner Desaster - Live -'' (live) - Re-released 2005
★ 1995 ''In Blue'' - Re-released 2005
★ 1996 ''Are You Sequenced?'' - Re-released 2006
★ 1997 ''Dosburg Online'' - Re-released 2006
★ 2001 ''Live @ KlangArt 1'' (live)
★ 2001 ''Live @ KlangArt 2'' (live)
★ 2005 ''Moonlake''
★ 2005 ''Vanity of Sounds'' - Re-released 2005 from ''Contemporary Works I'' box set
★ 2006 ''The Crime of Suspense'' - Re-released 2006 from ''Contemporary Works I'' box set
★ 2006 ''Ballett 1'' - Re-released 2006 from ''Contemporary Works I'' box set
★ 2006 ''Ballett 2'' - Re-released 2006 from ''Contemporary Works I'' box set
★ 2007 ''Ballett 3'' - Re-released 2007 from ''Contemporary Works I'' box set
★ 2007 ''Kontinuum''
In 2005 an intensive re-release program of Schulze CDs started, mostly with extended or bonus tracks, sometimes a whole additional CD. They are published by the label Revisited Records (a division of German company InsideOut Music 1), and distributed by SPV.
Richard Wahnfried albums
Composed by Schulze and performed with guest artists under alias Richard Wahnfried:
★ 1979 ''Time Actor''
★ 1981 ''Tonwelle''
★ 1984 ''Megatone''
★ 1986 ''Miditation''
★ 1994 ''Trancelation''
★ 1996 ''Trance Appeal'' - Re-released 2007
★ 1997 ''Drums 'n' Balls (The Gancha Dub)'' - Re-released 2006
See also the Richard Wahnfried project and its personnel.
CD Box Sets
★ 1993 ''Silver Edition'' - Limited edition 10 disc box set of 2000 sets. Sold out.
★ 1995 ''Historic Edition'' - Limited edition 10 disc box set of 2000 sets. Sold out.
★ 1997 ''Jubilee Edition'' - Limited edition of 25 disc box set 1000 sets. Sold out.
★ 2000 ''The Ultimate Edition'' - Re-released Silver, Historic and Jubilee Edition box sets expanded with bonus material.
★ 2000 ''Contemporary Works I'' - 10 disc box set with guest performers.
★ 2002 ''Contemporary Works II'' - 5 disc box set with guest performers (limited 6th disc included with the first 333 sets)
''The Dark Side of the Moog'' series
In collaboration with the extremely prolific ambient techno guru Pete Namlook (joined also by Bill Laswell on volumes 4 to 7). Each title is a humorous distortion of a Pink Floyd title:
★ 1994 ''The Dark Side of the Moog I'' - "Wish You Were There"
★ 1994 ''The Dark Side of the Moog II'' - "A Saucerful of Ambience"
★ 1995 ''The Dark Side of the Moog III'' - "Phantom Heart Brother"
★ 1996 ''The Dark Side of the Moog IV'' - "Three Pipers at the Gates of Dawn"
★ 1996 ''The Dark Side of the Moog V'' - "Psychedelic Brunch"
★ 1997 ''The Dark Side of the Moog VI'' - "The Final DAT"
★ 1998 ''The Dark Side of the Moog VII'' - "Obscured by Klaus"
★ 1999 ''The Dark Side of the Moog VIII'' - "Careful With the AKS, Peter" (live)
★ 2002 ''The Dark Side of the Moog IX'' - "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Mother"
★ 2005 ''The Dark Side of the Moog X'' - "Astro Know Me Domina"
The series was officially concluded with volume 10. On 21 March 2005 at 14:52 CET, Pete Namlook sold the Big Moog synthesizer that was the symbol of the series.
Other collaborations
★ 1970 ''Electronic Meditation'' (with Tangerine Dream)
★ 1971 ''Ash Ra Tempel'' (with Ash Ra Tempel)
★ 1973 ''Join Inn'' (with Ash Ra Tempel)
★ 1973 ''Tarot'' (with Walter Wegmuller)
★ 1973 ''Lord Krishna von Goloka'' (with Sergius Golowin)
★ 1974 ''The Cosmic Jokers'' (with The Cosmic Jokers)
★ 1974 ''Planeten Sit In'' (with The Cosmic Jokers)
★ 1974 ''Galactic Supermarket'' (with The Cosmic Jokers)
★ 1974 ''Sci Fi Party'' (with The Cosmic Jokers)
★ 1974 ''Gilles Zeitschiff'' (with The Cosmic Jokers)
★ 1976 ''Go'' (with Go, including Stomu Yamash'ta)
★ 1976 ''Go Live From Paris'' (with Go, including Stomu Yamash'ta)
★ 1977 ''Go Too'' (with Go, including Stomu Yamash'ta)
★ 1984 ''Aphrica'' (with Rainer Bloss and Ernst Fuchs)
★ 1984 ''Drive Inn'' (with Rainer Bloss)
★ 1984 ''Transfer Station Blue'' (with Michael Shrieve and Kevin Shrieve)
★ 1987 ''Babel'' (with Andreas Grosser)
★ 2000 ''Friendship'' (with Ash Ra Tempel)
★ 2000 ''Gin Rosé at the Royal Festival Hall'' (with Ash Ra Tempel)
Lone tracks
★ 1985 "Macksy" - Vinyl single made for the discos on company's request.
★ 1994 "Conquest Of Paradise" - Single, Schulze commissioned to replay a track of by Vangelis.
★ 2002 "Manikin Jubilee" - On a Manikin Records 2-CD sampler limited to 777 copies.
★ 2004 "Schrittmacher" - On a Manikin Records CD sampler.
Samplers and promos
★ 1991 ''2001''
★ 1994 ''The Essential 72-93''
★ 1999 ''Trailer''
★ 2003 ''Andromeda'' (Promo CD)
★ 2004 ''Ion'' (Promo CD)
See also
★ Electronic art music
★ Electronic music
★ Progressive music
★ New Age music
★ Berlin School
★ Kosmische Musik
★ Tangerine Dream
★ Ash Ra Tempel
★ Earthstar
External links
★ Klaus Schulze.com - The official Klaus Schulze website
★ Klaus Music Discussion - The Discussion about Klaus Schulze.
★ Klaus Music.pl - The "ultimate online encyclopedia" about Klaus Schulze.
★ Synthtopia's Klaus Schulze page - Short bio, key dates, quotes. (W/ads)
★ The Unofficial Klaus Schulze Discography - Discography, FAQ.
★ SDIYcut - Cardboard kits of some Klaus Schulze instruments, including the Big Moog !
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