- Berlin School of electronic music
The Berlin School of electronic music, or just Berlin School, was a development of
electronic music in the 1970s, shaped byBerlin -based artists likeKlaus Schulze ,Tangerine Dream andAsh Ra Tempel . The style is characterized by soaringelectric guitar or synthesizer melodies in high-register accompanied by complex, shiftinganalog sequencer bass lines. The lead soloist's warm, human improvisations were a counterpoint to the cold, robotic precision of the bass-lines. Sound effects such as wind, and washes ofMellotron choir, flute, or strings were often added for color. Experimental or ambient stretches were not rare either, especially as intros. Most works were instrumental, vocals were used sparingly.Vintage Berlin School tracks typically ran about twenty or thirty minutes, filling one side of a vinyl LP. The genre was so thoroughly identified with the long form that a general shift to shorter pieces in the 1980s seemed to herald the death of the movement. After the coming of the
compact disc "retro" artists were no longer limited by the need to flip over a vinyl record. Some newer works run continuously as a single track for almost 80 minutes.An outgrowth of
Krautrock , Berlin School was so named because most of its early practitioners were based out ofBerlin ,Germany . The genre's identification with space music made it distinct from the more percussive and rhythm-oriented Düsseldorf School which included Can, Cluster,Kraftwerk , andNeu! .Berlin School was and still is a relatively self-contained style that has not had nearly the impact on music in general that
Kraftwerk has had onsynth pop andtechno , but ambient,electronica , New Age, and trance are partially rooted in Berlin School. The genre is sometimes considered a sub-branch of New Age or ambient, though it predates the widespread usage of both terms.Proto-Berlin School
In 1963, years before the invention of the
Moog synthesizer , the UK television showDoctor Who had a theme constructed from tape recordings of oscillators, which sounds very much like Berlin School. In 1971Pink Floyd recorded an instrumental titled "One of These Days" for the LP "Meddle " that sounded very similar to the Dr. Who theme (but used two bass guitars interacting with a tape delay system). Its use of wind and other incidental sound effects foreshadowed (or possibly inspired) the Berlin sound.The first
Tangerine Dream release to feature rudimentary electronic rhythms was their third albumZeit in 1972. Tangerine Dream's former drummerKlaus Schulze recorded the track "Totem" in 1973 but did not release it until 1975 in "Picture Music" (after Tangerine Dream's seminal "Phaedra" charted well in theUnited Kingdom ). "Totem" featured anARP Odyssey synthesizer utilising the Sample & Hold function (combined with tape echo) that resembled the sounds produced by his later sequencer work.Classic Period
Analog sequencers were used by
Pete Townshend onThe Who 's "Baba O'Riley " in 1971 and byPink Floyd on 1973's "Dark Side of the Moon ", but the classic era of Berlin School commenced with the release of "Phaedra" byTangerine Dream in 1974, their first onVirgin Records , and closed with "Hyperborea " by the same group in 1983. BandmemberChristopher Franke is credited with turning the Modular Moog's control-voltage analog sequencer into a live performance instrument and launching the Berlin sound.In 1975 Tangerine Dream more or less reigned alone with a studio album, "Rubycon", and the live album "Ricochet". Klaus Schulze delivered the popular but transitional LP "Timewind". It contained the side-long track "Bayreuth Return", recorded in one take, structured around a sequencer pattern transposed and manipulated in real time.
Moondawn by Klaus Schulze in 1976 is often regarded as his first real entry in this genre, joined byJean Michel Jarre with "Oxygène " in the same year. Tangerine Dream delivered a studio work, "Stratosfear ", and the soundtrack to the film Sorcerer.In 1977
Ashra (Manuel Göttsching) released "New Age of Earth", along withMichael Hoenig 's "Departure from the Northern Wasteland", andVangelis ' Spiral. Tangerine Dream toured the United States and released a double live album, "Encore", with three sides of Berlin School and a side of proto-Ambient.Tangerine Dream drew some fire from fans for resorting to vocals on
1978 's "Cyclone", but "Madrigal Meridian" (which occupies the entire second half of that disk) is a slab of pure Berlin School similar to the shorter "Frank Herbert" track fromKlaus Schulze ' classic double LP "X".Jean Michel Jarre 'sEquinoxe relies on the sequencer for more than half of the album.Each artist had a unique signature. Tangerine Dream's extremely complex sequencer lines used a variety of tone colors: the lines were created out of simple sequences by real-time manipulation, with the
analog sequencer basically being treated as a performance instrument in its own right. Jarre's galloping sequences were heavy on the bass. Michael Hoenig's sequences (often several run in parallel) constantly and steadily changed, often creating polyrhythmicphasing patters resembling some ofPhilip Glass 's andSteve Reich 's minimalist work. Klaus Schulze preferred his sequences to be an octave or two higher than Hoenig's, shorter and more hypnotic. He tended, however, to transpose sequences in real time from controller keyboard, thus introducing modulations in his pieces.Latter-Day Berlin School
Between 1979 and 1984 Tangerine Dream exhausted most of the possibilities of this genre and began to record more accessible, short-form and increasingly New Age-like tracks for albums such as "Exit", "Le Parc" and "Underwater Sunlight". Jean-Michel Jarre delivered his ultimate sequencer statement with "Magnetic Fields" in 1981 and then began to record rock-oriented tracks that would please more fans in a concert setting. As the technology improved and
MIDI came into the picture, musicians began to see synthesizers as a means to have the sounds of traditional instruments available at the touch of a button. It became apparent that the Berlin sound had arisen from work-arounds to technological limitations that were rapidly disappearing.But some newer artists began to deliberately record in the mode of Berlin School from a genuine affection and budding nostalgia for the genre. In 1988, five years after Tangerine Dream left the Virgin label,
Wavestar released their acclaimed CD "Moonwind". The clean picked-bass and synthesizer trills of "Chase the Evening" distilled the Berlin sound to its essence. Even Tangerine Dream continues to send an occasional nod in that direction, such as the track "Culpa Levis" from "Dream Mixes 2: TimeSquare" in 1997.Berlin school music has evolved into many modern interpretations of the original 1970's Berlin School sound. Most modern styles still retain the same 'warm analogue synth sound' and progressive nature that is the basis of the genre. Notable latter day artists of Berlin School include Redshift, the Dutch [http://www.freesystemprojekt.nl Free System Projekt] ,
Radio Massacre International , Rainbow Serpent,Syndromeda ,Omega Syndicate , Arc,Airsculpture , Arcane,Dweller at the Threshold ,Ken Martin ,Rudy Adrian ,Indra ,Dom F. Scab , Spyra,Syn ,Craig Padilla , [http://www.nettilinja.fi/~ahassine/ Nemesis] andDetlef Keller .External links
* [http://www.pugachov.ru/eem/ Encyclopedia of Electronic Music]
* [http://home1.gte.net/deleyd/newage/newagespace.html New Age Space (Berlin School)]
* [http://www.computerchemist.com/ computerchemist]
* [http://www.inquisitorbetrayer.com/ Inquisitor Betrayer]
* [http://www.rmi.dircon.co.uk/ Radio Massacre International]
* [http://www.dattonline.com/ Dweller at the Threshold]
* [http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=126175505/ Eppie P Hulshof]References
Various contributors, "All Music Guide to Electronica", Backbeat Books, San Francisco, 2001.
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