- Expo 2000 (song)
Infobox Single
Name = Expo 2000
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Artist =Kraftwerk
Album =
A-side =
B-side =
Released = December 1999, November 2000
Format =
Recorded = 1999-2000
Genre =Electronic music Synthpop
Length =
Label = Kling KlangEMI
Astralwerks flagicon|United States
Writer =
Producer =Ralf Hütter Florian Schneider Fritz Hilpert Henning Schmitz
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Misc ="Expo 2000" is a song by
Kraftwerk . It was originally ana cappella jingle , a commission for theHannover Expo 2000 convention inGermany , and which was subsequently developed into longer pieces withmusic and additionallyrics .The "Expo 2000" single was released on CD and twelve inch vinyl in December 1999 by
EMI in Germany and in January 2000 elsewhere inEurope . It reached #27 in the UK singles chart in March 2000.It was their first commercial recording of new, original music since the release of the album, "
Electric Café " in 1986.In November 2000, a collection of
remix es was released, fittingly titled "Expo Remix", featuring contributions from various producers, including long-term collaboratorFrançois Kevorkian and members of theDetroit techno collectiveUnderground Resistance .Both releases were combined and issued on one CD by
Astralwerks in the US in October 2001.Expo-jingle
The original "Expo" theme was a typically Kraftwerk
vocoder -voice singing the phrase "Expo 2000" in six languages: German, English, French, Russian, Spanish, Japanese. In total, the piece lasted thirty seconds. This "Expo-Jingle" was only available fordownload from the "Expo 2000" website for a limited period and on the limited edition official "Expo 2000" souvenir CD.The jingle was used during the "Expo 2000" convention, according to the official "Expo 2000" website, "to announce Expo stops in buses, trains or planes, when prizes and awards are presented, at press conferences, during radio and television broadcasts, as a welcoming tune on the internet, as music on hold for the Expo Call Center, or when performances begin and as an intermission signal at Expo events."
There was criticism in
Germany at the time about the size of the fee paid — 400,000 DM (which would have been approximately €204,500 in 1999) — for such a brief and simple piece of music.:Cquote|We were in the middle of working on an album, and weren’t able to play a one-off concert to open "Expo". While I was talking to the artistic director, he asked Kraftwerk to produce an electronic sound for "Expo"; for computers, phones and all electronic communications. I think he had something like the Windows opening signature in mind. The history of "Expo" I knew from
Paris , which was the beginning; when European composers such as Debussy and the like were confronted with ethnic music fromBali ,Africa and elsewhere for the first time. It was cultural as well as technological. So the whole idea in the spirit of the musical world and history came to our mind. Let’s work with languages and computer languages; Russian, Japanese, Latin, German, and just make it an idea: ("imitates electronic voice") “EXPO 2000”. But then we liked it and didn’t want to just do four seconds, so we made a whole composition.::—Ralf Hütter [ "Mojo" magazine interview, August 2005]Expo 2000 tracklisting
# "Expo 2000" (Radio Mix)
# "Expo 2000" (Kling Klang Mix 2000)
# "Expo 2000" (Kling Klang Mix 2002)
# "Expo 2000" (Kling Klang Mix 2001)Note: The UK CD also included Kraftwerk's Expo2000 video but had a shorter version of Mix 2001
Expo Remix tracklisting
# "Expo 2000" - Orbital Mix
# "Expo 2000" - François Kevorkian & Rob Rives Mix
# "Expo 2000" - DJ Rolando Mix
# "Expo 2000" - Underground Resistance Mix
# "Expo 2000" - Underground Resistance Infiltrated Mix
# "Expo 2000" - Underground Resistance Thought 3 MixReferences
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