- Wolfgang Flür
Infobox Musical artist
Name = Wolfgang Flür
Img_capt =
Img_size = 220px
Background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
Birth_name =
Alias =
Born = Birth date and age|1947|7|17|df=yGermany
Died =
Instrument =Percussion ,keyboards
Genre =Electronic music Synthpop Krautrock
Occupation =Musician
Years_active = Late 1960s–present
Label =
Associated_acts = Spirits Of Sound
Fruit
The BeathovensKraftwerk (1973–1987)
Yamo
Dyko
URL = [http://www.yamomusic.de/ www.yamomusic.de]
Notable_instruments =Wolfgang Flür (born
17 July 1947 ) is a Germanmusician , best known as a member ofKraftwerk , theelectro-pop group, from 1973 to 1987, playing electronicpercussion . Flür also built much of the group's studio and stage equipment in his workshop below the band'sKling Klang studio.Previously he had played a conventional acoustic
drum kit in theDüsseldorf bandThe Spirits of Sound . (Another member of this band was guitaristMichael Rother , who also spent a few months as a member of Kraftwerk in 1971, before formingNeu! with then Kraftwerk drummerKlaus Dinger .)Flür is now the founding member of
Yamo , who released an album "Time Pie " in 1997, produced in collaboration withMouse on Mars . Flür's next release, the 12" and remixes of "I Was A Robot" climbed to number 6 in the German club charts. Collaborations withPizzicato 5 andDer Plan founding memberPyrolator have been announced, and the lyrics to the song "Greed" are in Flür'sautobiography , but this material remains unreleased.Flür also wrote an autobiography, published in the year 2000, called "Ich war ein Roboter" (English version: "I Was a Robot"),cite book | last = Flür| first = Wolfgang | authorlink = Wolfgang Flür | title = Kraftwerk: I Was a Robot| publisher = Sanctuary Publishing | date = 2000-11-29 | id = ISBN 186074320X ] showing the inner workings of Kraftwerk from the beginning. This book met with hostility and litigation from his former Kraftwerk colleagues
Ralf Hütter andFlorian Schneider . The original Hannibal Verlag edition was soon withdrawn, following an injunction, but the book was republished in English and Japanese, with removal of a couple of embarrassingly homoerotic photos of Schneider andEmil Schult and re-wording of certain sections. For instance, Flür no longer claims that the composition "Metal on Metal" was his idea; the idea was "probably" Hütter's, and he must have got the idea when he heard Flür banging away building stuff. However, most of the court attention centered around the recording of the song "Autobahn", and this point was decided in Flür's favor: The German court found that Flür did play drums on the "Autobahn" album. For many fans and critics, it seemed odd that Hütter and Schneider would take offence at this claim, since they credited him for doing so on the original edition of the album, and even later, credit-less, editions carry a band photo with Flür and his drum kit center stage.Recently, Flür has been seen DJ'ing in clubs, playing tech house and electro. He has also accompanied the German synthpop duo, Dyko, in live shows as an electronic percussionist.
Japanese singer
Maki Nomiya 's album "Party People" included the song "Yamate Line" with songwriting and co-production credited to Flür/Yamo (both being cited). The Agency recently released an exclusive Wolfgang Flur interview. Questions focused on Flur's background, musical inspirations, and customized drum machines that he created for Kraftwerk.External links
* [http://www.yamomusic.de/ Official website]
* [http://www.industryvendingmachine.com/interview_13_flur.html Wolfgang Flur interview with the Agency]References
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