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Krautrock Eruption ā An Introduction To German Electronic Music 1970-1980
Agree to disagree: A selected Krautrock discography
Krautrock, what is it anyway? A genre, a derogative term, a song by Faust, ⦠or: a welcome (and recurring) opportunity to talk about all of this. The music associated with the term in question has eagerly been canonized. From the enthusiastic and idiosyncratic ramblings of Julian Copeās āKrautrocksamplerā to encyclopaedic approaches like Alan and Stephen Freemanās āCrack in the Cosmic Eggā, there are plenty of books to read and lists to discuss: Whoās in, who isnāt? The quarrels and disputes surrounding the terms "Krautrock" and "Kosmische Musik" are a testament to their enduring relevance and fascination. I wonāt get into the weeds discussing
how to separate one from the other ā for all those who do want to, the book āKrautrock Eruptionā by Wolfgang Seidel addresses some of those questions. In this book, you will find an annotated discography of fifty albums. Out of these fifty, we are presenting an even narrower selection of tracks from twelve albums on this
compilation. Lists and compilation track listings inevitably see tracks missing and being left out. In our case, the compilation was produced in cooperation with the label Bureau B and therefore has a partial focus on some of their back catalogue.
That said, the list is meant to inspire repeated or further listening, to spark discussions and ā potentially ā to provoke new lists, perhaps your own! Itās all part of the fun. Music is made for enjoyment in the first and for friendly debate in the second place, after all.
Krautrock, what is it anyway? A genre, a derogative term, a song by Faust, ⦠or: a welcome (and recurring) opportunity to talk about all of this. The music associated with the term in question has eagerly been canonized. From the enthusiastic and idiosyncratic ramblings of Julian Copeās āKrautrocksamplerā to encyclopaedic approaches like Alan and Stephen Freemanās āCrack in the Cosmic Eggā, there are plenty of books to read and lists to discuss: Whoās in, who isnāt? The quarrels and disputes surrounding the terms "Krautrock" and "Kosmische Musik" are a testament to their enduring relevance and fascination. I wonāt get into the weeds discussing
how to separate one from the other ā for all those who do want to, the book āKrautrock Eruptionā by Wolfgang Seidel addresses some of those questions. In this book, you will find an annotated discography of fifty albums. Out of these fifty, we are presenting an even narrower selection of tracks from twelve albums on this
compilation. Lists and compilation track listings inevitably see tracks missing and being left out. In our case, the compilation was produced in cooperation with the label Bureau B and therefore has a partial focus on some of their back catalogue.
That said, the list is meant to inspire repeated or further listening, to spark discussions and ā potentially ā to provoke new lists, perhaps your own! Itās all part of the fun. Music is made for enjoyment in the first and for friendly debate in the second place, after all.
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Agree to disagree: A selected Krautrock discography
Krautrock, what is it anyway? A genre, a derogative term, a song by Faust, ⦠or: a welcome (and recurring) opportunity to talk about all of this. The music associated with the term in question has eagerly been canonized. From the enthusiastic and idiosyncratic ramblings of Julian Copeās āKrautrocksamplerā to encyclopaedic approaches like Alan and Stephen Freemanās āCrack in the Cosmic Eggā, there are plenty of books to read and lists to discuss: Whoās in, who isnāt? The quarrels and disputes surrounding the terms "Krautrock" and "Kosmische Musik" are a testament to their enduring relevance and fascination. I wonāt get into the weeds discussing
how to separate one from the other ā for all those who do want to, the book āKrautrock Eruptionā by Wolfgang Seidel addresses some of those questions. In this book, you will find an annotated discography of fifty albums. Out of these fifty, we are presenting an even narrower selection of tracks from twelve albums on this
compilation. Lists and compilation track listings inevitably see tracks missing and being left out. In our case, the compilation was produced in cooperation with the label Bureau B and therefore has a partial focus on some of their back catalogue.
That said, the list is meant to inspire repeated or further listening, to spark discussions and ā potentially ā to provoke new lists, perhaps your own! Itās all part of the fun. Music is made for enjoyment in the first and for friendly debate in the second place, after all.
Krautrock, what is it anyway? A genre, a derogative term, a song by Faust, ⦠or: a welcome (and recurring) opportunity to talk about all of this. The music associated with the term in question has eagerly been canonized. From the enthusiastic and idiosyncratic ramblings of Julian Copeās āKrautrocksamplerā to encyclopaedic approaches like Alan and Stephen Freemanās āCrack in the Cosmic Eggā, there are plenty of books to read and lists to discuss: Whoās in, who isnāt? The quarrels and disputes surrounding the terms "Krautrock" and "Kosmische Musik" are a testament to their enduring relevance and fascination. I wonāt get into the weeds discussing
how to separate one from the other ā for all those who do want to, the book āKrautrock Eruptionā by Wolfgang Seidel addresses some of those questions. In this book, you will find an annotated discography of fifty albums. Out of these fifty, we are presenting an even narrower selection of tracks from twelve albums on this
compilation. Lists and compilation track listings inevitably see tracks missing and being left out. In our case, the compilation was produced in cooperation with the label Bureau B and therefore has a partial focus on some of their back catalogue.
That said, the list is meant to inspire repeated or further listening, to spark discussions and ā potentially ā to provoke new lists, perhaps your own! Itās all part of the fun. Music is made for enjoyment in the first and for friendly debate in the second place, after all.

















