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Human Being: Live at the Zodiak - Berlin 1968
Human Being: Live at the Zodiak - Berlin 1968
$18.98
Tune into Live at the Zodiak 1968, with the volume up to the max, and you'll know why people came away stunned by the alien weirdness of it all.
Artist: Human Being
Release Date: April 2009
Genre:Jazz Free Form; Experimental
Track Count: 1
Running Time: 54 minutes
Catalog No.: AMC09008
Product Details
Human Being: Live At the Zodiak - Berlin 1968 is now available for sale. A 4 panel DigiPak with a 12-page insert - Including rare photos, quotes & insightful liner notes written by Stephen Ilfe.
An excerpt...
(Versión alemana)
Where do we start? Let’s take summer 1968 at the Zodiak underground music club beneath 32 Hallesches Ufer in West Berlin’s Kreuzberg Quarter. It was here that Human Being’s uncompromisingly loud debut rattled the foundations of the Wirtschaftswunder, West Germany’s post-war economic miracle, as if willing it to collapse. The tools of the 1960s American and British rock trade – guitar, organ, drums – were present and correct. But this wasn’t the sound of The Doors or Rolling Stones. The instruments were scraped and beaten, fed through early reverb, delay and echo units, the output sounding like industrial machines gone berserk.
Tune into Live at the Zodiak 1968, with the volume up to the max, and you’ll know why people came away stunned by the alien weirdness of it all.
Who was Human Being? A collective of non-musicians with anti-hippie black t-shirts and pre-punk defiance; the nucleus was Norbert Eisbrenner, Elke Lixfeld, Broderick Price, Beatrix Rief, Hans-Joachim Roedelius, Boris Schaak, Verena Schirz and Christoph Sievernich.Even to the seriously hip Zodiak crowd with a cocked ear for Hendrix and Zappa imports, the Human Being experience was unlike any before it. Yet repeat listens to Live at the Zodiak 1968 tells us their 400-volt noise was charged with a human impulse. “If you organise this noise,” the Zodiak’s founder Conrad Schnitzler told Roedelius, “it’s not just pure chaos, it can grow into music.”
And out of the chaos, a sense of redemption – for a nation sick of the past and confused about the future.
So, where’s the album? Astonishingly, for nearly 40 years there were no known recordings from the Zodiak. Then an unnamed fan, who had documented one Human Being gig on his portable Uher reel-to-reel machine, contacted Roedelius out of the blue with 64 minutes of quarter-inch stereo tape.
At the start of Live at the Zodiak 1968, there’s none of the props or comfort zones that even free jazz relied on – opening themes or reassuring 4/4 bars for providing a launch pad into the unknown. It opens to an ill-defined murk of low sounds punctuated by Schaak’s slow marching beat which reverberates like an oil drum. As metallic echoes glance off uncertain acoustic spaces, we’re led into a twilight zone filled with Price’s sustained guitar drones and Eisbrenner’s solemn one note saxophone bleats.Over the first ten minutes, there’s almost no development. Yet an exquisite tension arises between the crude mechanical means of generating sound and their flowing Japanese watercolour-like immediacy. A swelling electronic current of heavily processed cello tones, a distant electronic blipping, ecstatic waves of Syd Barrett-like slide guitar produced by running a cigarette lighter over the strings. The soft percussive clatter of found objects, ghostly wordless chants. While the instrumental technique is defiantly basic it yields the sonic equivalent of the Merzbau of Kurt Schwitters – the 1930s Dadaist who alchemised beauty out of litter and debris.
Gradually it picks up urgency, becomes louder and more insistent. As cadences rise and fall like hills, a tangible sense of landscape emerges. But it’s not picture music: (“You can’t paint a German landscape once a tank has driven through it,” declared the new wave artist Anselm Kiefer). If we can’t see the landscape we can hear the sounds as we journey through it; sometimes sad, confused or harsh, sometimes reflective, tender or optimistic.
So this is a psychic soundscape, then – utterly synthetic yet burdened with human knowledge. Over the 64-minute distance there’s an inner logic of tension, release, sustain and interval. For listeners with staying power it eventually rewards patience by climbing to an angry, almost symphonic peak of white noise. As it falls away to the final silence, you’re left with an intoxicating shock of discovery that even the most virtuosic of late 1960s free jazz and psychedelic rock often struggled to achieve.
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Product Reviews:
(Monday, 21 December 2009)Rating:
Human Being Live At The Zodiak: Berlin 1968 Nepenthe CD In the late 1960s, the experimental art, theatre and performance space Zodiak was West Berlin’s answer to London’s ICA and New York’s Electric Circus. That it is not nearly as well remembered as those venues may be because, incredibly, no artefacts of Zodiak shows have survived until now. This recently discovered audience recording of the ensemble Human Being, made in 1968, not only gives a glimpse into what performances at the Zodiak sounded like, but also documents one of the earliest progenitors of Krautrock, a collective consisting, quite intentionally, of both musicians and non-musicians – future Cluster members Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Boris Schaak, as well as Christoph Sievernich, Elke Lixfeld and Norbert Eisbrenner. Roedelius, Schaak and Tangerine Dream co-founder Conrad Schnitzler were also among Zodiak’s founders.
Fans of Cluster hoping to find an earlier version of that group’s cool, minimalist proto-electronica here will be disappointed, or at least surprised – Human Being’s brief was to go just about anywhere but familiar rock, or even Progressive rock, territory. This 56 minute uninterrupted performance is chaotic, arhythmic and decidedly unmusical, with no chords or melodies to speak of, but plenty of quasi-ritualistic chanting, scraping, feedback and drones from instruments played the wrong way or processed to the point of unrecognisability. It doesn’t quite fall into either avant jazz or psychedelic freakout territory, but rather evokes the sharp-edged, churning Industrial landscapes of groups that would appear ten years later. This is anti-music, not only in its rejection of musicianship and traditional structures, but also in its implicitly ungroovy, death-of-civilisation grimness.
It’s hard to believe that these same people would be heading more aerodynamic, electronic outfits like Harmonia just a few years later. But so many important Krautrock figures were involved in this project in one way or another that, in retrospect, Human Being’s ground zero starting point was clearly a crucial step in the development of German electronic music as we know it.
– Dave Mandl, The Wire
http://www.thewire.co.uk/
(Sunday, 20 December 2009)
Rating:
Human Being has just been released on Nepenthe Music. It is a label delivering 'neo-expressionism for the 21st century'. If you visit the site you will find various releases from Dwight Ashley, Ashley/Story, Cluster, Dieter Moebius, Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Tim Story. Only 1 track, of more than 56 minutes, is to be found on this cd? Nicely packed as a 4 panel DigiPak with a 12-page insert including rare photos, quotes and insightful liner notes written by Stephen Ilfe. "Berlin 1968" is the only known recording from the year-long underground music scene in the city that was on of the era's hottest flash points of countercultural revolution. Human Being's live performances were alternately chaotic and inspired, than in large part to their insistence that trained musicians were incapable of entering the territory they sought to explore. This ethos of freedom extended not just to the music they made, but also the instruments they used. At first, the group worked primarily with cast-offs from professionals. But it wasn't long before the group's Dadaist sensibility led to experimentation with found-object instrumentation and ultimately, the addition of electronic sound sources that would provide seminal inspiration to an entire generation electronic musicians including Tangerine Dream's Edgar Froese and Klaus Schulze, as well as Agitation Free's Lutz Ulbrich.
What may be most remarkable in revisiting "Human Being - Live At The Zodiac" is that this music , which was so alien 40 years ago, is so rich with the sounds of today. Whether Conrad Schniztler's prophetic pronouncement, "If you organise this noise it can grow into music ", has come true, you have to decide for yourself, although some people might claim this record as a bizarre infinite cacophony. An edition for collectors.
(NOA:5)NOA. – side-line.com
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