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Angoose
06 May 20 16:50
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Date Joined: 18 Jul 02
| Topic/replies: 24,312 | Blogger: Angoose's blog
Co-founder of hugely influential electronic pop group, who has died of cancer, had a UK No 1 hit with The Model in 1982

Florian Schneider, who as one of the founding members of German group Kraftwerk changed the sound of pop music forever, has died aged 73 of cancer.

The news was confirmed by one of his musical collaborators, who said Schneider had died a week ago and had a private burial. It was also confirmed via Sony Berlin.

Born in 1947, Schneider was the son of Paul Schneider-Esbelen, a noted architect who designed Cologne’s airport. Schneider first played music in various groups while studying in Düsseldorf, beginning in a band called Pissoff. Operating in the experimental, open-minded rock scene dubbed “krautrock” in the British press, he formed the group Organisation with Ralf Hutter, the pair later forming Kraftwerk in 1970.

Schneider played the flute, violin and guitar, though often filtered through electronic processing. His interest in electronic music grew. “I found that the flute was too limiting,” he later said. “Soon I bought a microphone, then loudspeakers, then an echo, then a synthesiser. Much later I threw the flute away; it was a sort of process.”

After three albums with Hütter in the mid-70s, Kraftwerk released Autobahn and expanded to a quartet. The album was composed primarily on synthesisers, and its highly original sound and witty lyrics made it a hit, with the title track reaching No 11 in the UK and No 25 in the US.

Adding ever-more sophisticated synthesisers and drum machines, and with Hütter’s distinctive vocals, the group went on to release a series of albums that became hugely influential on pop music, particularly the four-album run of Radio-Activity (1975), Trans-Europe Express (1977), The Man-Machine (1978) and Computer World (1981). They described their music as industrielle volksmusik: “folk music of the factories”, as translated by David Bowie.

As well as being forefathers of the synthpop that would dominate the 1980s and beyond, the title track of Trans-Europe Express was sampled in 1982 by Afrika Bambaataa & the Soul Sonic Force for one of the earliest hip-hop hits, Planet Rock, while Computer World was hugely influential on the house and techno music that emerged from Chicago and Detroit that decade.

Their work also brought them into the orbit of the Berlin-dwelling Bowie and Iggy Pop – in a TV documentary, Pop recalled that he and Schneider once went shopping for asparagus together.

Known for his enigmatic, somewhat faraway smile, Schneider worked on all of the group’s studio albums, including The Man-Machine, which yielded their biggest hit: The Model, a melancholy synthpop song which topped the UK charts in 1982.

Following their final studio album to date, Tour De France Soundtracks in 2003, and a return to touring, Schneider left the group in 2008.

No reason was given for his departure, and he has maintained a mostly low profile since. Hütter said in 2009 that Schneider “worked for many, many years on other projects: speech synthesis, and things like that. He was not really involved in Kraftwerk for many, many years,” and in 2017 said that the pair had “not really” spoken since Schneider left.

In 2015, Schneider released a new piece of music, Stop Plastic Pollution, in collaboration with producer Dan Lacksman. He said the track, released to raise awareness about pollution, was inspired by “taking a swim in the ocean at the coasts of Ghana, watching fishermen catch nothing but plastic garbage in their nets”.
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Report Angoose May 6, 2020 4:50 PM BST
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEnx9xS79Lc
Report Angoose May 6, 2020 4:53 PM BST
"Now she's a big success, I want to meet her again" Grin
Report Angoose May 6, 2020 4:56 PM BST
The first time I heard The Model, I was in the back of a minibus on the way back from a skiing trip to Glenshee.
The skiing was murder. Windy, bitter cold, and long queues for the lifts.

Didn't half cheer me up when I heard a remarkable sound from a remarkable band.

RIP
Report A_T May 6, 2020 5:07 PM BST
Sad news. Always loved Kraftwerk - Computer World one of my favourite albums
Report sofiakenny May 6, 2020 5:09 PM BST
Autobahn was a ripsnorter of a single.
Report ----you-have-to-laugh--- May 6, 2020 5:26 PM BST
trans europe express and tour de france will always remind me of my time in france.

they changed music in a way that i loved, and all that followed

sad news
Report screaming from beneaththewaves May 6, 2020 11:09 PM BST
Rendezvous on Champs-Elysees
Leave Paris in the morning with TEE

In Vienna, we sit in a late-night cafe
Straight connection, TEE


I remember listening to those lines again and again, growing up in Slough in the seventies. I desperately wanted to be Ralf Hütter or Florian Schneider, and live like that. It all sounded impossibly romantic and heroic, with those expressionist rhythms and soaring synths.

Thank you, Herr Schneider, for bringing hopes and dreams into a drab life.
Report alun2005 May 7, 2020 12:05 AM BST
Another irreplaceable man gone. Was there ever a more influential band than Kraftwerk on the second half of the 70s and maybe beyond? So many inferior followers shamelessly in their debt.

I got the 'Autobahn' LP as a birthday present in '75, on Vertigo Records, the one with the 'optical illusion' label.  The album had received quite a lot of airplay beforehand, and I recall an appearance by the band on 'Tomorrow's World' of all places.

One of my favourite vinyl possessions is a 12" single, from around 1978, on luminous vinyl the colour of bitter lemon squash, containing 'Neon Lights' coupled with 'Trans Europe Express' and  'The Model'.

I'd say 'Trans Europe Express' was their greatest album, and if pushed for a favourite selection I would probably have to go for "The Hall of Mirrors" .

.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TPAySIthMo
Report screaming from beneaththewaves May 7, 2020 12:25 AM BST
Europe Endlless, the first track on the Trans-Europe Express LP, became Your Silent Face with New Order. I don't think New Order ever tried to hide the fact that they lifted the rhythm wholesale. They were huge fans of that album. When I saw them as Joy Division, it was Trans-Europe Express which was playing over the PA as the curtain went up.
Report Whisperingdeath May 7, 2020 3:53 AM BST
I was driving a minibus once and played Trans-Europe Express for the boys and completely freaked them out. We got onto playing The Robots every time we picked up someone new to weird looks, silence and eventual laughs. We nearly all went to their show at the Royal Albert Hall recently such was the conversion but it didn’t happen unfortunately.

It was never my favourite type of music and I certainly did not get on with rave and trance mainly I think because I don’t do drugs but  from time to time I drift back to Kraftwerk on you tube for me it is more art than music and that album was seminal.
Report FATTIEWHITEYSLOVEADRINK May 7, 2020 8:27 AM BST
There music was major influence must been great to see live
Report squares May 7, 2020 12:15 PM BST
so far ahead of his time and so influential - RIP
Report stewarts rise May 7, 2020 12:37 PM BST
Sad to hear another innovative band member has died, getting to the age where our old heroes are passing away, very sad, RIP.
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