Album artwork for Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische  Musik 1974-1984 by Various

Welcome to Silberland - where the streets are paved with strobes. Home to neon lights, straight lines and open roads, this futurist fantasy was first founded in the mid-seventies, when Germany’s creative class chose musical therapy in order to indulge their shared hallucination of a new Europe. Fuelled by the catalytic fusion of globalisation and new technology, the world was turning ever faster and the kosmische generation were ready to keep the pace. With synthesisers, rhythm computers and human metronomes turned to a gallop, these electronic innovators set modernity to a motorik beat, and Bureau B’s second trip into Silberland cuts right to the thrust of the genre. The set begins with the propulsive opener from Harald Grosskopf’s 1986 LP Oceanheart, in which pristine sequences play in counterpoint atop a mechanical kick, hurtling forward until the rest of the kit catches up. Live drums take centre stage for Cluster’s feverish “Prothese” and the time travelling “Elektroklang” by Conrad Schnitzler, which foreshadows industrial and techno innovations while maintaining a primal punch. You offer astral ascension on “Son Of A True Star”, weaving proggy square waves and pulsating arps around an irresistible shuffle from mysterious percussionist Lhan Gopal (Grosskopf in disguise), before the optimistic “Für Dich” fuses classic kosmische chords with Thomas Dinger’s pummelling beat. Asmus Tietchens’ detuned keys and drum machine samba are imbued with a punk spirit shared by Moebius Plank Neumeier’s discordant jazz-tanz jam “Search Zero”.

Tracktitel 01. Harald Grosskopf - Eve On The Hill (bureau b edit) 02. Cluster - Prothese 03. Conrad Schnitzler - Elektroklang 04. You - Son Of A True Star (bureau b edit) 05. Thomas Dinger - Für Dich (bureau b edit) 06. Asmus Tietchens - Bockwurst á la Maîtresse 07. Moebius Plank Neumeier - Search Zero (bureau b edit) 08. Heiko Maile - Beat For Ikutaro (Tape 52) (bureau b edit) 09. Lapre - Flokati (bureau b edit) 10. Adelbert Von Deyen - Time Machine 11. Günter Schickert - Puls (bureau b edit) 12. Faust - Juggernaut 13. Moebius & Plank - Feedback 66 (bureau b edit) 14. Roedelius - Band 068 3 Bock auf Rock (nicht verwendetes Stück) 15. Serge Blenner - Phonique 16. Moebius & Beerbohm - Subito 17. Tyndall - Wolkenlos (bureau b edit) 18. Pyrolator - 180° 19. Die Partei - Guten Morgen in Köln 20. Deutsche Wertarbeit - Auf Engelsflügeln (bureau b edit)

Various

Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische Musik 1974-1984

Bureau B
Album artwork for Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische  Musik 1974-1984 by Various
LPx2

£42.99

Black
Released 16/06/2023Catalogue Number

BB414LP

Learn more
Album artwork for Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische  Musik 1974-1984 by Various
CD

£19.99

Released 16/06/2023Catalogue Number

BB414

Learn more
Various

Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische Musik 1974-1984

Bureau B
Album artwork for Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische  Musik 1974-1984 by Various
LPx2

£42.99

Black
Released 16/06/2023Catalogue Number

BB414LP

Learn more
Album artwork for Silberland Vol 2 - The Driving Side Of Kosmische  Musik 1974-1984 by Various
CD

£19.99

Released 16/06/2023Catalogue Number

BB414

Learn more

Welcome to Silberland - where the streets are paved with strobes. Home to neon lights, straight lines and open roads, this futurist fantasy was first founded in the mid-seventies, when Germany’s creative class chose musical therapy in order to indulge their shared hallucination of a new Europe. Fuelled by the catalytic fusion of globalisation and new technology, the world was turning ever faster and the kosmische generation were ready to keep the pace. With synthesisers, rhythm computers and human metronomes turned to a gallop, these electronic innovators set modernity to a motorik beat, and Bureau B’s second trip into Silberland cuts right to the thrust of the genre. The set begins with the propulsive opener from Harald Grosskopf’s 1986 LP Oceanheart, in which pristine sequences play in counterpoint atop a mechanical kick, hurtling forward until the rest of the kit catches up. Live drums take centre stage for Cluster’s feverish “Prothese” and the time travelling “Elektroklang” by Conrad Schnitzler, which foreshadows industrial and techno innovations while maintaining a primal punch. You offer astral ascension on “Son Of A True Star”, weaving proggy square waves and pulsating arps around an irresistible shuffle from mysterious percussionist Lhan Gopal (Grosskopf in disguise), before the optimistic “Für Dich” fuses classic kosmische chords with Thomas Dinger’s pummelling beat. Asmus Tietchens’ detuned keys and drum machine samba are imbued with a punk spirit shared by Moebius Plank Neumeier’s discordant jazz-tanz jam “Search Zero”.

Tracktitel 01. Harald Grosskopf - Eve On The Hill (bureau b edit) 02. Cluster - Prothese 03. Conrad Schnitzler - Elektroklang 04. You - Son Of A True Star (bureau b edit) 05. Thomas Dinger - Für Dich (bureau b edit) 06. Asmus Tietchens - Bockwurst á la Maîtresse 07. Moebius Plank Neumeier - Search Zero (bureau b edit) 08. Heiko Maile - Beat For Ikutaro (Tape 52) (bureau b edit) 09. Lapre - Flokati (bureau b edit) 10. Adelbert Von Deyen - Time Machine 11. Günter Schickert - Puls (bureau b edit) 12. Faust - Juggernaut 13. Moebius & Plank - Feedback 66 (bureau b edit) 14. Roedelius - Band 068 3 Bock auf Rock (nicht verwendetes Stück) 15. Serge Blenner - Phonique 16. Moebius & Beerbohm - Subito 17. Tyndall - Wolkenlos (bureau b edit) 18. Pyrolator - 180° 19. Die Partei - Guten Morgen in Köln 20. Deutsche Wertarbeit - Auf Engelsflügeln (bureau b edit)