Harmonia! Live!
Aquarius Records says,
“Record covers like this one just aren’t fair. Michael Rother, Dieter Moebius and Hans-Joachim Roedelius hiply dressed on a platform in an abandoned train station with their backs turned to the audience playing all manner of amazing looking analog electrical equipment: synths, farfisas, banks of tone generators, oscillators, patch bays, stacks of amps, leaning guitars, and cords everywhere, amongst racks of machines with all sorts of knobs and levels. It just makes us soooo jealous. Not only for such beautiful equipment, but also nostalgic for this period of time in Germany in the early seventies when so much thoughtful and incredibly inventive music was being produced. First Amon Duul II, Can and Faust then Kraftwerk, Cluster, and, Neu!, with Harmonia being the perfect synthesis of the latter three bands both in sound and personnel. Especially when you see the back cover and you get a closer look at the band and you can tell the trio just have this alchemical connection with each other and the sounds they make. Each member is focused but self-assuredly calm. Not exactly what you would expect from a band whom Brian Eno once called “the world’s most important rock band”. Not that much of the world had ever heard of them. Nor is it what most folks consider rock music to be.
So this is it! We’ve been reading about this for months, and it’s finally here: a live document of a now legendary show on March 23rd, 1974 at Penny Station in Griessem, Germany. Not that it really matters that this is live, as their is no applause or chatter to clue you in, just bits of mumbled talking as the songs wind down at the very end. Harmonia members attribute this to there being only 50 or so people in the audience most of which were either too stoned to clap or too unsure at what points the songs begin and end. Doesn’t seem to matter to the band anyway as we’ve already seen their backs were to the audience the entire time. But for a live document the sound quality is impeccable and what’s even better all of the tracks performed weren’t on any of their recordings, giving us, thirty-three years later, 5 new vintage Harmonia tracks to pore over. Most of which are over 9 minutes long.
Recorded between Harmonia’s woozy debut, Musik Von Harmonia, and its more rock-leaning follow-up, Deluxe, Live 1974 is the logical conglomeration of both sounds, sort of like the merging of Terry Riley-ish repetitions with Robert Fripp’s or Heldon’s spacey and searing guitar extrapolations. But unlike conventional rock bands, Harmonia’s music doesn’t climax or necessarily change all that much, making their deceptively simple musical structures more akin to trance, electronica and slow disco. Beginning with the slow burn of “Schaumberg”, an 11 minute epic of Rother’s sinewy guitar lines that build and loop over gentle pulses of Moebius’s programmed percussion and Roedelius’ repetitive tonal keyboard patterns merging into a more sped-up and hypnotic version with bass rhythms on “Veteranissimo”, an extended 17 minute meditation on “Veterano” from Musik Von Harmonia that breaks down to quiet heartbeats before slowly building again. “Arabesque”, the shortest track at five minutes, does away with the percussive elements altogether, instead focussing on overlapping patterns of melodic synth and guitar before slamming into the loping quarter-hour stoner lurch of “Holta-Polta”, then finally culminating in the blissful pastoralism of “Ueber Ottenstein”.
It’s been a stellar year or two for krautrock reissues as most of the Klaus Schulze, Cluster, Harmonia, Popol Vuh and Michael Rother catalogs have been reissued, re-introducing to the world the proto-new age realms of seventies German kosmiche music at a time when we can easily see its influence weaving through so many new bands like Arp, The Alps, White Rainbow, Lichens and Sylvain Chaveau. Always timeless, and never dated, Harmonia, like most of their German contemporaries mentioned above, were the most important rock band in the world simply because they cared about what they did, kept it simple, never indulged, and always left us wanting more.”
Harmonia
Live 1974
MegaUpload Download Link
Tracklist:
01. Schaumburg
02. Veteranissimo
03. Arabesque
04. Holta-Polta
05. Ueber Ottenstein