Germany - Full Moon 223 - 11/06/14
From head to heart
Kraftwerk's Autobahn
Following our retroscope series of latter years, here we go again! Here's Speakers'
corner's cousin; From head to heart. Luna Kafé's focused eye on great events, fantastic happenings, absolute
milestones, or other curious incidents from the historic shelves'n'vaults of pop'n'rock. Blowing our ears and our head, punching our chest and shaking our heart. Making us go sentimental,
but not slaphappy. This moonth we are taking another fourty-year leap back in time. Once more. Bak to 1974, again. To check some German roadworks. Some kind of construction or repair work,
or some technical maintenance maybe. Die Autobahn. Once the road is open again there will be no more traffic cones, barrier boards, t-top bollards or other warning devices to look for.
Checked. Clear. Go! Ein! Zwei! Drei! Vier! Autobahn.
Kraftwerk
Autobahn
Philips/Vertigo Records
I remember vividly the first time I heard Autobahn the album, a Sunday probably some time in the autumn 1975. My family had been invited to my aunt and uncle. The parent generation
went for a nap after dinner and I was sent to my cousins' room where I was allowed to use their record player, if I didn't play too loud. My cousins were several years older than me and not
at home. I browsed through their large (I thought, at the time) record collection and found this LP with the simple and, in retrospect, iconic blue and white motorway sign. It must have been
the British and not the German edition of the album then. On the same label as the early albums by Black Sabbath and Uriah Heep. This was really something completely different.
I was fascinated by the synthesizer sounds and the catchy melody of the title track, that covered the entire side one of the LP. The four songs of side two were less instant and I think
I concentrated on side one for most of that early evening. Kraftwerk remained a sort of cult fenomenon for me the following years, recorded onto cassette at first. I didn't listen to their
music too often, but quite intensively once in a while.
Most of the Kraftwerk charcteristics are present for the first time on Autobahn, the band's fourth effort. Apart from the novelty, at the time, combination of synthesizers and pop
melodies, there is the vocoder effect on the voice and electronic rhythms, to some extent. The vocoder voice only appears for a few seconds at the very beginnning just after the motor has
been started and during the last chorus of the title track. The heavy synthetic disco rhythms were still a few years down the line. In fact more than half the album's playing time lacks
drums-alike rhythms all together. And the band still relies on conventional instruments to a large extent. Most surprising is a recorder, the wooden flute you know, that dominates the simple
melody of last song of side two, "Morgenspaziergang" (Morning Stroll), along with a lyrical piano and electronic birds singing. But before we reach the morning on side two, there is the
night, "Kometenmelodie 1", Kometenmelodie 2" and "Mitternacht". The first Comet Melody and the Midnight track are a bit free-form, especially the latter, closer to the early days of
Tangerine Dream - and Kraftwerk of the previous albums. "Mitternacht" owes a bit to Pink Floyd of the early days, too. Well, there is a sort of windy
synthesizer melody in the former, slow and a bit creepy at first that gradually turns into a more pleasant dream. The second comet melody is altogether more cosy after a noisy fall at the
start, with a happy synthesized pop melody, as catchy as the vocal parts of the title track.
"Autobahn" the title track is probably not as well known as I first thought when I started to write this. It was edited into a three and a half minutes single released in May 1975 that
turned the members of Kraftwerk into pop stars, of their own kind. It made it to the hit lists all over the western world and dragged the album along. The almost 23 minutes long album version
on the other hand has long instrumental passages not often heard when the Kraftwerk quartet performes live. The one where electronic cars passes by from the left speaker to the right and
vice versa, occasionally honking the horn with doppler effect and all, over electric beats, is still quite fascinating. And let's not forget that a standard Farfisa organ and a flute dominate
the melody line of the song. It took another year, 1975's Radio-Aktivität/Radio-Activity to turn Kraftwerk into a full-blooded electronic band.
The band members later turned their fascination to more environmentally friendly means of transport: trains (Trans Europa Express/Trans-Europe Express, 1977) and bikes (Tour de
France, 2003). But it's probably their interest in new technology like robots (Die Mensch-Maschine/The Man-Machine, 1978) and computers (Computerweld/Computer World, 1981),
and that ride down the Autobahn from Köln to Bonn that they are most fondly rememberd for.
Wir fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Vor uns liegt ein weites Tal
Die Sonne scheint mit Glitzerstrahl
Wir fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Die Fahrbahn ist ein graues Band
Weisse Streifen, grüner Rand
Wir fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Jetzt schalten wir ja das Radio an
Aus dem Lautsprecher klingt es dann:
Wir fah'rn auf der Autobahn
Wir fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn
Fahr'n fahr'n fahr'n auf der Autobahn...
Later albums by Kraftwerk were recorded with both German and English titles and lyrics. "Autobahn" was never translated to English, but here's an attempt anyway:
We're driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
Driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
In front of us is a wide valley
The sun is shining with glittering rays
We're driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
Driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
The driving strip is a grey track
White stripes, green edge
We're driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
Driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
We're switching the radio on
From the speaker it sounds:
We're driving on the Autobahn
We're driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn
Driving, driving, driving on the Autobahn...
Copyright © 2014 JP
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