Irrlicht (album) explained

Irrlicht
Type:Studio
Artist:Klaus Schulze
Cover:Irrlicht Klaus Schulze Album.jpg
Released:August 1972
Recorded:April 1972 in Berlin
Length:50:27 (original)
74:27 (2006 reissue)
Label:Ohr
Producer:Klaus Schulze
Next Title:Cyborg
Next Year:1973

Irrlicht is the first album by Klaus Schulze. Originally released in 1972, in 2006 it was the sixteenth Schulze album reissued by Revisited Records as part of a series of Schulze album reissues. Recorded without a synthesizer, Irrlicht's set of "early organ drone experiments" is "not exactly the music for which KS got famous".[1]

Overview

The album's complete title is: Irrlicht: Quadrophonische Symphonie für Orchester und E-Maschinen (in English: "Will-o'-the-wisp: Quadraphonic Symphony for Orchestra and Electronic Machines"). Its atmospheric drone music tone is similar to Tangerine Dream's album Zeit (released the same month).

In 2005, Schulze said, "Irrlicht still has more connections to Musique concrète than with today's electronics. I still never owned a synthesiser at the time."[2] Schulze mainly used a broken and modified electric organ, a recording of a classical orchestra rehearsal played backward, and a damaged amplifier to filter and alter sounds that he mixed on tape into a three-movement symphony.[2]

Irrlicht, despite its highly unconventional nature, was originally released on the krautrock label Ohr. Because Schulze was signed to them while a member of Tangerine Dream, the label asserted that his solo album belonged to them too;[2] Schulze's reaction was, "I was just glad that Irrlicht was released at all. Any other company would have probably turned me away with this record."[2]

Track listing

All tracks composed by Klaus Schulze.

Notes

Personnel

References

Notes

  1. Both quotes from re-release producer Klaus D. Mueller (from the website and the booklet, respectively).
  2. Irrlicht CD booklet.
  3. Original 1972 LP booklet as quoted at Discogs.

External links