Radio-Activity Explained

Radio-Activity
Type:studio
Artist:Kraftwerk
Cover:Kraftwerk Radio Activity album cover.jpg
Studio:Kling Klang (Düsseldorf)
Genre:
Length:37:38
Label:
Producer:
Prev Title:Exceller 8
Prev Year:1974
Next Title:Trans-Europe Express
Next Year:1977

Radio-Activity (German title: Radio-Aktivität) is the fifth studio album by German electronic music band Kraftwerk, released in October 1975. The band's first entirely electronic album is also a concept album organized around the themes of radioactive decay and radio communication. All releases of the album were bilingual, with lyrics in both English and German. The album was accompanied by single release of the title track, which was successful in France and Belgium.

Background

Following the success of its 1974 predecessor Autobahn, an album based on Germany's eponymous motorway network, Kraftwerk embarked on a tour of the United States with the "classic" lineup of the band formed by Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider, Karl Bartos—who joined in February 1975—and Wolfgang Flür in April and May 1975.

Album title

Radio-Activitys album title displays Kraftwerk's typical deadpan humour, being a pun on the twin themes of the songs,[3] half being about radioactivity and the other half about activity on the radio.[4] Bartos revealed that the title was inspired by a chart column in the American magazine, Billboard,[5] which featured the most played singles under the title "Radio Activity".[6] According to Wolfgang Flur, the concept arose as a result of the many radio interviews that Ralf and Florian had given on their American tour.

Composition and recording

The album was recorded in Kling Klang Studio, Düsseldorf, and it was self-produced by Hütter and Schneider. It was their first purely electronic album, and the first one to be performed by the "classic" band line-up.[7] Karl and Wolfgang worked on electronic percussion.[8] LP liner notes state music and production was by Hütter and Schneider, with Emil Schult collaborating on lyrics. For this album, the band had decided to record some vocals in English and Schult's command of the language after studying for a while in the United States was better than Hutter's or Schneider's. Tim Barr pointed out the impact his experiences had in the United States on his ability to speak the language and in more subtle ways as well. Schult also designed the artwork, which was based on a late-1930s 'Deutscher Kleinempfänger' radio.

The overture instrumental piece "Geiger Counter" used Geiger counter beats based on musique concrète.[9] The album featured use of the distinctive Vako Orchestron keyboard to provide vocal choir on title track.[10] "Antenna" used an echo chamber effect, and Hütter's Farfisa electronic piano was used on "Transistor". For the recording, extensive use was made of the vocoder.

Release and promotion

In September 1975, the band toured the UK, playing 17 shows. By 1975, Hütter and Schneider's previous publishing deals with Capriccio Music and Star Musik Studio of Hamburg had expired. The compositions on Radio-Activity were published by their own newly set up Kling Klang Verlag music publishing company, giving them greater financial control over the use of songwriting output. Also, the album was the first to bear the fruit of Kling Klang as an established vanity label under the group's new licensing deal with EMI.

Radio-Activity was released in October 1975. For their promotion, their record company sent them to a "real Atomkraftwerk" to take promotional photos. In these photos, the group was dressed in white protective suits and anti-radiation boots on their shoes. The album reached on the Canadian charts in February 1976. The title track "Radioactivity" was released as a single in May 1976 and became a hit in France, selling 500,000 copies, and Belgium in the charts.

Reception

Radio-Activity was released to mixed reviews, with Rolling Stone criticizing the album: "...no cut on the album comes near the melodic/harmonic sense that pervaded Autobahn or the creative use of electronics on the much earlier album Ralf and Florian".[11] Uncut wrote regarding their 2009 remaster that it "begins like a heartbeat in the void, accelerating into the pulse that will form the spine of the title-song, an eerie tribute to the intangibles (music, disintegrating atoms) that linger in the atmosphere." It consider that "has a musty scent of Old Europe, which proved a hit with the synth groups of 1980-81 (eg, Ultravox and Visage), and it retains a blood-chilling, Wagnerian quality even now, thanks to Kraftwerk's use of the Vako Orchestron, a choir-like relative of the Mellotron."

Chris Power from Drowned in Sound praised it for the experimental feeling in 2009: "A bridge between electronic experimentalism and the powerful, groundbreaking unification of avant-garde form and catchy, commercial function that was just around the corner, Radio-Activity is the sound of Kraftwerk finding their way in a strange new landscape that they were in the very process of creating". In a retrospective review, Jason Ankeny from AllMusic called the album "a pivotal record in the group's continuing development" and stated that it "marked Kraftwerk's return to more obtuse territory, extensively utilizing static, oscillators, and even Cage-like moments of silence".

Personnel

Adapted from 2009 remaster liner notes.[12]

Kraftwerk

Additional personnel

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1976)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[13] 94
Canada (RPM)[14] 59
France (SNEP)[15] 1

Certifications and sales

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Rubin. Mike. Who Knew That Robots Were Funky?. The New York Times. 4 December 2009. 28 November 2016. 1553-8095.
  2. Book: Schütte . Uwe . Kraftwerk: Future Music from Germany . 2020 . Penguin Books . [London] . 978-0-141-98675-3 . 90.
  3. Book: Bussy . Pascal . Kraftwerk: Man, Machine and Music . 2004 . SAF Publishing Ltd . 978-0-946719-70-9 . 78 . 27 October 2022 . en.
  4. Book: Schütte . Uwe . The Cambridge Companion to Krautrock . 27 October 2022 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-316-51107-7 . 99 . 27 October 2022 . en.
  5. Web site: Edwards . Lucas . 'Radio-Activity': How Kraftwerk Went Nuclear With Their Fifth Album . Dig! . 26 October 2022 . 26 October 2022.
  6. Book: Schütte . Uwe . German Pop Music: A Companion . 11 January 2017 . Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG . 978-3-11-042354-9 . 80 . 27 October 2022 . en.
  7. Book: Esch . Rudi . Electri_City: The Düsseldorf School of Electronic Music . 26 August 2016 . Omnibus Press . 978-1-78323-776-0 . 70 . 27 October 2022 . en.
  8. Book: Hardy . Phil . Laing . Dave . The Da Capo Companion To 20th-century Popular Music . 21 August 1995 . Da Capo Press . 978-0-306-80640-7 . 531 . 27 October 2022 . en.
  9. Web site: Kraftwerk: Radioactivity . Clash Magazine Music News, Reviews & Interviews . 27 October 2022 . 13 February 2013.
  10. Web site: Vako Orchestron - Kraftwerk - Trans-Europe Express & Radioactivity . MATRIXSYNTH . 27 October 2022.
  11. Ward. Ed. Ed Ward (writer). Radio-Aktivitat. Rolling Stone. New York. 12 February 1976. 10 November 2017. 0035-791X.
  12. Radio-Activity (Digital Remaster). Kraftwerk. 2009. CD. Mute Records. CDSTUMM304. Great Britain.
  13. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 170.
  14. Web site: RPM Top 100 Albums - February 28, 1976.
  15. Book: Kraftwerk: Publikation. 9781783236183. Buckley. David. 13 June 2015. Omnibus Press .