Kraftwerk - The Man-Machine
Facts
| Artist(s) | Kraftwerk |
| Studio | Emd Int'l |
| Release Date | September 26, 1995 |
| UPC Code | 777746039280 |
About Kraftwerk - The Man-Machine
The album on which Kraftwerk got serious about their legacy of fusing human flesh and the technology it has inspired into an indistinguishable whole, Man-Machine also ironically embodies some of the band's most endearing contradictions. The case is stated up front with the techno classic "The Robots." The journey continues to worlds both utopian ("Spacelab") and dystopian ("Metropolis"). Then it segues into a bona fide, hook-laden dance track ("The Model," perhaps inspired by the club success that Kraftwerk's previous album, Trans-Europe Express, experienced at the hands of enterprising early mixmaster DJs). There's also a downright sentimental cityscape, "Neon Lights." But lest anyone think that Schneider, Hutter, and company are too human, they wrap up the proceedings with the robotic dance-groove of the title track, inspiring dizzy listeners to ponder: Kraftwerk--men or machines? --Jerry McCulley Amazon.com essential recording
Tracks
- The Robots
- Spacelab
- Metropolis
- The Model
- Neon Lights
- The Man-Machine
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User Reviews
Average user review:| The best trance album ever |
| dull "music of der future". |
The CD is probably one of the most horrible things I've listened to. If you can get to the end of it, you'll find all sorts of unwanted electronic noise, Krautbot voice dubs, electro fuzz, beeps, computer konks, repugnant computer-generated vocals, static, repulsive synthesizers, and extremely unpleasant clamor that goes on forever, that you'll soon be reaching for a hammer to crush the CD. In my estimation, all crap. A few American bands at the time tried the stale trend with deadly results, Gary Numan The Pleasure Principle (1979), Styx Kilroy Was Here (1983) , both tossed their careers away because of it.
You'll be reminded of foolish telephone companies, lumbering computer screens, electronic wires, gay 70's discos, and moronic techno cabarets in smelly, dark German cellars. So, unless you're a nerd or have little taste in music, forget this stuff ever existed.
July 9, 2008
| Almost perfect |
Check for instance the true thematic opposition between Metropolis and The Model; or the significant links between The Robots, Metropolis and The Man-Machine, and even The Model or Neon Lights. Spacelab might seem a bit out of place unless you relate it with a cold-war/space race era context, a seemingly permanent by-product of the Russian Revolution, and World War II.
The album's cover art might remind us of revolutionary forms of art and political expressions in constructivism and suprematist propaganda (check the red and black color palette, the Chelovek typefaces and El Lissitsky's artwork in the back of the album (part of the Suprematist story of two squares in six constructions), while at the same time re-presents the aesthetic and make-up used in European silent-film making of the 20's decade. Films like Fritz Lang's Metropolis (I doubt there's not a coincidence), which talks about a social struggle between workers almost turned-into-robots (check that for the other meaning of all that We are the robots thing, along with the ya tvoi sluga ya tvoy rabotnik messages in the song) and the Masters of Metropolis, living in a very rich yet superfluous ("Elegance and decadence") European setup, much like the one reflected in The Model and Neon Lights.
The Man-Machine might be, in certain terms, a great quasi-concept album. The music production is truly great and I really love this album. Its only drawback is, of course, the language. Although the message in the German and English versions is virtually the same, it is much more impacting to listen to Wir Sind Die Roboter instead of the plain-sounding We are the robots. It's the same thing, actually, just a matter of choice.
By the way, all the art-concept blah blah, etc. thing is obviously not mine (except for the things in parentheses and all that social struggle thing). Check wikipedia for the real thing. May 12, 2008
| Man or Machine? |
The Robots is a mechanic groove with a human soul. The robot has a soul that makes the _______ robot human? Maybe. Plus, this song will make you dance to. Like robots maybe, or like a human, _________. Spacelab is a bit happer. I'm still a bit bleak on this one, but it sounds like a futuristic spacelab. Give or take. Metropolis seems to lurk with bad foreshadowing of a bleak distopia. The Model, a dance song, takes the other turn and critizes models as cold, heartless machines under the human body. I agree, models have no feelings and couldn't give a ______ less about anybody's. Neon Lights plays on the effects of Neon Lights. Long and kind of mesmerizing. Like neon lights. Finally, the end track, the Man-Machine, brings up what this album is all about.
Oh, and these are MY assumptions. If yours are different, than good for ________ you.
I prefer Computer World for the best Kraftwerk album so far, but The Man-Machine is a good idea for a listen. So yes, Kraftwerk even do what most people think are impossible: That electronic music has life. It does, but those people, I pity them. I'm not talking about Crazy Frog or Merzbow either. Indeed, if you look in the wrong place, your going to find lifeless music. Any genre. Always.
8/10 February 7, 2008
| Superb Music !! |
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