It takes about 5 hours to drive from Düsseldorf to Hamburg on the Autobahn. During that stretch, you possibly can listen to Kraftwerk’s album Autobahn seven occasions — or in the event you prefer, you possibly can loop its eponymous opening music thirteen occasions. For it was “Autobahn,” extra so than Autobahn, that modified the sound of music around the globe in methods we nonetheless hear right now. “Germany was suddenly on the musical map,” writes the Guardian’s Tim Jonze. “David Bowie – who used to experience the autobahn whereas listening to the file – moved to Berlin and went on to make the electronically influenced Low, “Heroes” and Lodger. Brian Eno relocated to the rural village of Forst to file with the influential avant-garde band Harmonia.” Quickly would come the electronic pop of Extremelyvox, DAF and the Eurythmics, followed by Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder’s floodgate-opening “I Really feel Love”.
Not a foul pop-cultural coup for, as Jonze places it, “a 22-minute 43-second music concerning the German highway internetwork.” On the time of its launch in early 1975, Kraftwerk had put out three full albums, however what would change into their signature Teutonic-electronic sound hadn’t fairly taken form. Nevertheless it was already clear that their work took its inspiration from twentieth-century modernity, a subject of which no single work of man of their houseland might have been extra evocative than the Autobahn.
With its origins within the Weimar Republic and its lengthy stretches without a pace limit, the German freeapproach internetwork is internationally regarded as a concrete symbol of whole personal freedom, and whole personal responsibility, within a excessively rule-respecting culture. To the younger members of Kraftwerk, who typically drove the Düsseldorf-Hamburg section, it held out the promise of freedom.
So did the then-new Minimoog synthesizer, which value as a lot as a Volkswagen on the time, however provided the prospect to make music like nothing the public had ever heard earlier than. “Autobahn” captured the imaginations of listeners eachthe place with not simply its electronic results, but additionally the incongruity of their combination with instruments just like the flute (a holdover from Kraftwerk’s earlier compositions) and vehicular sounds evocative of a genuine highway journey — all assembled at what would then have appeared a hypnotically expansive size for a pop music. Little did even the hippest listeners of the mid-seventies, such because the Americans tuned into early free-form FM stations the place no corpocharge professionalgramming guidelines utilized, know that they have been hearing what Jones calls “the purpose the place electronic pop music truly started.” All automotive journeys run out of highway eventually, however humanity’s journey into the possibilities of high-tech music exhibits no indicators of methoding its finish.
Related Content:
The Psychedelic Animated Video for Kraftwerk’s “Autobahn” (1979)
Kraftwerk Performs a Dwell 40-Minute Version of their Signature Track “Autobahn:” A Soundmonitor for a Lengthy Highway Journey (1974)
How Kraftwerk Made the Rock and Roll Corridor of Fame
Kraftwerk’s First Concert: The Startning of the Finishmuch lessly Influential Band (1970)
How the Moog Synthesizer Modified the Sound of Music
Hear the Evolution of Electronic Music: A Sonic Journey from 1929 to 2019
Based mostly in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. He’s the writer of the newsletter Books on Cities in addition to the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Summarizing Korea) and Korean Newtro. Follow him on the social internetwork formerly often called Twitter at @colinmarshall.

