Editorial Reviews Music Review:
Music Review
Grace Under Pressure [CD-single] [Import]
Basic 100, Volume 79: Dmitri Shostakovich
Music: Tulsa for One Second Remix Project
Allusions in the Moonlight: a japanese lieder recital
Art of the Duo: Gunther Klatt & Aki Takase Play Ballads of Duke Ellington
Amazon.com essential recording
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