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Amon Düül

 
Artist: Amon Düül

Group Members:

Chris Karrer, Falk U. Rogner, Danny Secundus Fichelscher, Stefan Zauner, Renate Knaup-Kroetenschwanz, Lothar Meid, John Weinzierl, Peter Leopold

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

John Weinzierl, Lothar Meid, Chris Karrer

Formal Connection With:

Space Explosion
  • Formed: 1968, Munich, Germany
  • Disbanded: 1981
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Tanz der Lemminge," "Yeti," "Phallus Dei"

Biography

One of the first active Krautrock units, Amon Düül grew out of a multimedia artist commune in Munich that mixed radical political criticism with a unique vision of free-form improvisation tied to American psychedelic rock, especially compared to the avant-garde inclinations of other space rock units like Tangerine Dream and Cluster. Such open-ended and non-musical origins made the later activity of the group quite confusing, as a quartet of (slightly) more musically inclined members branched out in 1969 as Amon Düül II. Meanwhile, the original Amon Düül continued releasing albums, most of which had actually been recorded during a mammoth jam session by the entire conglomeration in 1969. Though Amon Düül ceased recording material by 1972, frequent reissues during the decade -- and the resumption of the Amon Düül name by several Amon Düül II alumni in the 1980s -- resulted in still more confusion. Listeners unfamiliar with the lineup of every Amon Düül-related release can content themselves with the fact that the main line of the group began with Amon Düül in the late '60s and moved to Amon Düül II for the 1970s recordings.

When originally founded in 1968 however, the group was more of an alternative-living commune project than actual recording artists. Wishing to bring their vision of hippie living to a worldwide audience, the collective named themselves Amon Düül (Amon being an Egyptian sun god, Düül a character from Turkish fiction) and recorded hours of material during what is reportedly one mammoth recording session from early 1969. Even before the release of the self-titled Amon Düül debut that year, several members -- led by vocalist Renate Knaup-Kroaetenschwanz (aka Renate Knaup), guitarist Chris Karrer, bassist John (Johannes) Weinzierl, drummer Peter Leopold and organist Falk U. Rogner -- had broken away from the original group to form Amon Düül II. That group released its own debut album Phallus Dei in 1969. While three additional albums credited to Amon Düül appeared in 1970 and 1971 (Collapsing/Singvögel Rückwärts & Co., Paradieswärts Düül and Disaster), they were actually comprised of additional recordings from 1969 sessions.

By 1971, it was clear that Amon Düül II was the major unit of the axis. Still, lineups were barely stable enough to credit the same group with all of the work released under the Amon Düül II banner. Members came and went during the early '70s -- the only constants were Karrer and Weinzierl -- and Amon Düül II gradually progressed away from the acid-improv style of their first recordings to embrace a more pop-oriented approach to progressive rock on 1973's Vive la Trance and the following year's Hijack, which saw many old members returning to the fold. Two new additions, Stefan Zauner and Klaus Ebert, added a keyboard-dominated quasi-disco sound to 1976's Pyragony, and the duo's sound soon dominated the crumbling Amon Düül II lineup. Both Knaup and Weinzierl left the group by 1978 (to play with, respectively, Popol Vuh and Embryo), and Amon Düül II finally halted one year after.

Just two years later, however, Amon Düül II reunited with most of the original lineup to record another album, Vortex. That same year, Weinzierl moved to Wales to begin a British version of the band with old bandmate Dave Anderson. What should have been billed "Amon Düül III" was, however, simply christened Amon Düül. The release of four albums during the 1980s (including Hawk Meets Penguin, Meeting With Menmachines and Die Losung) confused even adept listeners, while Amon Düül II appeared to be finished. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
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Discography: Amon Düül
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Utopia [German Bonus Tracks]

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Lemmingmania [Germany Bonus Track]

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Live in London [Bonus Tracks]

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Carnival in Babylon [Repertoire Bonus Tracks]

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Vive la Trance [Bonus Track]

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Flawless

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Konzertfilm

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Carnival in Babylon [Revisited Bonus Tracks]

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Wolf City [Revisited Bonus Tracks]

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Die Losung

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Only Human [Bonus Tracks]

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Almost Alive...And Looking Fine [Bonus Tracks]

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Greatest Hits

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Yeti [Deluxe Edition]

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Phallus Dei [Deluxe Edition]

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Vive La Trance [Bonus Tracks]

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Tanz der Lemminge [Bonus Track]

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Yeti [Germany Bonus Tracks]

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Tanz der Lemminge [2002 Reissue]

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Phallus Dei [Germany Bonus Tracks]

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Phallus Dei [Germany Bonus Tracks]

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Wolf City [Bell Musik Bonus Tracks]

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Plays Phallus Dei

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Pyragony X

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UA Years: 1969-1974

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UA Years: 1969-1974

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Complete BBC Sessions

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Anthology

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Live in London [SPV]

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Live in Tokyo

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Live in Tokyo

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Para Dieswärts Düül [Bonus Tracks]

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Kobe (Reconstruction)

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Nada Moonshine

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BBC in Concert Plus

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Fool Moon

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Fool Moon

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Lösung

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Amon Düül II

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Airs on a Shoestring: The Best of Amon Düül

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Airs on a Shoestring: The Best of Amon Düül

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Experimante

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Meeting with Menmachines

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Meeting with Menmachines

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Utopia

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Hawk Meets Penguin

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Hawk Meets Penguin

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Vortex

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Almost Alive...And Looking Fine

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Pyragony

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Pyragony

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Made in Germany

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Made in Germany

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Live in London

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Hijack

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Hijack

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Lemmingmania

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Vive la Trance

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Carnival in Babylon

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Wolf City

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Tanz der Lemminge

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Disaster

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Yeti

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Yeti

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Collapsing/Singvögel Rückwärts & Co.

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Psychedelic Underground

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Phallus Dei

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Surrounded by the Bars

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Wikipedia: Amon Düül
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Amon Düül
Origin Munich, Germany
Genres Rock
Years active 1967–1981

Amon Düül was a German political art commune formed out of the student movement of the 1960s which became well-known for its free form musical improvisations. This spawned two rock groups, Amon Düül (sometimes referred to as Amon Düül I) and the more famous Amon Düül II. After both groups disbanded in the 1970s, some of the original members reunited in the 1980s under the name Amon Düül again, though this incarnation is commonly referred to as Amon Düül (UK) to avoid confusions with the original one.

Contents

Origins

Amon Düül began in 1967 as a radical political art commune of Munich based artists calling themselves, in part, after the Egyptian Sun God Amon; Düül has been cited as a character from Turkish fiction.[1]

The commune attained underground popularity for its free form musical improvisations, performed around the happenings and demonstrations of the contemporary politicized youth movement. The commune had a liberal attitude to artistic freedom, valuing enthusiasm and attitude over artistic ability, and as a result, band membership was fluid; anyone who was part of the commune could be part of the group. A faction within the commune was more ambitious, conventional and musically structured than the commune society overall. This led to a split within the collective, which separated in 1969 into the components "Amon Düül" and "Amon Düül II".

Amon Düül

Though not as highly regarded as their successors, Amon Düül celebrated in a joyfully open ended experimentation that at times equalled their more successful psychedelic rock equivalents in countries such as the USA or Brazil (e.g. Os Mutantes). Such a loose methodology was unavoidably hit or miss and led to frequent disruptive personnel changes. The members were close to Kommune 1 in Berlin and boasted, for a time, a prominent member in Uschi Obermaier, a glamour girl of the day. Continuing for seven years, with varying degrees of success and in varying mutating guises, they wound down in 1973 after releasing four official albums (though most were recorded pre 1970 and the first three albums all came from one 1968 jam) which are these days regarded as unique, if unessential, records in the history of German rock.[2]

Amon Düül II

Amon Düül II were formed in 1968 by the more professionally and technically inclined members of the original collective, with core members John Weinzierl, Chris Karrer, Peter Leopold, Falk Rogner, and Renate Knaup-Kroetenschwanz. They signed to the United Artists label and released a string of highly regarded albums with strong psychedelic and progressive flourishes. After 1975, the band changed labels and moved towards more accessible music, before finally disbanding in the late 70s.

Afterwards

At the beginning of the 1980s John Weinzeirl, with original bassist Dave Anderson and various others, began releasing albums as Amon Düül again (though this band is commonly called Amon Düül (UK) to differentiate it from the original one). Between 1982 and 1989, they released five albums, but they generally failed to ignite the interest of most former fans.

When the 1990s brought new exposure and audiences to the original krautrock groups, Chris, Renate, Falk and John reunited, and continue to perform sporadically.

Discography

Amon Düül

Amon Düül II

Amon Düül (UK)

Sources

  • Cope, Julian (1995). Krautrocksampler. London: Head Heritage. ISBN 0952671913. 

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Amon Düül (Rock Band, '60s-'90s)
The UA Years: 1969-1974 (1999 Album by Amon Düül II)
Die Lösung (1989 Album by Amon Düül w/ Bob Calvert)

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