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Holger Czukay

 
Artist: Holger Czukay
Holger Czukay

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Sheldon "Kelly" Ancel, Jaki Liebezeit

Worked With:

Rene Tinner, Damo Suzuki, Konrad Plank, Malcolm Mooney, Jaki Leibezeit, Michael Karoli, Irmin Schmidt

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: March 24, 1938, Gdansk, Poland
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Bass, Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Rome Remains Rome," "Good Morning Story," "Clash"
  • Representative Songs: "How Much Are They?," "Boat-Woman-Song," "Ode to Perfume"

Biography

A founding member of the enormously influential Krautrock group Can, Holger Czukay was one of the pivotal underground figures of his era; over the course of his long, expansive career, Czukay successfully bridged the gap between pop and the avant-garde, pioneering the use of samples and exploring the significance of world music on Western culture.

Czukay was born in Gdansk on March 24, 1938. After falling in love with music at a young age, he spent his formative years studying to be a composer and conductor, but his ideas were frequently too radical for mainstream tastes; after being disqualified from one jazz festival for his "unclassifiable music," he was later expelled from Berlin's Music Academy for similar artistic insolence. Under the tutelage of avant-garde composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, Czukay continued to refine his ideas, and soon became a teacher himself; through student Michael Karoli, he gained his first exposure to performers like the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Velvet Underground.

After picking up the bass, Czukay teamed with Karoli, fellow Stockhausen protege Irmin Schmidt, drummer Jaki Liebezeit and American-born vocalist Malcolm Mooney, and in early 1968 the group Inner Space was formed. Quickly renamed Can, in 1969 they released their debut Monster Movie, the first in a series of visionary albums establishing the band as one of the truly seminal artists of the period. At much the same time, Czukay teamed with Rolf Dammers to release an LP titled Canaxis 5, instituting both primitive sampling techniques (achieved with tape splices) and worldbeat influences; sculpted from thousands of recordings dubbed from short-wave radio broadcasts, the album employed samples from a number of international sources, and consequently positioned Czukay as an early proponent of world music appropriation.

After 1976's Flow Motion, Can disbanded, and three years later Czukay issued his debut solo effort Movies, a marked refinement of his short-wave sonic collage techniques. In addition to critical raves, the record won considerable interest throughout the musical community, and Czukay subsequently began work on a number of outside projects: in addition to playing on the Eurythmics' 1981 debut In the Garden, he teamed with Jaki Liebezeit and bassist Jah Wobble for the LP Full Circle and the club hit "How Much Are They." Through Wobble, Czukay also met the Japanese singer Phew, and along with Liebezeit and producer Conny Plank they recorded the 1982 album Phew.

Czukay's next official solo release was 1982's On the Way to the Peak of Normal, another collaboration with Wobble assembled from sessions with the Dusseldorf-based band SYPH. 1984's Der Osten Ist Rot and 1987's Rome Remains Rome (featuring the controversial "Blessed Easter," which contained a sample of Pope John Paul II) followed, although Czukay spent the majority of the mid-decade involved in a variety of production work. In 1988 he teamed with David Sylvian for the lovely Plight and Premonition; after the duo reunited the following year for Flux + Mutability, Czukay re-formed Can to record a new studio LP, Rite Time. Apart from the 1991 solo effort Radio Wave Surfer and 1993's Moving Pictures, Czukay spent much of the 1990s removed from performing, focusing instead on production work before releasing Good Morning Story (his first solo album in six years) in 1999. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Holger Czukay
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Holger Czukay (born Holger Schüring[1] on 24 March 1938) is a German musician, probably best known as a co-founder of the krautrock group Can.

Contents

Biography

Czukay was born in the Free City of Danzig (now Gdańsk). He studied music under Karlheinz Stockhausen from 1963 to 1966[2] and then worked for a while as a music teacher. Initially Czukay had little interest in rock music, but this changed when a student played him The Beatles' 1967 song "I Am the Walrus".[3]. This opened his ears to music by rock experimentalists, such as the Velvet Underground and Frank Zappa.

Czukay co-founded Can in 1968. He played bass guitar and performed most of the recording and engineering for the group. Rosko Gee, former bassist of the British band, Traffic joined the band in 1977, with Czukay handling only tapes and sound effects on Saw Delight, his final LP with the group before departing for a solo career.

After his departure from Can, Czukay recorded several albums. One of his trademarks was the use of shortwave radio sounds and his early pioneering of sampling"[4], in those days involving the painstaking cutting and splicing of magnetic tapes. He would tape-record various sounds and snippets from shortwave and incorporate them into his compositions. He also used shortwave as a live, interactive musical instrument (such as on 1991's Radio Wave Surfer), a method of composition he termed radio painting.

Czukay has collaborated with a considerable number of musicians, notably a series of albums with Jah Wobble and David Sylvian, [2] two younger British musicians who shared his interest in blending pop music with experimental recording and sampling techniques. Other collaborators include U.N.K.L.E, Brian Eno, Eurythmics, and the German New Wave band, Trio.

Discography

Solo:

  • Canaxis (1969)
  • Movies (1979)
  • Biomutanten / Menetekel (as Les Vampyrettes with Conny Plank) (1981)
  • On the Way to the Peak of Normal (1981)
  • Full Circle (1982) with Jah Wobble and Jaki Liebezeit
  • Snake Charmer (1983) with Jah Wobble, The Edge, and Ben Mandelson
  • Der Osten Ist Rot (1984)
  • Rome Remains Rome (1987)
  • Plight and Premonition (1988) with David Sylvian
  • Flux and Mutability (1989) with David Sylvian
  • Radio Wave Surfer (1991) (recorded live in 1984, 1986 & 1987)
  • Moving Pictures (1993)
  • Clash (1998) with Dr. Walker
  • Good Morning Story (1999)
  • La Luna (2000, remastered and expanded 2007)
  • Linear City (2001) audio collaborations with Susanne Drescher, Per Odderskove, Ray Darr, Darren B. Dunn, Marc Uzan, Ola Norlander, Haki, U-She, Drew Kalapach, Michael Letourneau, Alan Evil from IFPR, Luca Kormentini, Andrew Paine (Boomboy), The Weeds of Eden, Michael Banabila, Dreamfluid, Beatsystem, Noiseman433, Dane Johnson, James Webb, Panoptic, 1605 Munro, Tom Hamlyn
  • The New Millennium (2003) with U-She
  • Time and Tide (2007) with U-She
  • 21st Century (2007) with Ursa Major

With Can:

External links

Notes


 
 
Learn More
Can (1979 Album by Can)
Plight and Premonition (1988 Album by David Sylvian/Holger Czukay)
Brilliant Trees (1984 Album by David Sylvian)

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