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Mouse on Mars

 
Artist: Mouse on Mars
Mouse on Mars

Group Members:

Jan St. Werner, Andi Toma

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Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Jan St. Werner, Andi Toma

Formal Connection With:

Relationship With:

Dwayne Sodahberk
  • Formed: 1993, Düsseldorf, Germany
  • Genres: Electronica
  • Representative Albums: "Iaora Tahiti," "Autoditacker," "Rost Pocks: The EP Collection"
  • Representative Songs: "Actionist Respoke," "Bib," "Distroia"

Biography

German post-techno duo Mouse on Mars is among a growing number of electronic music groups dabbling in complex, heavily hybridized forms that include everything from ambient, techno, and dub to rock, jazz, and jungle. The combined efforts of Andi Toma and Jan St. Werner (of Köln and Düsseldorf, respectively), Mouse on Mars formed in 1993, reportedly when Werner and Toma met either at a death metal concert or a health food store. Working from Werner's studio, the pair fused an admiration for the early experiments of Krautrock outfits like Can, Neu!, Kluster, and Kraftwerk into an offbeat update including influences from the burgeoning German techno and ambient scenes. A demo of material found its way to London-based guitar-ambient group Seefeel, who passed it on to the offices of their label, Too Pure.

MOM's first single, "Frosch," was released by the label soon after and was also included on the debut album, Vulvaland. Immediately hailed for its beguiling, inventive edge that seemed to resist all efforts at easy "schublade" (an even less flattering approximation of the English "pigeonhole"), Vulvaland was reissued in 1995 by (oddly) Rick Rubin's American Recordings label, which also released their follow-up, Iaora Tahiti, soon after. More upbeat and varied than their debut, the album made some inroads into the American marketplace, but the group's somewhat challenging complexity and steadfast refusal to pander make widespread popularity unlikely. They returned in 1997 with three different releases -- the EP Cache Coeur Naif, the LP Autoditacker, and the vinyl-only Instrumentals. Another vinyl-only release (Glam) appeared in 1998, and was followed a year later by the "official" follow-up to Autoditacker, Niun Niggung.

Although remixes are rare, Mouse on Mars began appearing with increasing frequency on compilations of experimental electronic music, including Volume's popular Trance Europe Express series. They were also prominently featured on a pair of tribute albums -- Folds and Rhizomes and In Memoriam -- dedicated to French poststructuralist philosopher Gilles Deleuze. Idiology, which introduced percussionist/collaborator Dodo Nkishi into the fold, followed in 2000 on Thrill Jockey. In 2004, the duo celebrated a decade's worth of work with the release of Radical Connector and a global tour, which was captured by 2005's concert album Live04. The following year's hard-hitting Varcharz was released by Ipecac. St. Werner also has recorded as half of the duo Microstoria (with Oval's Markus Popp) and solo as Lithops. ~ Sean Cooper, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Mouse on Mars
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Mouse on Mars

Mouse on Mars live (2001)
Background information
Origin Düsseldorf, Germany
Genres IDM, ambient, techno, experimental
Years active 1993 to Present
Labels Too Pure
Ipecac
Thrill Jockey
Sonig
Domino
Associated acts Lithops
Microstoria
Oval
Website www.mouseonmars.de
Members
Andi Toma
Jan St. Werner

Mouse on Mars is a duo from Germany (Jan St. Werner, from Köln, and Andi Toma, from Düsseldorf) who have been making electronic music since 1993. Their music is a sometimes quirky blend of techno, trance, disco, and ambient with a heavy dollop of analog synth sounds.[1] Their music also utilizes live conventional rock instruments such as drums, bass and guitar.

Contents

History

St. Werner and Toma are childhood friends who were born on the same day, in the same hospital.[2] Their first album, Vulvaland, was released in 1994 on the British record label Too Pure. This is considered their "straightest" and most focused album, mixing ambient and techno. Their second album, Iaora Tahiti, has a much more playful feel and encompasses a wider variety of electronic dance genres.

Over the years, their sound has increased in warmth, playfulness and what the duo term "fantastic analysis". On their fourth album Niun Niggung (released on Domino Records in 2000), the live instruments start to become more prominent. Idiology, their fifth album, has continued this trend while their sixth album Radical Connector, has a more "pop" feel. Both of these albums also increasingly include vocals, primarily by touring drummer Dodo NKishi.[3] Their sound seems to have taken a large veer away from the stylistics of their last two efforts on their newest album Varcharz which has a firmly experimental electronic foundation.

Mouse on Mars regularly perform live as a three-piece, with Toma & St. Werner augmented by drummer Dodo NKishi. In 2005, they released their first live album, titled Live 04.[4]

Mouse on Mars collaborated in the studio and toured with Stereolab in the mid 1990s - the results can be heard on Stereolab's Dots and Loops album and the associated Miss Modular single, and Mouse on Mars' Cache Cœur Naïf EP. St. Werner and Lætitia Sadier of Stereolab have also performed karaoke duets.[5] Around the same time, Mouse On Mars co-produced an album called Time Pie for ex-Kraftwerk drummer Wolfgang Flür's new project, Yamo.

St. Werner has released solo work under the name Lithops and partners with Markus Popp of Oval for Microstoria.

While releasing albums on British indie labels, Mouse on Mars started their own label, Sonig, on which they release their own work and that of other German artists. They have also produced a number of EPs and have recorded music for film soundtracks as well as remixing the work of other musicians.

Mouse on Mars have collaborated with Mark E. Smith of The Fall in a band called Von Südenfed in 2007. Their album is called "Tromatic Reflexxions".

Discography

Albums

Compilations

  • 1994 Trance Europe Express - Volume 3 cd02 track 01:-Mouse On Mars Maus Mobil (6:30) [1]
  • 1998 "1001" on In Memoriam Gilles Deleuze on the label Mille Plateaux
  • 2003 Rost Pocks: The EP Collection
  • 2006 silver monk time - a tribute to the monks (29 bands cover the MONKS) label play loud! productions

Singles / EPs

  • 1994 Frosch
  • 1995 Bib
  • 1995 Saturday Night Worldcup Fieber
  • 1997 Cache Coeur Naif
  • 1997 Twift
  • 1999 Pickly Dred Rhizzoms
  • 1999 Distroia
  • 1999 Diskdusk
  • 2001 Actionist Respoke
  • 2002 Do It
  • 2002 Agit Itter It
  • 2005 Wipe That Sound

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.higher-frequency.com/e_interview/mouse_on_mars/ Higher Frequency interview (August 2004)
  2. ^ http://www.amoshapp.com/film.html Mouse On Mars Biographical Short: "Mouths On Lamaze" (February 2009)
  3. ^ http://www.junkmedia.org/index.php/photos/cud/junkmail.html?i=1322 Junkmedia interview (November 2004)
  4. ^ http://www.popmatters.com/music/interviews/mouse-on-mars-051206.shtml PopMatters interview (December 2005)
  5. ^ http://www.amoshapp.com/chmo.mp3 Radio interview with Mouse on Mars and Lætitia Sadier of Sterolab


External links


 
 
Learn More
Init Ding (1995 Album by Microstoria)
Electric Ladyland, Vol. 1 (1997 Album by Various Artists)
Instrumentals (1997 Album by Mouse on Mars)

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