During its heyday in the early 1990s,
Plastic Noise Experience was a duo consisting of
Claus Robert Kruse and
SM Kalwa, and its releases helped shape the sound of Germany's dark electronic music and EBM scenes. Following a long hiatus,
Plastic Noise Experience has returned as the performing name of
Kruse by himself, and that name still stands for the best in old-school German electro. And when I say "old-school," I do mean old-school --
Kruse's chilly but almost cheerful synthesizer bleeps and mechanical rhythms hark back explicitly to the glory days of
Kraftwerk, even as his vocal style and distorted percussion sounds evoke the harsher and more dystopian sounds of
Front 242 and
KMFDM. Luckily, it's the relatively light-hearted music that ends up undermining the Teutonic sternness of the vocals rather than vice versa, especially on "Monoton Synchron" and the really pretty jaunty "Vad." The album ends, somewhat strangely, with two abstract (almost ambient) instrumental meditations titled "Schlafmodus 1" and "Schlafmodus 2." Translated roughly, those titles mean "Sleep Mode 1" and "2", and if they aren't exactly soporific, they won't necessarily rouse you from slumber either. Recommended.