* En anglais uniquement
German musician
Michael Rother is among the most influential artists in rock, experimental, and electronic music. He formed
Neu! with drummer
Klaus Dinger in 1971, after both musicians were briefly members of an embryonic
Kraftwerk, and the group's hypnotic, locked-groove rhythms (commonly described as "motorik") and free-form song structures helped define the Krautrock genre. Eschewing chord changes and focusing on harmonic droning, while also experimenting with innovative recording techniques,
Neu! gradually became a much-namechecked influence over the years, greatly affecting the work of
David Bowie,
Sonic Youth,
Stereolab,
Radiohead, and countless others. Concurrently with
Neu!,
Rother formed
Harmonia with
Hans-Joachim Roedelius and
Dieter Moebius, melding electronic rhythms with the cosmic explorations of the duo's similarly groundbreaking group
Cluster. After both
Neu! and
Harmonia ceased activity,
Rother launched his solo career with 1977's Flammende Herzen, one of four albums to feature drumming by
Can's
Jaki Liebezeit. His solo work evolved from
Neu!-like art rock to electronic productions such as the upbeat
Lust (1983), the more meditative Traumreisen (1987), and the abstract ambient pop of
Remember (The Great Adventure) (2004).
Rother has remained active during the 21st century, performing works from throughout his career in addition to composing film scores and releasing albums such as As Long as the Light, his 2022 collaboration with Italian musician
Vittoria Maccabruni.
Born in Hamburg in 1950,
Rother was educated in Germany and England, as well as Pakistan, where he resided during the early 1960s. Later in the decade,
Rother played in a Düsseldorf-based band called the Spirits of Sound along with future
Kraftwerk member
Wolfgang Flür.
Rother himself played electric guitar in
Kraftwerk during 1971, between the group's first two albums, but he left along with drummer
Klaus Dinger, and the two formed
Neu! The group's
Conny Plank-produced eponymous debut appeared on German label Brain in 1972, attracting limited attention at the time, but gradually becoming a widely acknowledged influence on numerous generations of musicians. After purchasing several instruments, the members of
Neu! ran out of money halfway through the recording of
Neu! 2, so they included their 1972 single "Super"/"Neuschnee" played at multiple speeds and manipulated via tape, essentially creating experimental remixes of the material. After the album's 1973 release,
Rother formed
Harmonia with
Roedelius and
Moebius, and the three musicians built a studio in Forst, West Germany.
Musik von Harmonia, an electronic album that made innovative use of pulsating drum machines and multi-layered electronic textures, appeared in 1974.
Neu! '75 was split between the group's earlier motorik style and a heavier sound, driven by
Dinger's sneering vocals, which was later referred to as proto-punk.
Harmonia released their second album,
Deluxe, in 1975. Featuring driving rhythms played by
Guru Guru drummer
Mani Neumeier, the album was much closer to the hypnotic rock sound of
Neu! than the electronic abstractions of
Cluster. All three members of
Harmonia decided to go their separate ways, but they regrouped at the insistence of avowed fan
Brian Eno, who had declared them to be "the world's most important rock band."
Harmonia and
Eno spent 11 days recording music together, but the tapes were lost until
Roedelius found them two decades later, releasing them as
Tracks and Traces in 1997.
Rother began recording solo material in 1976. Working with drummer
Jaki Liebezeit of
Can as well as producer/engineer
Conny Plank,
Rother recorded the fully instrumental Flammende Herzen, and Sky released it in 1977. 1978 follow-up Sterntaler expanded on its sound, introducing more harmonic elements. This was succeeded by 1979's
Katzenmusik, one of
Rother's most dynamic, expressive works yet. In 1982,
Rother switched from Sky to Polydor and released the self-produced
Fernwärme, a significantly darker album that found him moving in a more electronic direction (it was also his final album to feature
Liebezeit). His next album, 1983's
Lust, was entirely self-recorded and was
Rother's first production to utilize a Fairlight music computer. This was followed by 1985's
Süssherz und Tiefenschärfe, another bright, upbeat solo production. After an ill-fated
Neu! reunion during 1985-1986,
Rother recorded a calmer, more ambient solo album titled Traumreisen, which was released in 1987. Radio, a compilation of
Rother's solo material, was released in 1993 by Random Records, which also reissued his albums in addition to releasing
Esperanza in 1996. Neu! 4, an album of the group's aborted reunion sessions, was released without
Rother's permission by Japanese label Captain Trip Records in 1995.
Eventually,
Rother and
Dinger worked out an agreement to reissue the initial three
Neu! albums, which appeared on Astralwerks (in the U.S.) and Grönland Records (in Europe) in 2001, gaining renewed press attention as well as a new generation of fans. In 2004,
Rother released
Remember (The Great Adventure), an ambient solo album that featured guest vocalists
Herbert Grönemeyer and Sophie Williams as well as contributions from
Asmus Tietchens,
Andi Toma (
Mouse on Mars), and other electronic musicians. In 2007,
Rother performed on-stage with the
Red Hot Chili Peppers during a concert in Hamburg. He then toured with
Moebius as Rother & Moebius, and subsequently participated in a series of
Harmonia reunion concerts. In 2010, Grönland released a comprehensive
Neu! vinyl box set, including
Neu! '86, a reworked version of the reunion sessions, which was issued individually as well. Also in 2010,
Rother played several shows consisting of
Neu! material with drummer
Steve Shelley (
Sonic Youth) and bassist
Aaron Mullan (
Tall Firs). A single titled Blinkgürtel, recorded in
Sonic Youth's studio in 2008 and credited to Hallogallo 2010, was issued by the Vampire Blues label.
Rother continued to perform
Neu! and
Harmonia material at the 2012 ATP Festival in Camber Sands, England, where he was backed by Berlin-based group
Camera, as well as the final U.K. holiday camp edition of ATP in 2013. Subsequent live performances featured
Mullan, singer
Anika (
Exploded View), drummer Hans Lampe (
La Düsseldorf), and guitarist Franz Bargmann (
Camera). Grönland released
Harmonia's Complete Works box set in 2015, individually issuing the previously unreleased Documents 1975. Four years later, the label released Solo, a box set containing
Rother's first four solo albums as well as his soundtrack work for the films Houston and Die Räuber, composed earlier in the decade and reworked in 2018.
Rother returned in 2020 with
Dreaming, his first solo album in 16 years. It was also included as part of Solo II, a simultaneously issued box set compiling the remainder of his full-lengths, from
Lust onward.
Rother collaborated with Italian musician/vocalist
Vittoria Maccabruni on As Long as the Light, a mainly instrumental electronic album, which appeared in early 2022. ~ Paul Simpson