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A moniker of influential German producer, songwriter, and mastering engineer
Jörg Burger,
the Modernist makes minimal techno inspired by the melodicism of classic indie pop. Previously known for making trance and downtempo as
the Bionaut, as well as collaborations with
Wolfgang Voigt such as
Burger/Ink,
Burger first appeared as
the Modernist with the 1997 full-length Opportunity Knox, establishing a stripped-down yet tuneful techno sound which would later become a trademark of the Cologne scene centered around the Kompakt label. Two more albums and numerous singles followed, and after the release of the 2006 mix Collectors Series, Pt. 1: Popular Songs,
Burger largely reserved the project for remixes and compilation tracks. 2021's Total the Modernist collected songs previously released on Kompakt's Total series.
Initially inspired by the pop scene in London, where both
Burger and
Voigt resided in the early '80s, the pair became acid techno converts when they returned to Germany. By 1988, they were recording electronic music influenced by both pop and acid techno, though
Voigt's music had a minimal, rhythmic bent while
Burger's was warmer and more melodic. Two of
Burger's early tracks appeared on the 1989 compilation Teutonic Beats, which was produced by
Thomas Fehlmann. Two years later,
Burger and
Voigt formed their first label, Trance Atlantic, on which
Burger released Burger Industries: Vol. 1. In 1993, after a move to Frankfurt to work with
Air Liquide's
Jammin' Unit and
Dr. Walker and the creation of two other labels, Structure (which released
Burger's first
Bionaut album, 1992's Everybody's Kissing Everyone) and Blue,
Voigt and
Burger put their collaboration on a temporary hiatus.
Burger returned to Cologne and, along with recording artists like
Cristian Vogel and
Thomas Heckmann, he put his creative energies into
Bionaut and one-off single projects, a new label, Eat Raw, a dance magazine called House Attack and a record store, Delirium.
He also contributed to the relaunch of
EMI's Harvest label, which released
Bionaut's 1995 long-player
Lush Life Electronica as well as the 1996
Burger/
Ink album
Las Vegas and
the Modernist's debut, 1997's Opportunity Knox. These releases were received warmly by publications like Spex, Muzik, Jockey Slut, and Mixmag. Around this time
Burger also founded Granit, a graphics and illustration studio responsible for the artwork on all of his projects' covers.
By 1999,
Burger had moved from
EMI/Harvest to Sony, where he created the Popular Organisation, which featured a triumvirate of labels: the dancefloor-oriented Popular Tools, the experimentally-based Popular Sound and Popular Music, which released electronically-inclined pop. Popular Tools released
the Modernist's second album
Explosion in Europe in late 1999; the album was released in the US by Matador Records -- who also released the North American version of
Las Vegas -- in early 2000 with different artwork and extra tracks.
The Modernist released a split EP with
Bochum Welt, Eldar, on Art of Perception in 2001. 4 Remixe für the Modernist, containing material from the moniker's first two albums remixed by
Voigt under various aliases, was issued by Kompakt. Wonder released
the Modernist's 2002 EP Come Back as well as 2003 full-length
Kangmei and remix EP Protest Songs. A
Modernist track appeared on 2005's Speicher 28 single, and the mix CD Collectors Series, Pt. 1: Popular Songs was issued by Faith Recordings in 2006.
Burger has largely concentrated on mastering work and collaborations since then, but he's continued reserving
the Modernist for remixes, as well as contributions to Kompakt's annual Total compilation series, which were gathered on the 2021 digital release Total the Modernist. ~ Heather Phares & Paul Simpson