Dieter Moebius, Electronic Music Pioneer, Dead at 71
New submitter Lawrence Bottorff writes: Dieter Moebius, who is credited as a founder of the late-sixties Berlin 'Krautrock' scene, has died at age 71. Krautrock, of course, was hardly rock music, but the protoplasm of a uniquely German avant-garde industrial ambient electronica. Probably his best-known work was with Brian Eno on their famous Cluster collaboration albums. Many believe Cluster (Moebius, Hans-Joachim Roedelius, Conny Plank) cemented Eno's path on his laconic, melancholic, New-Age-free ambient sound back in the mid- to late-seventies.
But is Slashdot now an obituaries website?
Put Autobahn on an infinite loop for your dead 1-dimensional strip Kraut homie!
AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
Lol, this story means nothing to statistically zero people in the U.S.
When the all of the parents of the electronic music have passed, perhaps city orchestras can find the music classical enough to be rearranged and played. Death to Beethoven! Oh, wait..
Such cultural phenomena can apparently only be seen due retrospection. One could only hope we have something cooking right now for the future generations to appreciate.
You mean statistically zero people know of him? Now you made me LOL.
This is a great opportunity for us to remember another fallen Slashdot comrade, frequent contributor and noted computer expert Roland Piquepaille. His superb writing and submissions were the main reason I kept coming back to Slashdot back in the day. He liked to focus on the social aspects of computing, which is a subject that particularly interests me. His research would always be cutting edge and very in-depth, and I would learn something new from him every time I read one of his submissions. It wasn't until after he was taken from us so early that I discovered just how much I'd miss him and his work. Although I never met the man, I felt like I had a deep inner bond with him thanks to all of the submissions he sent in here, and how deeply they resonated with me. To some, Roland Piquepaille was just another contributor. But to me, he was the heart and soul of Slashdot. He was the man that made this site great. We have seen a severe decline in the quality of Slashdot's submissions since the untimely passing of our dear Roland, and I do not think that this is a coincidence. The death of Roland Piquepaille in many ways meant the inevitable decline of Slashdot. Slashdot is a site that depends on its submissions, and without great submitters like Roland Piquepaille to provide content, then this site just cannot hope to succeed. Roland Piquepaille, we miss you. We miss you each and every day!
Cluster (and Dieter) are Krautrock and Dusseldorf School, not Berlin. Dusseldorf is Can, Cluster, Kraftwerk, et al. Berlin School is a more ambient/spacey scene that included Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze and that crowd.
I was wondering why his weight loss strategy was relevant...
Your life has become tiresome. Now touch my monkey.
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
or make loud n0ises
Seemed rather one-sided.
I'm not hip enough to grok your headline. Can you please provide a glossary? Who is Dieter Moebius? Who is Berlin 'Krautrock'? Why is the latter part of the name in quotes? Why was it a scene? I see the word "music" in the second sentence which hints that it might be related to music. What is protoplasm? Can you put any more adjectives into, "uniquely German avant-garde industrial ambient electronica?" How about, "laconic, melancholic, New-Age-free ambient sound?" There has to be some sort of synergistic cloud that makes even less sense but would look cool in your summary.
I guess he's now going to be laying in a strip.
Did he make any music? Or was he just a journalist's best friend? Talking of which, what's Brian Eno got to do with Krautrock?
I saw him a couple of years ago at the 2012 Sen Francisco Electronic Music Festival; it was an amazing performance.
I had hoped he would make another US tour at some point; that had been his first solo tour in the US.
Title piece from the LP Grosses Wasser , by the group Cluster, of which he was half with Han-Joachim Roedelius
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYACy-lY6dg
If at first it doesn't grab you, put on as background music. Maybe for Thanksgiving dinner?
He created an amazing band.
I do not approve. Musicians should be immortal. Eno, Moebius, Roedelius are awesome. Rest in peace, Dieter.