Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Kraftwerk co-founder Florian Schneider-Esleben dies

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BERLIN » Florian Schneider-Esleben, who helped pioneer electronic music as the co-founder of Kraftwerk and influenced genres ranging from disco to synth pop, has died at age 73.

Citing fellow group founder Ralf Huetter, Sony announced that Schneider-Esleben had been suffering from cancer, German news agency dpa reported. Schneider-Esleben and Huetter met while both were students at the Academy of Arts in Remscheid. They started working together in 1968, and two years later founded the Kling-Klang-Studio in Duesseldor­f and launched Kraftwerk.

“From the beginning, we had a concept of electronic folk music. It’s a kind of anticipato­ry music, looking ahead to the age of the computer,” Huetter told the German broadcaste­r Deutsche Welle in 2014.

They rarely spoke to reporters and their individual names were largely unknown to the general public, but few groups were as important in shaping the sounds of popular music over the past half century. Just as their sensibilit­y anticipate­d the computer age, their immersion in drum machines, synthesize­rs and other electronic instrument­s would be echoed in countless songs, whether in pop hits like Blondie’s “Heart of Glass” and Soft Cell’s “Tainted Love” or in the music of Depeche Mode, Bjork and David Bowie, who named one of his songs “V-2 Schneider.”

“EVERY modern musician owes something to this man’s vision,” the Cure’s Lol Tolhurst tweeted Wednesday.

Kraftwerk albums included the breakthrou­gh release “Autobahn,” “Radio-Activity,” “Trans-Europe

Express,” “The ManMachine” and “Tour de France.” The German group won a Grammy award for lifetime achievemen­t in 2014, when it was praised for creating some of the most “influentia­l work in our musical history.”

Schneider-Esleben was the son of modernist architect Paul Schneider-Esleben and spent much of his childhood in Duesseldor­f. Both he and Huetter were already working in avant-garde and experiment­al music when they met. In a 2005 interview with MOJO magazine, Huetter described him as a “sound perfection­ist.”

“So, if the sound isn’t up to a certain standard, he doesn’t want to do it,” he said. “With electronic music there’s no necessity ever to leave the studio. You could keep making records and sending them out. Why put so much energy into travel, spending time in airports, in waiting halls, in backstage areas, being like an animal, just for two hours of a concert?”

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