The Guardian (USA)

Kraftwerk, Tribal Gathering 1997: past, present and future become one

- Jude Rogers

One night in 1997, in the grounds of a country house just off the M1, I watched Kraftwerk, the enigmatic MenschMasc­hine, successful­ly evolve. Their appearance at the dance music onedayer Tribal Gathering was the group’s first ever festival set. To be there was to witness Kraftwerk in the context of the black dance music they had inspired and were inspired by.

The performanc­e was a timely reboot for the band. Their last original album – the lacklustre Electric Café – was released in 1986, when early jack, house and techno was leaving Kraftwerk behind. A 1991 remix album, The Mix, also received lukewarm reviews, although it reshaped their older tracks within cleaner, clubbier lines. The Tribal Gathering set was about Kraftwerk acknowledg­ing where their influence properly pulsed – and where its future lay. That night, they were the only act playing live in the main tent. The Detroit stage next door had shut for Kraftwerk’s set, as techno royalty such as Kevin Saunderson and Jeff Mills didn’t want to miss their spiritual forebears. Before the first “einszweidr­eivier” of Numbers, the tent was closed to prevent dangerous overcrowdi­ng.

This was the best gig of my life. Back then, I was a curious, slightly square undergradu­ate who loved Underworld and Leftfield as much as Pulp and Suede. I got to the Trans-Europe tent two hours early, camping out as Two Lone Swordsmen entered the intense final leg of their eight-hour sound-system set (a neat way of the stage being readied for Kraftwerk’s precise specificat­ions).

At first, I felt like a female anomaly among the handful of deeply serious men, some in anoraks, standing

stage-front. But by 11pm, the tent was a mass of tight, whooping waves made up of every demographi­c: I felt accepted in the festival’s mix of glammedup ravers, trance hedonists and hoodiewear­ing ordinary Joes. Then a robotic voice cut through. “Meine Damen und Herren,” it began … Numbers from 1981’s Computer World exploded into life, repeated patterns of melody bending and phasing, rhythms expanding and contractin­g.

Kraftwerk’s Tribal Gathering set came at a crucial time for dance music in the UK. Three years earlier, rave culture had been targeted by the Conservati­ve government’s criminal justice bill. Now we were 23 days into New Labour’s brave new world, and 30,000-strong legal, overground parties seemed to be the future. The techno-inspired dance acts of Tribal Gathering’s world had also become mainstream concerns. The Chemical Brothers had two No 1s after headlining in 1996. Orbital, returnees to Luton in 1997, had two Top 5 hits earlier in the year. I would see their exhilarati­ng set at the Planet Earth tent just after Kraftwerk, before experienci­ng the visceral rush of a French duo called Daft Punk who had recently released their debut album.

The gig was 23 years ago, so my precise memories are sketchy, but I still remember feeling an overwhelmi­ng sense of awe throughout the 90-minute Kraftwerk set. (I should add that I was skint and largely sober, only able to afford a few beers at the end of a university year.) To be in the presence of Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider felt miraculous in 1997: their last album was six years old, after all, and they had never played in such a setting. I remember the crowd as a warm-hearted embrace, unlike the laddish atmosphere­s I was used to at indie gigs. I remember hit after hit, and the perfect, metronomic beauty of the music slotting us together, up and down, on their soundwaves.

I recently found footage of the set on YouTube, which filled in the details. They frontloade­d their set with tracks from Computer World: given the direct impact this record had on hip-hop and the early metallic hisses of techno, this was perhaps unsurprisi­ng. I had a vague memory of a total banger near the end, which I discovered with a thrill is a track they’ve barely played since, and never released. There were gentler moments, too: Radioactiv­ity disseminat­ing its air of beguiling yet menacing mystery, Tour de France slowly unfurling like a Schubert minuet. I love how the crowd screams, then claps along, when Autobahn begins, sweetly and naively. The wonder Kraftwerk impart about the possibilit­ies of technology feels shared in that moment.

Before Tribal Gathering, Kraftwerk played theatres and tribute shows. After it, they became festival fixtures. It felt precious to be there at that pivotal moment, at both a peculiar homecoming and an annunciati­on.

 ??  ?? ‘Perfect, metronomic beauty’ ... Kraftwerk performing at Tribal Gathering, 1997. Photograph: Brian Rasic/Getty Images
‘Perfect, metronomic beauty’ ... Kraftwerk performing at Tribal Gathering, 1997. Photograph: Brian Rasic/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States