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        »A fan had sent me a mail and asked for some musical and instrumental 
details from an album title. I took the CD out of my shelves, put it on 
and played the track. It was "Georg Trakl" from the "X" double album. 
Not listening to it for a long time, I was really surprised how fresh 
and lively is sounded to me. After all it was recorded a third of a 
century ago. It never was and still today it's not classifiable: it's 
neither pop music, nor "classical" music, there is no schmaltz and there 
is no arty seriousness, it's a piece of music that stands for itself, 
as, by the way, many other tracks by Klaus. "Georg Trakl" is pure 
Schulze music, but of the more "light" and "flimsy" kind. The music 
bounces like an playful lamb in the open countryside on a sunny 
springtime morning. ...if I may say so.
  
     There were no prototypes, no examples, no forerunners of this 
archetypical, genuine "Schulze music". At least I don't know any. If you 
know any track before, any piece before, any composition before, that is 
similar to, for instance, Klaus Schulze's GEORG TRAKL, please tell me.«(kdm, in The KS Circle no. 183, June 2012)  | 
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