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Q: Klaus, what's your new LP?
K: The new album is called Dig It. It's the first electronic Digital LP.
First I also wanted to use the "Half Speed Cut" technique for it, but
various technicians told me that this technique is not as good as its
image.
Q: Computer?
KS: Yes, I know... But the one who's afraid of computers or even fight
them, will never understand. Fear is no excuse for ignorance. We're in
the computer age, it's useless to fight against it but use these tools, as
a means to the end. My end is good and beautiful music. The musical
ideas of a composer get clearer, more real and therefore more obvious.
The era of analogue wheelchair electronics is over.
Q: Now that the music - that you and a few other pioneers created -
had even found their way into the cheapest of entertainment music,
with the help of cheap synthesizers, isn't it quite obvious that an
avantgarde musician like you look for another, a new territory?
KS: You said it. But not just that and not as resolute but in a more
informal way. I like to try new things because it also gives me fun. But
you're right. My aim is to use any new technique, but in a positive way.
In a world of computers we all could live more healthy and more secure
if we would use these new tools in the right (positive) way.
Q: Will you ever produce a music that is easier to understand?
KS: My music is much too complicated for a seasonal hit single. Also I
can't go back and play as if I lost my craftsmanship, my experience, my
knowledge. Can't fabricate simple sounds, melodies and rhythms for a
wider market. I don't even will.
Q: You paved the way for many years and for many successors, for
today's beginners...
KS: Beginners, or synth amateurs are existing for quite a few years. That
there is a kind of breakthrough has many reasons. I would see my part
a bit smaller. Maybe the new players just benefit from the long pause of
Kraftwerk? Most of these youngsters sound more like Kraftwerk than
KS. An important aspect is that the traditional synthis, the ones I used
for many years, get cheaper and cheaper, which is a positive thing.
Many fans tell me that they just bought a Korg MS 10 or 20.
It seems as if Korg could sell thousands of their little apparatuses to my
fans.
Q: Something else. I wonder about certain musicians who where just
laughing about your ideas and first albums then, played themselves at
this time some kind of jazz rock, and today they try to do what your
standard was in 1972 to '73.
KS: These musicians are of no interest to me. They will always do what
comes if it promises some success. They don't go a risky step forward.
These people were and are always there, and they are also necessary.
It would be horrible if there were only innovators. Music, new music
must have its time to reach the consciousness of the general public.
Q: Klaus, you played in Linz lately, at the "ars electronica". What are
your impressions?
KS: Too many to speak about everything. I did the opening concert of
this festival. It was a huge event, with TV, live broadcast from a steel
factory, a true multi media spectacle. Hardly to be repeated, although I
have offers. But the costs were immense, the Linz promoters spoke
about 400,000 DM (250,000 Dollars) expenses for just my evening.
Q: Did you use in Linz the new toy, the G.D.S. computer?
KS: Yes, but not entirely. Also I had a percussion player with me, who will
join me again in Brussels on my next concert. He played 4 or 5 huge
gongs, 2 tympanies and a lot more. I'm tired to play or to listen to the
sound of a normal drumset. I used to have that in the seventies, on LPs
as well as in concerts, but I realize now that it's more interesting to play
against the electronic rhythm, not along it. Also on Dig It I used this
new kind of percussion.
Q: Which instruments you play on Dig It and in concerts, besides the
G.D.S.?
KS: On Dig It just the G.D.S. and the percussion. In concerts, in Linz as
well as in Brussels I will also use parts of my old equipment: the Big
Moog, two Minimoogs, the Polymoog, Yamaha CS 80, ARP 2600, ARP
Odyssey, Korg 3300, and my old EMS. Any change will come slowly,
will be done organically, as always with me and my equipment, as well
as with my music.
Q: Where do you play the next time?
KS: After the Brussels gig my regular tour will be in next spring,
approximately in April '81. The Berlin Philharmonic Hall is already
booked. Then again the Gruga Hall in Essen, that's all I know so far. In
the meantime I'm fully engaged with new productions for my IC label,
which isn't anymore supported by WEA, and this brings a lot of
additional work that has to be done.
Additional questions in October 1980:
Q: Back to the Linz concert. There were also some negative reactions.
What do you say?
KS: With what I do, there are always positive but also negative reactions.
If I would listen to all this, I must change my music from day to day. No!
I do the music as I want to do, and I don't listen to critics and what they
write, be it positive or negative.
Q: Some questions about Dig It. It's the first LP that was done
exclusively with the G.D.S....
KS: Not exclusively. For instance, I used some percussion. And I used
a tape loop from the group IDEAL. But I also did some percussion
sounds with the G.D.S. itself.
Q: How do you see the future of digital synthesizers or computers?
KS: No question for me: The eighties are electronic!
And synth-computers are the leading instruments of this era. I'm on the right way.
In ten years from now, the classical synthesizers - that had a big part
in the seventies, also for me - will be not seen anymore. There will be
only digital equipment with huge amounts of data banks, or
what-do-I-know-what-will-be-possible then?
Q: Can you also record music with the G.D.S., or just produce and
play?
KS: The G.D.S. is not only a sound generating instrument but I can
record the music on a floppy disk like on a "normal" tape machine with
32 tracks. The difference is the brilliance of the sound. The quality is
much better than with traditional machines.
Q: Was there any time pressure while recording Dig It Are you
satisfied with the result, mainly with the sounds?
KS: You mean if I could have done something better? --- No. Also there
was no time pressure. The production went smoother and faster as with
the former albums; I needed one week for Dig It. On a large scale, I'm
satisfied with Dig It.
Q: Why isn't this album released with 45 RPM, as the new IC
albums?
KS: I wanted this, of course. But the album is too long.
Q: After a few listenings I have the impression that Dig It includes
indeed many new sounds, but in form it's still the old Klaus Schulze. On
the recent ...Live... album you announced a new, unknown music for
the future.
KS: Now you got me (laughs). I can't change my music from one day to
the next. With the sounds I already went a step ahead. With the musical
form I probably need some more time.
(Translation from German by kdm, 1997) | ||||||||||||||||||