Komputer

Collaborating since 1982, Simon Leonard and David Baker were originally signed to Mute Records in 1984 under the name I Start Counting and continued with releases under the moniker Fortran 5 until the release of Komputer's debut album, "The World of Tomorrow" in 1998.
Komputer
Komputer - Market Led

Artist: Komputer
P: 2002
Dark experiments with noise and audio processing effects in a certain Kraftwerk style.

12,90 EUR
 
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Komputer - Synthetik

Artist: Komputer
P: 2007
Opening with the futuristic "International Space Station", a farewell song to planet Earth, the album looks to the future, takes a slightly nostalgic look at time's past, and then, unapologetically tells the listener how it is with the artisan anthem "What We Do". Komputer continue their rewriting of Pop music with Kraftwerk as heroes. Their sound is also reminiscent of early Mute bands like I Start Counting and The Normal. Mute.

14,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
Komputer - The World of Tomorrow

Artist: Komputer
P: 1998
If you believe everything written about electronica, you'd think it traced its ancestry directly to Kraftwerk. But there was a time during the latter half of the '70s when another branch grew from the tree--electronic pop music. Think Gary Numan, Yazoo, and the wondrous M, whose "Pop Muzik" was--and still is--a sublime single. Komputer, at least, haven't forgotten those halcyon days. In fact, they're the basis of this entire album which wears pop music unashamedly on its sleeve, mixing it at times with the instrumental romanticism of Orbital ("Looking Down on London"), and nods toward other movements, present and past, in the genre. But mostly, this is about some songs, glorious like "Valentina" or downright silly (like "Bill Gates"). The World of Tomorrow is more like yesterday's world today, but still thoroughly entertaining. --Chris Nickson

14,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
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