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After the Heat

3.6M streams

3,624,584

Rastakraut Pasta

614.9K streams

614,872

Tonspuren

270.4K streams

270,420

Blotch

151.4K streams

151,358

Material

151K streams

151,001

Blotch

142.1K streams

142,116

En Route

76.5K streams

76,489

Solo Works. Kollektion 7. Compiled by ...

61.5K streams

61,488

Kram

45.9K streams

45,933

Blue Moon

38K streams

38,039

Biography

From his early work with the pioneering Krautrock bands Cluster and Harmonia to his later solo recordings, Dieter Moebius remained one of the most innovative and prolific voices in contemporary electronic music, anticipating movements from ambient to techno years before the fact. Exploratory and prolific, Moebius remained active over a span of more than four decades, collaborating frequently with peers like Brian Eno, Conrad Plank, and Guru Guru's Mani Neumeier, and releasing new music until just before his death in 2015. His massive discography includes Krautrock essentials like Cluster's 1974 master stroke Zuckerzeit and 1983's proto-techno Plank/Neumeier collaboration Zero Set, as well as multiple solo outings. Hamburg-based label Bureau B released a wealth of Moebius' music, issuing some of his albums on vinyl for the first time and compiling collections such as 2022's posthumously released Solo Works. Moebius was born in St. Gallen, Switzerland in 1944. By his twenties, he was a student at Berlin's Akademie Grafik by day and a cook at an area restaurant by night. In 1969, he was befriended by Conrad Schnitzler, a key figure in local avant-garde circles, and was invited to join Kluster, a band Schnitzler was forming with fellow underground artist Hans Joachim Roedelius. The trio released their debut LP Klopfzeichen in 1970; in the wake of their third album, 1971's Kluster und Eruption, Schnitzler exited to pursue a solo career, and Moebius and Roedelius continued as a duo, modifying the name to Cluster. Working with famed producer Conrad Plank, Cluster began to move increasingly toward more structured soundscapes -- with 1974's Zuckerzeit, they even pursued an electronic pop sound similar in spirit to Kraftwerk. Moebius and Roedelius also teamed with Neu!'s Michael Rother in Harmonia, releasing a pair of much-acclaimed mid-'70s LPs which caught the attention of Brian Eno, who in response collaborated with the trio on a legendary session (released much later as Tracks and Traces) heralding a turn towards ambient textures (and influencing the sound of the 1976 Cluster album Sowiesoso). Roedelius and Moebius subsequently worked with Eno on 1977's Cluster and Eno and 1979's After the Heat as well; in the wake of 1981's Curiosum, however, they dissolved Cluster, with both pursuing solo endeavors. Moebius' first subsequent effort was 1981's Material, a second collaboration with Plank (his proper solo debut, Rastakraut Pasta, had appeared two years earlier); together, they produced some of the most experimental recordings of their respective careers, creating harsh mutant soundscapes which, over time, gave way to the proto-ambient textures of 1986's En Route, their final work before Plank's untimely death. Concurrently, Moebius also teamed up with Gerd Beerbohm for 1982's Strange Music and 1983's Double Cut, both explorations of pure noise; meanwhile, with the solo album Tonspuren (also from 1983), Moebius clearly anticipated the emergence of techno. Apart from joining Karl Renziehausen in the duo Ersatz, he also reunited with Roedelius to revive Cluster in the early '90s. Collaborations with Mayo Thompson and Mani Neumeier followed, in addition to solo albums such as Blotch and Nurton. Cluster reunited once again in 2007, resulting in the live album Berlin 07 and studio effort Qua, before disbanding for good in 2010, with Roedelius eventually forming Qluster. Moebius released solo albums Kram and Ding, as well as a collaboration with Asmus Tietchens (Moebius + Tietchens). The latter was issued by Bureau B, which also re-released much of Moebius' back catalog, with and without Cluster. Snowghost Pieces, with Tim Story and Jon Leidecker (aka Wobbly), appeared in 2014, as did the solo EP Nidemonex. Moebius died of cancer on July 20, 2015, at the age of 71. Following his death, many of his later works were reissued by Bureau B, and the label also released Musik für Metropolis and Familiar (with Story and Leidecker) in 2017. In 2022, Tietchens assembled a new compilation of Moebius recordings focusing on his solo works rather than his collaborations. The aptly titled Solo Works was released (again by Bureau B) in July of 2022. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi