Deluxe full color gatefold 2LP version, volume 1 of 2. Artists: A.R. & Machines, Can Roedelius, Michael Rother, Popol Vuh, Michael Hoenig, Agitation Free, D.A.F. Harald Grosskopf, Amon Duul II, Conrad Schnitzler & Wolf Sequenza, Broselmaschine, Eno/Moebius/Roedelius, Gila and Wolfgang Riechmann.
The first seeds of German rock and experimental electronic music were  planted in 1968, as students and workers in Paris, Prague, Mexico and  throughout the world demonstrated against mainstream society, the war in  Vietnam, imperialism and bourgeois values. The birth of a  counter-culture, drug experimentation and social change expanded musical  worlds. Germany experienced its own cultural revolution fuelled by  these worldwide student and worker revolts and by a generation’s desire  to rid itself of the guilt of war.
Many German youth turning their back on mainstream society. From the  opening of the first collective/cooperative in 1967, Commune 1, in  Berlin, to the formation of the Baader-Meinhof terrorist group and the  bombings, kidnappings and killings of the Revolutionary Armed Forces  (RAF), young Germans sought out new values and a lifestyle outside of  ‘the system’. These cooperative and communal experiences led to a number  of new radical German bands including Amon Duul, Faust and Can.
Many artists and musicians believed a complete rejection of  everything musically that had gone before was also necessary in order to  build a new identity for German culture. At this time German music  meant ‘schlager’ music – insipid pop music that hardly confronted the  country’s recent historical events.
The first recordings of groups such as Kluster (later Cluster) were  extreme experiments with sound; un-music, anti-melody and anti-rhythm -  attempts to destroy any musical links with the past. Holger Czukay and  Irmin Scmidt of Can studied music under the radical avant-garde composer  Karheinz Stockhausen and Conrad Schnitzler studied art under the  conceptual artist Joseph Beuys. German rock groups were as interested in  musique concrète and serial compostion as they were in the psychedelia  of Pink Floyd or the rock, soul and jazz music played by resident  American forces.
From this beginning German rock music began an evolutionary journey  of experimentation. Electronic music became a pathway to notions of  space and the cosmos. Conversely, the emergence of communal living led  to a number of musicians setting up live/work spaces in rural areas and  developing a ‘pastoral’ outlook, with musical ideas engaged closely with  nature.
And despite an aversion to the politics of American society, German  rock bands were nevertheless fascinated by the emerging stateside  counter-culture of psychedelic music and drug experimentation. A band  such as Ash Ra Tempel even recording an album with drug  guru/theoretician Timothy Leary (‘Seven Up’, 1973).German electronic music, kosmische music, cosmic rock, space music.  The objectives were to create new music, ‘free’ from the past. A music  that gave seed out of the cultural ‘nothingness’ that young Germans felt  as a consequence of Germany’s role in the Second World War. A  generation who grew up stifled by the recent history of Nazi atrocities,  the guilt of their parents’ generation and their disillusionment at the  reintegration of old Nazis into mainstream society.
And whilst some of the bands featured here slipped by the wayside over the years, others such as Faust, Cluster, Can, Tangerine Dream are now well into their fourth decade having firmly established that which they set out to achieve – a new German music.