Title: Perpetuum Mobile
Release date: 2 October, 2004
Record label: Mute
Single:
Official website: Einst?rzende Neubauten
Wikipedia: Einsturzende Neubauten
Ich gehe jetzt
Perpetuum Mobile
Ein leichtes leises S?useln
Selbsportrait mit Kater
Boreas
Ein seltener Vogel
Ozean und Brandung
Paradiesseits
Youme & Meyou
Der Weg ins Freie
Dead Friends (Around the Corner)
Grundst?
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Einst?rzende Neubauten's long-awaited new studio album, Perpetuum Mobile has arrived at last and will be released on February 10, 2004 through Mute. This is the follow up to Silence Is Sexy (2000) and the Strategies Against Architecture III (2001) anthology.
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"Arriving in each new city, the traveller encounters something of his past, the possession of which he had no longer been aware: the foreignness of what you no longer are or no longer own is expecting you on the threshold of new locations."
-- Italo Calvino
They've taken their time. Following Silence Is Sexy, their Strategies Against Architecture III anthology, the Berlin Babylon soundtrack, and the live cut Brussels 9-15-2000, Perpetuum Mobile, EINST?RZENDE NEUBAUTEN's long-awaited new studio album, has arrived at last. Time brings about changes - and since their foundation, EINST?RZENDE NEUBAUTEN have, like no other band, reflected these major and minor, public and private vicissitudes. They have been exemplary in reinventing themselves with every new album - while remaining faithful to themselves, especially in their constant metamorphosis. "Perpetuum Mobile" expands the range of their music, enriching it with new facets: like in the radicalism with which melancholia, wafted through with farewells, is portrayed here. Or the long, almost epic narratives that rigorously take all the time they need to develop their perfect dramaturgy. Alongside these, we find subtle sonic images, whose intensity develops out of reduction, or songs that breathe a fragile beauty ("Paradiesseits") and deeply felt mourning ("Dead Friends (around the corner)"). But EINST?RZENDE NEUBAUTEN also immediately continue their search for that unexpected new sound - with new installations (see "Boreas") or surprising instrumentations consisting of wind players, tubes, pedal steel guitars, the clavichord, bird calls, and air compressors. But the game with "foreign" sounds is no end in itself, no pure exploration of materials, but a means of painting seductively disconcerting sound landscapes in which lyrics, rhythm and sound come together to form a unified entirety. Just like the whole album, which develops a manifest logic in view of these many surprising aspects - right down to the final track, "Grundst?ck".
Departure
In the beginning is the farewell: "Ich gehe jetzt" (I'm going now). The truism that in each demolishing movement there lurks a moment of departure has been illustrated more clearly, logically and convincingly by EINST?RZENDE NEUBAUTEN on their new album Perpetuum Mobile than ever before in the band's long history. The Neubauten are in motion, and always have been, musically. But now they've specified this momentum in a conceptionally closed album: it describes - veined by numerous references and reflexives - the routes and detours that life holds in store for thought. Flight movements small and great, occasionally ironic, at times daringly direct. Neubauten in motion: this can be taken quite literally. The space has widened: Berlin remains only a spot on the map; it has been moved out of the centre of experiences, and the fixed geographic perspectives have dissolved into a life of nomadism. EINST?RZENDE NEUBAUTEN do not live here any more, at least not with that erstwhile exclusiveness. Since circumstances tend to have an inevitable inclination to invade all forms of artistic production, Perpetuum Mobile reflects life en route. Life appears like a single transit movement, revealing that borders have only one remaining purpose: they are there to be transgressed.
Under Surveillance
Silence Is Sexy (2000), the most recent album by EINST?RZENDE NEUBAUTEN, was recorded in different studios over a long period of time. For Perpetuum Mobile the band, who have been operating as a constant line-up consisting of Blixa Bargeld, Alexander Hacke, N. U. Unruh, Jochen Arbeit and Rudi Moser since Ende Neu, decided on a novel and unusual production approach. Webcams were installed at the Neubauten studio in Berlin's north to transmit the entire creative process via the Internet on their homepage, www.neubauten.org. Interested fans were granted access to the site after paying a one-off fee which served to guarantee the financial independence of the production. At previously announced fixed times, their supporters had the opportunity to watch the creative process live and to send their comments live to the band. To be able to react to incoming remarks, everybody in the studio, including sound engineer and webmaster, was equipped with a laptop. All the sessions broadcast - and later also the rough mix versions - were filed in an archive that could always be accessed online and discussed later in the chat or the forum. There were a number tracks, says Blixa Bargeld, that the band would have abandoned after a few attempts ("Ein seltener Vogel"), but continued to work on because the supporters insisted on their completion. So these fans, through their influence on the music, the lyrics and the production, were supportive in two respects.

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