Hello,
If most artists in contemporary electronica are like islands unto themselves, turning out tracks in relative anonymity, Pete "Namlook" Kuhlmann was a whole continent. A dizzyingly prolific composer who steadily built up an entire industry around his Frankfurt-based Fax label, Namlook's name was inextricably linked with the post-rave resurgence of ambient music, and many of his solo and collaborative recordings with the likes of Mixmaster Morris, Tetsu Inoue, Klaus Schulze, Bill Laswell, Richie Hawtin, Geir Jenssen, Dr. Atmo, Burhan Ocal, Atom Heart, Jonah Sharp, Charles Uzzell-Edwards, and David Moufang, among many others, number among the most lauded and influential in new ambient. "... ......N-Joy
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
Pete Namlook (born 25 November 1960 as Peter Kuhlmann [phon koolman] in Frankfurt, Germany, died on 8 November 2012) was an ambient and electronic-music producer and composer., the extremely prolific Pete Namlook (1960-2012) was one of the high priests of new-school ambient, ie. ambient techno, trance, lounge and other related dance-music spinoffs. In its 20 year history his record label Fax Records released some of the definitive albums in these sub-genres and Namlook stands alongside a handful of other names such as The Orb, Biosphere and Mixmaster Morris as one of the originators of ambient's resurgence and reinvention via dance music in the late 80's and early 90's.
Intriguingly, he often favoured the sounds of analogue synthesisers over digital and - alongside fellow German e-musician Oliver Lieb - was reputed to have one of the most extensive collections of classic analogue equipment in Europe. And although he downplayed the linage, like many of his new-school peers his music has some of its roots in old-school electronica as varied as Brian Eno, psy rockers Pink Floyd, and Krautrock icons like Klaus Schulze and Tangerine Dream.
But Namlook was no imitator. He deepened and refined the sound of his predecessors with an injection of fresh ideas from the dance world, coupled with fine musicianship honed from many years of playing rock and jazz. In a 2007 interview with e-music magazine Slices he actually made a point of distancing his music from the conceptual influence of Eno particularly:
"You have to differentiate quite clearly between ambient in a techno sense, and on the other hand Brian Eno, a purely conceptual thing. I only knew of a collaboration between Brian Eno and Cluster [the German band], and him with Roxy Music. I only bought his ambient stuff later. Ambient as Eno defines it...is more or less musical wallpaper. It stays in the background and serves the environment rather than saying something about itself. In my definition of ambient, which has nothing in common with Eno's definition, it's about a journey, intense emotions that need to be transported - environmental music, jazz, ethno - depending on what project I'm working on".
The genesis of Fax Records
Although he had long dreamed of making a career from ambient electronica, in Fax Records' early days he was mainly pursuing a dance floor-oriented direction and releasing 12-inch vinyl singles to a warm reception from sectors of Europe's club scene.
But Namlook soon became dismayed at other artists' appropriation of the Frankfurt "hard trance" sound (developed through his genre-defining 4 Voice project). Thankfully his ambient B-sides to these singles - in hindsight a brilliant strategy - were also creating plenty of interest. Within a few years of the label's inception he had set about focusing Fax almost entirely on ambient and downtempo styles.
Up to his death in 2012 Namlook released an enormous number of solo and collaborative albums of widely varying quality both under his own name and various other project monikers. Collectors should be aware that many CD's were very limited pressings and some will be difficult to find, even more so now that Namlook has gone and the label is no more. Certain key titles were re-issued on CD and download from time to time, however, and much of the Fax catalogue is now spread widely online.
The Silence series
Silence (1992) is the one that started it all, Fax's first album release and one which caught the ear of both seasoned electronic boffins and dance fans looking for a chilled-out tonic after a night among the thumping beats of clubland. Both this album and Silence II (1993) are collaborations with close associate Dr Atmo and despite being at times almost new age in their choice of themes (a voice whispers sweet cosmic nothings like "we are all part of the universe") the music is outstanding. These beguiling, shimmering, reverberant landscapes are sometimes beatless and sometimes gently beaty with subdued live pads and cymbals. The 20 minute "Garden Of Dreams" is a particular mesmerising blend of slow Mid-Eastern rhythms with sighing and crying electronic chords.
Continuing the series is the the Persian-tinged Silence III (1998) which features Namlook on his own. Titles like "Mirage" "Into The Desert" and “A Ship On A Sea Of Sand” are just perfect; his sense of place is quite stunning and he understands the visual qualities of ambient sound exceptionally well. His creative range across entire series is impressive: from stately progressions of warm, organic-sounding orchestral synthscapes to atonal, purely atmospheric pieces of pure texture. When it comes to sound design Namlook’s attention to detail is faultless, which makes hearing his music on good hi-fi equipment especially rewarding. Silence III is followed by two more superb albums in the series.
The surreal, innovative first volume of Dreamfish (1993) with collaborator Mixmaster Morris is another genre-defining release, still cited today as a favourite by fans of early post-rave ambient. The environmental sound effects are deployed in a quirky way amongst the textured, gently rhythmic landscapes and the music brims with surprises and quiet invention. The jazzy bass notes on "Fishology", for example, move along at a good clip yet are so subtle that the track's calming qualities are never disturbed. The first three volumes of the Air series are also high-water marks for Namlook. Like the Silence series they show some rich ethnic and neo-classical leanings, and they remain particularly effective examples of how he uses live acoustic instruments in an electronic setting. The delicate, tinkling cymbals and soft tom-tom beats on "Je suis seule et triste ici" from Air I (1993), for instance, are utterly refreshing because Namlook is able to maintain a deep electronic ambient feel while still expanding electronica's instrumental vocabulary.
Air II (1994) is deeply psychedelic. An eleven-part "trip" subtitled "Traveling Without Moving", it takes it's thematic cue from Frank Herbert's cult sci-fi novel and movie Dune. Herbert's story posited a strange universe dependant on a life-extending, mind-altering spice drug. On Air II Namlook subtly draws on the story's themes to create a beautiful, creepy, intoxicating universe of his own. Again he utilizes acoustic instruments: didgeridoo, sighing woodwinds, flamenco guitar, Mid-Eastern flutes, and swooping vocal textures that rise and fall to striking effect. They're all integrated seamlessly, proving that despite the club music influences he thrived by exploring outside the rigid structures of electronic beats and sequencing.
Other collaborations
Although as an artist Namlook's focus was far broader than just club-influenced sounds, when he did get into more squelchy or bleepy techy-trance territory the results could be just as stimulating. On the brilliant two-part title track from The Fires Of Ork (1993) that thumping 4/4 kick drum is there alright, but somehow Namlook and cohort Gier Jenssen (aka Biosphere) have managed to mute it just enough to create a truly "ambient" dance music: thunderous yet shadowy and eerie, built around a voice sample of Rutger Hauer from Blade Runner. Also beats-based is the the superb first volume of From Within (1994), one of the pinnacles of ambient techno that marries Namlook's warm keys and spiralling synth sounds with the sparse bleeps and beats of Canadian techno guru Richie Hawtin. Again, the rhythms don't drive you into the ground but rather lull you into a gentle if uneasy trance, particularly on "Million Miles To Earth" and "Sad Alliance". The third in this series, From Within III (1997) is also outstanding
Namlook after the mid 90's
While many aficionados would agree that the early to mid 1990's produced most of Fax's - and Namlook's - most enduring releases, it would be unfair to dismiss some of Namlook's work since then. Highlights from 1995-2001 include the final volumes in what is probably Namlook's greatest series, the magnificent Silence IV (2000) and Silence V (2001). The luminous piano notes and warm orchestral synths of "The Night Before I Left" from Silence IV might just be the most emotional piece of music Namlook has ever made, an elegy that's at once incredibly sad and jaw-droppingly pretty. From the same album is the extraordinary "Bedouin Love", a dark, swirling epic with thunderous Moroccan drums, a strange spoken Arabic monologue and chilling yet beautiful synthesiser chords. In the same sonic universe as the Silence albums is From Within 3 from 1997, again made with Richie Hawtin but this time quite different from earlier volumes due to its softer, warmer sound. There's feather-soft lead guitar lines, lush strings, jazzy improvising and warm analogue melodies, all held together by subtle, intelligent drum programming. It's a fantastic example of accessible, soulful electronica.
In the 2000's and beyond Namlook continued with a busy release schedule of solo albums and collaborations but rarely with the same impact his music made in the previous decade. Not that there's lack of variety; for hardcore Fax fans there's plenty to explore. Experimental releases like New Organic Life (2002) are scarily unfamiliar, experimental, arguably unlistenable at times. Some outstanding individual melodic tracks appear on otherwise less-then-great albums such as Resonate (2006) and Namlook Le Mar (2009). However, some of his other collaborative albums made after the mid 90's - not listed on this page - are highly recommended including recordings with Tetsu Inoue, Klaus Schulze and Wolfram Spyra.
Death and legacy
Aged just 51, Namlook died unexpectedly in his sleep of a heart attack on 8 November 2012. Maintaining his intense work rate right up to the night he passed away, some wondered whether Namlook simply drove himself into the ground, literally living and dying for his art. Yet his sister told UK music journalist Mark Prendergast that "he went to bed happy" that day. Who are we to judge? Namlook left behind an extraordinary and enormous recorded legacy, as well as a generation of underground electronic producers and composers inspired by both his talents and his uncompromising independence. Fax Records is no more, though for the moment a good deal of his discography remains available. Hopefully a sensible licensing deal with the Kuhlmann estate will enable another publisher take on the best of his catalogue and keep it available in the coming decades. He deserves no less.
The tribute: Die Welt ist Klang
A superb Namlook tribute album appeared in 2013, almost as essential as any of the work released by the man himself. Die Welt ist Klang ("The World Is Sound") was put together in 2012-13 via a crowdfunding campaign by Dave Wade-Stein from EAR/Rational Music, the longtime North American distributor for Fax and related labels. The album is presented thus: four volumes of mostly new or unreleased music by former Fax artists, and four volumes of new material by mostly unknown musician-fans.
It's only fitting that one of the most prolific recording artists in the history of music - in all recorded music, not just a genre - should be honoured with a sprawling 8-volume tribute. It would take pages to review so much music in detail; suffice to say the standard of contributions overall is very high. Interestingly, most of the former Fax artists here don't seek to recapture peak moments from their past works. They just do what they do - from beatless ambient to bleepy dance grooves, from lounge to techno, from gentle dissonance to sweet, tender melodies. As for the the 40 or so musician-fan contributions, they were chosen from a large pool of submissions by a blind vote. Although there are some easy-to-spot pastiches among them, here too there is much freshness and surprise.
Die Welt ist Klang is a massive treasure chest of (mostly) new ambient and electronica. Some of it is the sound of now and some of it wistfully looks back. All of it acknowledges the contributions and example of one remarkable man.
Namlook" is "Koolman", a phonetic rendering of his real name, spelled backwards.
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
The first in a series of collaborative improvisations by German experimentalists Pete Namlook & Atom Heart (Uwe Schmidt), 1995's Jet Chamber is a bit on the spotty side, but the tracks that work are sublime, some of the best ambient electronica of their era. The opening track, the 31-minute "Split Wide," is a bliss-out classic, with only a jarring midsection of atonal noise bursts from both members disturbing the placid beauty of the undulating keyboard lines. The comparatively brief "Chaos Impuls" (only four minutes, by far the shortest track on the hour-plus album) is a similarly environmental soundscape, but the remaining three tracks, "Rotor Cabinet," "Feedback Fluctuation," and "Streamline," are slightly more structured, with lolling beats and occasional washes of melody stretching out over Namlook's space rock-inspired keyboard and processor sounds. The last is a particular gem, as Atom Heart builds a teasingly repetitive groove that Namlook parries with for a good 11 minutes or so. All five volumes of the Jet Chamber series are strictly for ambient electronica fans, but those looking for an accessible entrée into Pete Namlook's dauntingly huge discography could do much worse than starting here.
Pete Namlook • Atom Heart - Jet Chamber ( flac 333mb)
01 Split Wide 30:51
02 Rotor Cabinet 12:25
03 Chaos Impuls 4:08
04 Feedback Fluctuation 10:13
05 Streamline 11:12
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
Like a movie sequel that's basically a retread of the original, there's a definite "been there, done that" feel to the second entry in Pete Namlook & Atom Heart's Jet Chamber series of collaborative improvisations, but like the best movie sequels, there's just enough of a changeup in Jet Chamber II to keep it from becoming redundant. Where Namlook was clearly in control of 1995's Jet Chamber, Jet Chamber II is more of a showcase for his beat-making partner. Atom Heart is all over this album, making up for his subdued presence on its predecessor by creating a strange array of whirring, clicking, and chattering beats under Namlook's trademark Krautrock-inspired synths. The first and last of the three extended tracks, the 18-and-a-half-minute "Inner Rotation" and the nearly 27-minute "Outer Rotation," are driven by Atom Heart's beats and loops, with the latter track reaching moments of sheer atonality about two-thirds of the way through. In contrast, the aptly titled 17-minute "Calm Box" is almost all Namlook, a close relation to the sublime "Split Wide" from Jet Chamber, though with a slightly more structured and less amorphous feel akin to parts of Brian Eno's Discreet Music.
.Pete Namlook • Atom Heart - Jet Chamber II ( 280mb)
01 Inner Rotation 18:30
02 Rotation 17:20
03 Outer Rotation 26:56
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
Pete Namlook and Uwe Schmidt (aka Atom Heart) hold each other up in the studio with an acceptable trio of sci-fidelity tracks. Like so many albums on the FAX record label, Jet Chamber V falls back on familiar strengths, filtered through the latest technology. Consequently it's a showcase for both the artists as well as the gear they plug into. "I Miss Green" spins out stuttering little robot beats with a gridwork of synth -- a very energizing and sterile track with stray beams of light shooting out from time to time, but the piece evolves primarily by way of adding and subtracting a dozen elements over the course of 21 minutes. It's reminiscent of early Spacetime Continuum material, but lengthier. "Tightness" is a darker groove, clicking and beeping with the same compositional state of suspended animation, under an ambient drone. Here, it's like the synchronized backdrop to a Kraftwerk song, rather than the song itself. It's the very picture of German engineering. "Voted Steady" squawks, gurgles, clunks, and chirps along, like a curious assembly of alien metronomes keeping time with harmonic keyboards floating overhead. It's the circuit boards of the equipment having a miniature drunken argument with themselves, and therefore a bit disposable. Jet Chamber V is essentially another notch in the very, very long belts of Namlook and Schmidt, an album that neither breaks new ground nor crashes into it. For collectors of the FAX outpouring, it's a finger on the label's pulse.
Pete Namlook • Atom Heart - Jet Chamber V (flac 242mb)
01 I Miss Green 21:26
02 Tightness 16:59
03 Voted Steady 13:40
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
The Kool Man was one serious collaborator as the three albums he did with Russian sound collage outfit The New Composers should testify. 12 songs? What is this a box set. No, these are actually short and very entertaining pieces that go from odd space pop to abstract ambient. Worth checking out for more then just the Namlook fan.
Pete Namlook • New Composers - Planetarium ( 250mb)
01 Life on Mars 3:14
02 There Is Not Another World 6:48
03 Echnaton 3:27
04 Waters of Love 3:45
05 Tetra 5:55
06 Musika i slowa 3:22
07 Indigo 4:07
08 The Second Sector 3:22
09 In the Memory of Magnitola 3:16
10 Una 3:15
11 Bellan 2:37
12 Shadows of Shadows 7:00
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While Planetarium was more structured like something New Composers would release on their own, Planetarium 2 has Pete Namlook taking the pilot's wheel this time, attempting to get an intriguing space epic out of his work with the New Composers, starting with a rather lengthy intro "Moontrip", with a lot of repeated bleeps and NASA samples from Namlook. (later on, we hear some Russian sample that we assume are provided by New Composers) And thus, for the first half it's lot of spacey danciness that takes us back to the days of The Fires of Ork and Alien Community. Surprisingly, it's when the New Composers really come in that things actually get interesting. "Space Casino" is a goofy cheesy track made up of a lot of samples, most notably ones lifted from anime, I presume. Along with "Space Ballet", which is a sound collage piece featuring some disjointed piano along with various Russian TV samples, it's enough to make you wish they come out with a whole album in this style. "Spirit Preparation" and "225" have Namlook and New Composers finally coming to together to give us some great space ambient and have you looking forward to what this collaboration will bring in the future.
Pete Namlook • New Composers - Planetarium 2 ( 345mb)
01 Moontrip 11:45
02 Start Process 10:23
03 Urgent Message 2:54
04 MIR Station - Selektor 8:36
05 Space Casino 4:17
06 6 Beta 9 Answer 3:44
07 Spirit Preparation 8:53
08 Space Ballet 3:48
09 225 2:43
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
If most artists in contemporary electronica are like islands unto themselves, turning out tracks in relative anonymity, Pete "Namlook" Kuhlmann was a whole continent. A dizzyingly prolific composer who steadily built up an entire industry around his Frankfurt-based Fax label, Namlook's name was inextricably linked with the post-rave resurgence of ambient music, and many of his solo and collaborative recordings with the likes of Mixmaster Morris, Tetsu Inoue, Klaus Schulze, Bill Laswell, Richie Hawtin, Geir Jenssen, Dr. Atmo, Burhan Ocal, Atom Heart, Jonah Sharp, Charles Uzzell-Edwards, and David Moufang, among many others, number among the most lauded and influential in new ambient. "... ......N-Joy
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
Pete Namlook (born 25 November 1960 as Peter Kuhlmann [phon koolman] in Frankfurt, Germany, died on 8 November 2012) was an ambient and electronic-music producer and composer., the extremely prolific Pete Namlook (1960-2012) was one of the high priests of new-school ambient, ie. ambient techno, trance, lounge and other related dance-music spinoffs. In its 20 year history his record label Fax Records released some of the definitive albums in these sub-genres and Namlook stands alongside a handful of other names such as The Orb, Biosphere and Mixmaster Morris as one of the originators of ambient's resurgence and reinvention via dance music in the late 80's and early 90's.
Intriguingly, he often favoured the sounds of analogue synthesisers over digital and - alongside fellow German e-musician Oliver Lieb - was reputed to have one of the most extensive collections of classic analogue equipment in Europe. And although he downplayed the linage, like many of his new-school peers his music has some of its roots in old-school electronica as varied as Brian Eno, psy rockers Pink Floyd, and Krautrock icons like Klaus Schulze and Tangerine Dream.
But Namlook was no imitator. He deepened and refined the sound of his predecessors with an injection of fresh ideas from the dance world, coupled with fine musicianship honed from many years of playing rock and jazz. In a 2007 interview with e-music magazine Slices he actually made a point of distancing his music from the conceptual influence of Eno particularly:
"You have to differentiate quite clearly between ambient in a techno sense, and on the other hand Brian Eno, a purely conceptual thing. I only knew of a collaboration between Brian Eno and Cluster [the German band], and him with Roxy Music. I only bought his ambient stuff later. Ambient as Eno defines it...is more or less musical wallpaper. It stays in the background and serves the environment rather than saying something about itself. In my definition of ambient, which has nothing in common with Eno's definition, it's about a journey, intense emotions that need to be transported - environmental music, jazz, ethno - depending on what project I'm working on".
The genesis of Fax Records
Although he had long dreamed of making a career from ambient electronica, in Fax Records' early days he was mainly pursuing a dance floor-oriented direction and releasing 12-inch vinyl singles to a warm reception from sectors of Europe's club scene.
But Namlook soon became dismayed at other artists' appropriation of the Frankfurt "hard trance" sound (developed through his genre-defining 4 Voice project). Thankfully his ambient B-sides to these singles - in hindsight a brilliant strategy - were also creating plenty of interest. Within a few years of the label's inception he had set about focusing Fax almost entirely on ambient and downtempo styles.
Up to his death in 2012 Namlook released an enormous number of solo and collaborative albums of widely varying quality both under his own name and various other project monikers. Collectors should be aware that many CD's were very limited pressings and some will be difficult to find, even more so now that Namlook has gone and the label is no more. Certain key titles were re-issued on CD and download from time to time, however, and much of the Fax catalogue is now spread widely online.
The Silence series
Silence (1992) is the one that started it all, Fax's first album release and one which caught the ear of both seasoned electronic boffins and dance fans looking for a chilled-out tonic after a night among the thumping beats of clubland. Both this album and Silence II (1993) are collaborations with close associate Dr Atmo and despite being at times almost new age in their choice of themes (a voice whispers sweet cosmic nothings like "we are all part of the universe") the music is outstanding. These beguiling, shimmering, reverberant landscapes are sometimes beatless and sometimes gently beaty with subdued live pads and cymbals. The 20 minute "Garden Of Dreams" is a particular mesmerising blend of slow Mid-Eastern rhythms with sighing and crying electronic chords.
Continuing the series is the the Persian-tinged Silence III (1998) which features Namlook on his own. Titles like "Mirage" "Into The Desert" and “A Ship On A Sea Of Sand” are just perfect; his sense of place is quite stunning and he understands the visual qualities of ambient sound exceptionally well. His creative range across entire series is impressive: from stately progressions of warm, organic-sounding orchestral synthscapes to atonal, purely atmospheric pieces of pure texture. When it comes to sound design Namlook’s attention to detail is faultless, which makes hearing his music on good hi-fi equipment especially rewarding. Silence III is followed by two more superb albums in the series.
The surreal, innovative first volume of Dreamfish (1993) with collaborator Mixmaster Morris is another genre-defining release, still cited today as a favourite by fans of early post-rave ambient. The environmental sound effects are deployed in a quirky way amongst the textured, gently rhythmic landscapes and the music brims with surprises and quiet invention. The jazzy bass notes on "Fishology", for example, move along at a good clip yet are so subtle that the track's calming qualities are never disturbed. The first three volumes of the Air series are also high-water marks for Namlook. Like the Silence series they show some rich ethnic and neo-classical leanings, and they remain particularly effective examples of how he uses live acoustic instruments in an electronic setting. The delicate, tinkling cymbals and soft tom-tom beats on "Je suis seule et triste ici" from Air I (1993), for instance, are utterly refreshing because Namlook is able to maintain a deep electronic ambient feel while still expanding electronica's instrumental vocabulary.
Air II (1994) is deeply psychedelic. An eleven-part "trip" subtitled "Traveling Without Moving", it takes it's thematic cue from Frank Herbert's cult sci-fi novel and movie Dune. Herbert's story posited a strange universe dependant on a life-extending, mind-altering spice drug. On Air II Namlook subtly draws on the story's themes to create a beautiful, creepy, intoxicating universe of his own. Again he utilizes acoustic instruments: didgeridoo, sighing woodwinds, flamenco guitar, Mid-Eastern flutes, and swooping vocal textures that rise and fall to striking effect. They're all integrated seamlessly, proving that despite the club music influences he thrived by exploring outside the rigid structures of electronic beats and sequencing.
Other collaborations
Although as an artist Namlook's focus was far broader than just club-influenced sounds, when he did get into more squelchy or bleepy techy-trance territory the results could be just as stimulating. On the brilliant two-part title track from The Fires Of Ork (1993) that thumping 4/4 kick drum is there alright, but somehow Namlook and cohort Gier Jenssen (aka Biosphere) have managed to mute it just enough to create a truly "ambient" dance music: thunderous yet shadowy and eerie, built around a voice sample of Rutger Hauer from Blade Runner. Also beats-based is the the superb first volume of From Within (1994), one of the pinnacles of ambient techno that marries Namlook's warm keys and spiralling synth sounds with the sparse bleeps and beats of Canadian techno guru Richie Hawtin. Again, the rhythms don't drive you into the ground but rather lull you into a gentle if uneasy trance, particularly on "Million Miles To Earth" and "Sad Alliance". The third in this series, From Within III (1997) is also outstanding
Namlook after the mid 90's
While many aficionados would agree that the early to mid 1990's produced most of Fax's - and Namlook's - most enduring releases, it would be unfair to dismiss some of Namlook's work since then. Highlights from 1995-2001 include the final volumes in what is probably Namlook's greatest series, the magnificent Silence IV (2000) and Silence V (2001). The luminous piano notes and warm orchestral synths of "The Night Before I Left" from Silence IV might just be the most emotional piece of music Namlook has ever made, an elegy that's at once incredibly sad and jaw-droppingly pretty. From the same album is the extraordinary "Bedouin Love", a dark, swirling epic with thunderous Moroccan drums, a strange spoken Arabic monologue and chilling yet beautiful synthesiser chords. In the same sonic universe as the Silence albums is From Within 3 from 1997, again made with Richie Hawtin but this time quite different from earlier volumes due to its softer, warmer sound. There's feather-soft lead guitar lines, lush strings, jazzy improvising and warm analogue melodies, all held together by subtle, intelligent drum programming. It's a fantastic example of accessible, soulful electronica.
In the 2000's and beyond Namlook continued with a busy release schedule of solo albums and collaborations but rarely with the same impact his music made in the previous decade. Not that there's lack of variety; for hardcore Fax fans there's plenty to explore. Experimental releases like New Organic Life (2002) are scarily unfamiliar, experimental, arguably unlistenable at times. Some outstanding individual melodic tracks appear on otherwise less-then-great albums such as Resonate (2006) and Namlook Le Mar (2009). However, some of his other collaborative albums made after the mid 90's - not listed on this page - are highly recommended including recordings with Tetsu Inoue, Klaus Schulze and Wolfram Spyra.
Death and legacy
Aged just 51, Namlook died unexpectedly in his sleep of a heart attack on 8 November 2012. Maintaining his intense work rate right up to the night he passed away, some wondered whether Namlook simply drove himself into the ground, literally living and dying for his art. Yet his sister told UK music journalist Mark Prendergast that "he went to bed happy" that day. Who are we to judge? Namlook left behind an extraordinary and enormous recorded legacy, as well as a generation of underground electronic producers and composers inspired by both his talents and his uncompromising independence. Fax Records is no more, though for the moment a good deal of his discography remains available. Hopefully a sensible licensing deal with the Kuhlmann estate will enable another publisher take on the best of his catalogue and keep it available in the coming decades. He deserves no less.
The tribute: Die Welt ist Klang
A superb Namlook tribute album appeared in 2013, almost as essential as any of the work released by the man himself. Die Welt ist Klang ("The World Is Sound") was put together in 2012-13 via a crowdfunding campaign by Dave Wade-Stein from EAR/Rational Music, the longtime North American distributor for Fax and related labels. The album is presented thus: four volumes of mostly new or unreleased music by former Fax artists, and four volumes of new material by mostly unknown musician-fans.
It's only fitting that one of the most prolific recording artists in the history of music - in all recorded music, not just a genre - should be honoured with a sprawling 8-volume tribute. It would take pages to review so much music in detail; suffice to say the standard of contributions overall is very high. Interestingly, most of the former Fax artists here don't seek to recapture peak moments from their past works. They just do what they do - from beatless ambient to bleepy dance grooves, from lounge to techno, from gentle dissonance to sweet, tender melodies. As for the the 40 or so musician-fan contributions, they were chosen from a large pool of submissions by a blind vote. Although there are some easy-to-spot pastiches among them, here too there is much freshness and surprise.
Die Welt ist Klang is a massive treasure chest of (mostly) new ambient and electronica. Some of it is the sound of now and some of it wistfully looks back. All of it acknowledges the contributions and example of one remarkable man.
Namlook" is "Koolman", a phonetic rendering of his real name, spelled backwards.
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
The first in a series of collaborative improvisations by German experimentalists Pete Namlook & Atom Heart (Uwe Schmidt), 1995's Jet Chamber is a bit on the spotty side, but the tracks that work are sublime, some of the best ambient electronica of their era. The opening track, the 31-minute "Split Wide," is a bliss-out classic, with only a jarring midsection of atonal noise bursts from both members disturbing the placid beauty of the undulating keyboard lines. The comparatively brief "Chaos Impuls" (only four minutes, by far the shortest track on the hour-plus album) is a similarly environmental soundscape, but the remaining three tracks, "Rotor Cabinet," "Feedback Fluctuation," and "Streamline," are slightly more structured, with lolling beats and occasional washes of melody stretching out over Namlook's space rock-inspired keyboard and processor sounds. The last is a particular gem, as Atom Heart builds a teasingly repetitive groove that Namlook parries with for a good 11 minutes or so. All five volumes of the Jet Chamber series are strictly for ambient electronica fans, but those looking for an accessible entrée into Pete Namlook's dauntingly huge discography could do much worse than starting here.
Pete Namlook • Atom Heart - Jet Chamber ( flac 333mb)
01 Split Wide 30:51
02 Rotor Cabinet 12:25
03 Chaos Impuls 4:08
04 Feedback Fluctuation 10:13
05 Streamline 11:12
xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
Like a movie sequel that's basically a retread of the original, there's a definite "been there, done that" feel to the second entry in Pete Namlook & Atom Heart's Jet Chamber series of collaborative improvisations, but like the best movie sequels, there's just enough of a changeup in Jet Chamber II to keep it from becoming redundant. Where Namlook was clearly in control of 1995's Jet Chamber, Jet Chamber II is more of a showcase for his beat-making partner. Atom Heart is all over this album, making up for his subdued presence on its predecessor by creating a strange array of whirring, clicking, and chattering beats under Namlook's trademark Krautrock-inspired synths. The first and last of the three extended tracks, the 18-and-a-half-minute "Inner Rotation" and the nearly 27-minute "Outer Rotation," are driven by Atom Heart's beats and loops, with the latter track reaching moments of sheer atonality about two-thirds of the way through. In contrast, the aptly titled 17-minute "Calm Box" is almost all Namlook, a close relation to the sublime "Split Wide" from Jet Chamber, though with a slightly more structured and less amorphous feel akin to parts of Brian Eno's Discreet Music.
.Pete Namlook • Atom Heart - Jet Chamber II ( 280mb)
01 Inner Rotation 18:30
02 Rotation 17:20
03 Outer Rotation 26:56
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Pete Namlook and Uwe Schmidt (aka Atom Heart) hold each other up in the studio with an acceptable trio of sci-fidelity tracks. Like so many albums on the FAX record label, Jet Chamber V falls back on familiar strengths, filtered through the latest technology. Consequently it's a showcase for both the artists as well as the gear they plug into. "I Miss Green" spins out stuttering little robot beats with a gridwork of synth -- a very energizing and sterile track with stray beams of light shooting out from time to time, but the piece evolves primarily by way of adding and subtracting a dozen elements over the course of 21 minutes. It's reminiscent of early Spacetime Continuum material, but lengthier. "Tightness" is a darker groove, clicking and beeping with the same compositional state of suspended animation, under an ambient drone. Here, it's like the synchronized backdrop to a Kraftwerk song, rather than the song itself. It's the very picture of German engineering. "Voted Steady" squawks, gurgles, clunks, and chirps along, like a curious assembly of alien metronomes keeping time with harmonic keyboards floating overhead. It's the circuit boards of the equipment having a miniature drunken argument with themselves, and therefore a bit disposable. Jet Chamber V is essentially another notch in the very, very long belts of Namlook and Schmidt, an album that neither breaks new ground nor crashes into it. For collectors of the FAX outpouring, it's a finger on the label's pulse.
Pete Namlook • Atom Heart - Jet Chamber V (flac 242mb)
01 I Miss Green 21:26
02 Tightness 16:59
03 Voted Steady 13:40
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The Kool Man was one serious collaborator as the three albums he did with Russian sound collage outfit The New Composers should testify. 12 songs? What is this a box set. No, these are actually short and very entertaining pieces that go from odd space pop to abstract ambient. Worth checking out for more then just the Namlook fan.
Pete Namlook • New Composers - Planetarium ( 250mb)
01 Life on Mars 3:14
02 There Is Not Another World 6:48
03 Echnaton 3:27
04 Waters of Love 3:45
05 Tetra 5:55
06 Musika i slowa 3:22
07 Indigo 4:07
08 The Second Sector 3:22
09 In the Memory of Magnitola 3:16
10 Una 3:15
11 Bellan 2:37
12 Shadows of Shadows 7:00
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While Planetarium was more structured like something New Composers would release on their own, Planetarium 2 has Pete Namlook taking the pilot's wheel this time, attempting to get an intriguing space epic out of his work with the New Composers, starting with a rather lengthy intro "Moontrip", with a lot of repeated bleeps and NASA samples from Namlook. (later on, we hear some Russian sample that we assume are provided by New Composers) And thus, for the first half it's lot of spacey danciness that takes us back to the days of The Fires of Ork and Alien Community. Surprisingly, it's when the New Composers really come in that things actually get interesting. "Space Casino" is a goofy cheesy track made up of a lot of samples, most notably ones lifted from anime, I presume. Along with "Space Ballet", which is a sound collage piece featuring some disjointed piano along with various Russian TV samples, it's enough to make you wish they come out with a whole album in this style. "Spirit Preparation" and "225" have Namlook and New Composers finally coming to together to give us some great space ambient and have you looking forward to what this collaboration will bring in the future.
Pete Namlook • New Composers - Planetarium 2 ( 345mb)
01 Moontrip 11:45
02 Start Process 10:23
03 Urgent Message 2:54
04 MIR Station - Selektor 8:36
05 Space Casino 4:17
06 6 Beta 9 Answer 3:44
07 Spirit Preparation 8:53
08 Space Ballet 3:48
09 225 2:43
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Thank you, Rho !
ReplyDeletegreat FAXes! JET CHAMBER 3 & 4?
ReplyDeleteBump on the above request : anyone got a flac of Pete Namlook & Atom Heart Jet Chamber III? I have 1,2,4&5 it's almost blasphemous not having 3 :) I found them a rutracker [dot] org - to make life easier browsing there install google translate add-on into your browser (chrome, vivaldi, chedot etc any chrome engine based browser) Enjoy all the music there - hint: invest in a 4 TB drive or 3... i did... soooo much good music there.
ReplyDeletePlz email me via here if you know of a III in flac
Thank you for the posts.
ReplyDeletePlease re-up Jet Chamber I & III and Planetarium 2.