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Out of stock

Deutsche Wertarbeit

Deutsche Wertarbeit

Label: Skycap Records

Format: LP

Genre: Electronic

Out of stock

Original 1981 1st press on Sky with laminated sleeve of excellent Berlin-school synth and only album by Dorothea Raukes solo project.

** condition: NM/EX ** "Women working in vintage electronic music certainly don't enjoy as much status as the more well-known fellas of the genre, but alongside equally worthwhile artists such as Doris Norton, Laurie Spiegel and many others, Dorothea Raukes offered the Deutsche Wertarbeit project and album in 1981. It's a constantly rhythmic-based work that crosses light Berlin School-modelled atmospheres, fuzzy ambient passages, programmed beats and frequently breezy vocoder tunes that drift closer to synth-pop, with little traces of disco and dance music worked in as well.
Upbeat opener “Guten Abend, Leute” is very much modeled on the popular electronic Kraftwerk era of the mid Seventies onwards, full of dominant upfront reprising themes, pulsing beats, spacey synth swirls and robotic vocoder spoken-word recitations provided by Dorothea herself. The laid-back and easily pleasing “Deutscher Wald” blends sparkling electric piano notes with fuzzy caressing synth washes over light beats, and “Unter Tage” offers strident urgent themes and jangling sequenced beats, softly taking the piece a little closer to Tangerine Dream.
“Auf Engelsflügeln” uplifting gliding synth waves and churning beats on side two almost take the piece into synth-pop territory, effortlessly coasting into a blissful vocoder spoken coda in the final moments, and almost heroic theme comes to life in “Intercity Rheingold” that could pass for one of the shorter soundtrack segments that Tangerine Dream delivered plenty of in the same decade. But for many listeners the near-ten minute closer “Der Grosse Atem” will impress most of all, a delicately solemn, enveloping and unhurried purer Berlin School work. Big on slowly evolving sonic atmospheres, chilly icy drones and eerie electronic shimmering, it ultimately takes on a comforting Ashra-like serenity without ever coming close to vapid New Age music stylings (but an unwarranted and obtrusive glitch computer meltdown in the final seconds kills the mood!). A perfect and worthy addition to vintage prog/electronic collections."

Details
Cat. number: sky 049
Year: 1981