2015-05-29

a kraut legend: staff carpenborg and the electric corona 1970: the legendary dance nihilismus plus a bonus track

 
ahahand it sounds like a mell/anger of doldinger, amon düül (2), the dinger brothers and varyearlie kraftwerk: an unknownanymous german band, probably from the munich area51, that recorded a totalkrautfreakout for a german budgetbilliglabel in 1970 with only very little reference to annyantetypes: an unconscious protodancemuzack intenderend to be a lightshaking background music for higherest societerons lounge paddys: the fantastic party of staff carpenborg and the electric corona!


way back in the nineteeth i found this little gem on a german hinterland fleamarket for one deutschmark and pretty soon it became the holy greyle of the compilers of "kraut! demons! kraut!" (andoryouknowthemall obscured by krauts or kraut bloody rageous et cetera et cetera) in whatwitch i had the inflammable honour of being part of themthesethose ass part of the inn-kraut. some tracks and traces of staff carpenborg can be found on the mentioned and other kraut compilations: in 2006 we gave the remastered and expanded compactcassetteversions to ewige blumenkraft and they released it on a cd and allen voran wrote the linernotes that will tell you all and so this is all.
 

here we go-go!

01 - all men shall be brothers of ludwig
02 - the every days way down to the suburbs (listen directly)
03 - lightning fires, burning sorrows
04 - swing low, if you like to do (listen directly)
05 - stainy heavy needles
06 - p.a.r.t.y.
07 - let the thing comin' up (listen directly)
08 - shummy poor clessford idea in troody taprest noodles
09 - afro rock

(mp3 / all scans included / direct download)

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

For long time looking for CD or better quallity rip of the album

FALCON`S - FEVER (Hansa 1970)

thanks!

the saucer people said...

Many thanks for this gem! I remembered the name Staff Carpenborg and the Electric Corona from your splendid Kraut! compilations (it is a name that is hard to forget after all), but I had no idea the tracks came from an entire album of his material.

To be honest, when I first saw the post, I thought it was a long lost Heribert Thusek and Horst Ackermann album (of Science Fiction Corporation/Vampires of Dartmoore infamy), one that Finders Keepers had neglected to hoover up in their reissue frenzy!

All kudos to you for digging up this uber-rarity in a German flea market - it is those moments that make all the endless hours, days, months, years of searching, so worthwhile.