LA

Blorp! Kraft-werks Disney’s Concert Hall

· 2 min read

KRAFTWERK
Walt Disney Concert Hall
Los Angeles
May 28, 2024

When the Disney Hall usher scanned my e‑ticket, it emitted a cute, space-age tone: ​“Blorp!” Ah, another way Kraftwerk has transformed music culture. It’s a trite truism that the krautrock legends are longtime, worldwide trendsetters. Of course, the Düsseldorf-based group pioneered electronic and techno. And without them there would be no industrial rock — Einstürzende Neubauten, Nine Inch Nails, and the like. David Bowie and Brian Eno were early disciples, propelling synthy pop from Depeche Mode to Daft Punk to Devo. And hip-hop is thick with Kraftwerk influence: I still cherish my 12-inch ​“Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force. That electro-funk jam went gold in 1982 using themes from Kraftwerk’s ​“Trans-Europe Express.”

But that’s old news. What floored me at the Walt Disney Concert Hall performance of The Mix(1991) — part of a nine-night residency showcasing their biggest albums — was how fresh the Kraftwerk concept remains. (I had this realization bouncing in my seat, because … dang! Those beats!) Magically, Kraftwerk has remained cutting-edge since the 1970s. They continually update their material — not just the rhythms and synth tones but also the stage graphics that magnify the music and multilingual lyrics. This is Kraftwerk’s version of Wagnerian ​“Gesamtkunstwerk,” or total art form.

In the studio version of ​“Spacelab,” for example, a rolling sequencer-based ostinato echoes the proto-disco of Giorgio Moroder. (Moroder produced Donna Summer’s sublime banger ​“I Feel Love” in 1977, the same year that Kraftwerk released ​“Trans-Europe Express.”) But at this performance, satisfying today’s dance-music tastes, the thumps were now monster-sized, and the snare slapped hard — the better to rock Disney Hall’s superb acoustics. Likewise, in ​“The Robots,”compared to the original, the BPMs were accelerated and funkified: an infectious confusion of loose and mechanical. And in ​“Home Computer,” the syncopations achieved jazzy/baroque levels of synth riffing, verging on atonality, that danced with the abstract graphics. Exquisite!

This new-old schtick employs the aesthetics of ​“retrofuturism,” a foundational paradox for the group. Uwe Schütte’s definitive biography, Kraftwerk: Future Music from Germany (2020), quotes Kraftwerk founder Ralf Hütter: ​“We were much considering […] the simultaneity of past, present and future today. I think visions and memories synchronise together, and I think certain things from a little way back look more towards the future than things that are pseudo-modern today.”

A word about the visual displays: They played the same new-old trick. Yet each was unique to the song at hand. ​“The Man Machine” was all Russian Constructivist flying cubes and quadrilaterals. (Think artist Kazimir Malevich.) ​“Tour de France” repurposed black-and-white racing newsreels as the music upshifted to syncopation and sophisti-synth tones. Very slick, and very cool.

At the end, band members exited one-by-one, leaving Ralf Hütter, Kraftwerk’s last original member, to perform a solo. No longer robotic, he was moving his hips and tapping his feet. Then he waved goodbye.