Cyborg cover

Cyborg

Released

Four full LP sides of Schulze creating worlds. The focus is organ and synth, with some orchestral and percussive fleshing out. He really lets each track unfold from what the synth patches do. When I talked elsewhere here about the German cohort respecting the machines and listening to them, this is what I meant. Kraftwerk were convinced they knew better than everybody, even the machines. This is the inverse, Schulze just drinking in the magical texture and resonance of his oscillators, letting it flow and feel and prosper. Doesn’t sound much like a cyborg, for what it’s worth. My favorite is side four, “Neronengesang”: dark and airborne. The feral “roars” are worth the price of admission.

Sasha Frere-Jones

Schulze’s first album of synthesizer music (1972’s Irrlicht featured organ and manipulated tapes of an orchestra), Cyborg is a double LP containing four 25-minute tracks. (The two-CD reissue adds a nearly hour-long bonus track.) There’s a powerful pulse running through “Conphära,” and the eerie hums and sudden stabs of “Synphära,” “Chromengel” and “Neuronengesang” take the music far beyond the ambient realms of Tangerine Dream, into powerful and often unsettling areas. Listen in the dark and you may find yourself looking nervously over your shoulder.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
In Paris, Aries 1973 cover

In Paris, Aries 1973

Black Artists Group
Electric Byrd cover

Electric Byrd

Donald Byrd
The Natural Order cover

The Natural Order

John Butcher, Fred Frith
Tides cover

Tides

Arovane
Simultan cover

Simultan

Roland Kayn
Uneasy cover

Uneasy

Tyshawn Sorey, Vijay Iyer, Linda Oh
On Falling cover

On Falling

Marcus Fischer
Brace Up! cover

Brace Up!

Bill Orcutt, Chris Corsano
Freya cover

Freya

Tineke Postma