On Electronic Music Cities week - today, Wolfgang Flür. He spent most of his adult life in Düsseldorf.
Born in 1947 in post-war Germany, Wolfgang Flür made his name in the band Kraftwerk, a band that was formed in Düsseldorf. The last time I met him was in 1997 when he released his first post-Kraftwerk album with his band Yamo. His latest album, Magazine 1, is a masterpiece, a mixture of old and new, a commentary on today's world, and also that of post-war Düsseldorf, from Flür's perspective. In this interview, we talk about his own personal history, about his plea for pacifism in Say No! through the Wolfgang Borchert poem of the same name, and the track Birmingham, the home base of his main collaborator on this album, Peter Duggal. He also talks about how Trans Europe Express inspired him to make his track Night Drive, and his emotional final meeting with ex-Kraftwerk bandmate, Florian Schneider, in Düsseldorf where he continues to reside today.
Electronic Cities - Podcast Interview with Sébastien Darchen is also online.
As well as with Martyn Ware, Mark Reeder, and WestBam from the Electronic Cities of Europe.
More info about Flür here: https://www.facebook.com/WolfgangFlur1
Connect with me on Instagram; steve.blame
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