Kraftwerk / Techno Pop (1983) (The Catalog Box Set)
Artist Kraftwerk
Box Set Title: The Catalog (Klangbox 002) (50999 9 67506 2 9)
Album Title: Techno Pop (1983) (The Catalog Box Set)
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Rock: General Rock
Format CD
Released 11/23/2009
Reissue Date 11/23/2009
Label Kling Klang
Catalog No KLANGBOX 002
Bar Code No 50999 9 67512 2 0
Packaging Box Set (8 Disk)
Tracks
1. Boing Boom Tschak (2:59)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter)
2. Techno Pop (7:41)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter/Emil Schult/F Schneider Esleben)
3. Musique Non Stop (5:44)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter/F Schneider Esleben)
4. The Telephone Call (3:50)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter)
5. House Phone (4:56)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter)
6. Sex Object (6:51)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter)
7. Electric Cafe (4:19)
(Florian Schneider/Karl Bartos/Ralf Hutter/Schmitt)
Date Acquired 12/01/2009
Personal Rating
Acquired from Amazon

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Andy Kellman

One of electronic music’s most crucial and lavish box sets, The Catalogue contains eight Kraftwerk albums remastered by founding member Ralf Hütter: Autobahn (1974), Radio-Activity (1975), Trans-Europe Express (1977), The Man-Machine (1978), Computer World (1981), Electric Cafe (aka Techno Pop, 1986), The Mix (1991), and Tour de France Soundtracks (2003). Some purists were upset with liberties taken by Hütter -- specific elements of certain songs sound sharpened, evidence of some noise reduction, and so forth -- but they are few in number and minor in effect. (The gripes were quite possibly made with the intent to prove that they know the ins and outs of these albums more than you do.) The box itself is 12 inches by 12 inches, rather hefty. The eight discs, nested in four dense foam compartments, are individually packaged in sleeves that replicate the original artwork, whether through the disc’s pouch or the slipcase in which the pouch is (tightly) housed. Each album gets its own 12-by-12 booklet with full-page images.



Review by Jason Ankeny

Five long years after Computer World, Kraftwerk finally resurfaced with another LP, Electric Cafe; the rest of the pop music industry having finally caught up with the group's vision, they no longer seem so innovative and inspired -- indeed, the record's brief running time (under 36 minutes) seems indicative of a lack of ideas and new directions, with the spartan opening tracks, "Technopop" and "Musique Non-Stop," virtually interchangeable and the remaining cuts surprisingly mainstream in both form and content.
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