Operating Kraftwerk under the 8-bit influence
Bitpoppers reinvent electronica heavyweights with video game flair
Billy Kalb
Issue date: 2/14/07 Section: Diversions
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The 15 artists collected on "8-Bit Operators: The Music of Kraftwerk," on the other hand, seem to have decided that it's more fun to button-mash - each has recast a favorite Kraftwerk song in the form of "bitpop" - music played on ancient video game consoles with 8-bit processors, particularly the Commodore 64, the Atari 2600 and, naturally, the venerable Nintendo Entertainment System.
As a result, "8-Bit Operators" fares far better than most gimmicky tribute albums (See: "Fade to Bluegrass: The Bluegrass Tribute to Metallica"; "Anthem: The String Quartet Tribute to Good Charlotte") because its gimmick actually makes sense. Not only does 8-bit video game music owe its entire style to the innovations made by Kraftwerk in the mid-to-late 1970s, the compilation goes one further and has the group's once cutting-edge sound reimagined through intentionally retro tools. There are an awful lot of layers to chew on here, folks.
Not surprisingly, the most successful tracks here are the ones where the artists ("chippers," for those keeping score at home) most vigorously embrace the NES vibe. Covox's "Computer Love" is pure gray-cartridge nostalgia with buzzing low tones and chirping highs, its classic Nintendo percussion swooshing and sizzling underneath processed vocals. Oliver Wittchow's take on "Kristallo" and Herbert Weixelbaum's "Tanzmusik," both culled from Kraftwerk's earliest days, are so repetitious and cyclical in structure that they naturally lend themselves to 8-bit reconstruction - these tracks could have been video game music from the beginning. And Kraftwerk staple "The Model," performed here as a chugging synth stomper by Nullsleep, could be a lost boss stage from Double Dragon were it not for the vocoder vocals.
There's a lot to like in the songs that diverge from this formula, too. "Pocket Calculator," from 1981's "Computer World," becomes spiraling, schizoid new wave in the hands of Glomag - think "Video Killed The Radio Star" trapped in the world of Bubble Bobble. "Showroom Dummies" gets made over by Sweden's Role Model and loses none of its majestically cold detachment, its ominous electro pulse made all the more potent by the addition of icy female vocals. 8-Bit Weapon's amped-up "Spacelab" features a winding, sine-wave synth melody far blurrier than the original's and a tick-tock rhythm cranked to disco odyssey levels. The minds behind Kraftwerk always thought of it as a pop band; in bitpop form, the music comes closer than ever to reaching that vision.
2008 Woodie Awards
