Wednesday, March 26, 2025

STROBE CD #11

























"This is Strobe a new concept in radio programming". Where we resurrect underground freeform radio circa 1968-1972.

Friday, March 21, 2025

STROBE Magazine Echoes of the Yaqui Way



Strobe - A New Concept in Radio

"This is Strobe a new concept in radio programming". Where we resurrect underground freeform radio circa 1968-1972.

The format we use to ensure authenticity is to source actual underground FM freeform radio playlists from underground radio shows of the 1968-1972 era and play only the records they actually played.  This is the undiluted real deal it's the historic and iconic sound of the underground.      


THE STROBE RADIO EXPERIENCE.  

Tune in here:  https://newpdg2020.blogspot.com/2024/10/wild-fm-radio.html


Echoes of The Yaqui Way Special Issue

The enigmatic figure known as The Man With No Name emerged in the early 1970s as a pioneering DJ in the freeform FM radio scene. Broadcasting from Santa Fe's underground station KSFR-FM, his shows were renowned for their eclectic mixes of obscure psychedelic rock, cosmic poetry, and mystic musings, delivered in a laid-back style reminiscent of a spaghetti western gunslinger. Listeners were captivated by his ability to craft surreal soundscapes that transported them on auditory journeys beyond the conventional radio experience.

In 1972, during what would become his final broadcast, The Man With No Name vanished mysteriously. His station's van and equipment were discovered abandoned in the New Mexico desert, but he was never found, leading to widespread speculation and the birth of a legend. Five years later, in the early 1980s, a reel-to-reel tape labeled "From The Other Side" arrived at the station, accompanied by instructions to broadcast it from the same desert location where he had last transmitted. The tape featured his voice guiding listeners on a metaphysical journey aboard the "Blue Bus," blending ethereal music with cryptic narratives.

Psychedelic Western Night

The enduring mystery surrounding The Man With No Name has cemented his status as a cult figure in radio history, symbolizing the adventurous spirit of freeform FM and the counterculture movement of the 1970s.

The key to his legend may lie in a rare, self-published book titled Echoes of the Yaqui Way. Ostensibly a mix of spiritual philosophy, psychedelic memoir, and countercultural travelogue, the book serves as a cryptic roadmap through his influences—Carlos Castaneda, peyote rituals, and the lost frequencies of the FM underground.

Published in the early 1980s under the byline The Man With No Name, only a handful of copies were ever distributed, mainly among radio heads, underground bookshops, and those who claimed to have known him personally. Some believe it to be a semi-autobiographical account of his time as a DJ and his subsequent disappearance. Others claim it holds hidden messages—coordinates, codes, or even the key to his final transmissions.

In the early 1970s, The Man With No Name was a pioneering figure in freeform FM radio, known for his eclectic and immersive broadcasts that blended psychedelic rock, cosmic poetry, and mystic narratives. His sudden disappearance in 1972 left fans and colleagues speculating about his fate, with theories ranging from a voluntary retreat into the desert to more mysterious circumstances.

Another Psychedelic Night

Recently, a previously unpublished manuscript from 1974, discovered at a Fairmont, WV estate sale, has shed new light on what some claims were his activities post-disappearance. The narrative describes a journalist's encounter with a clandestine radio station, Radio Free Fairmont, operating from a basement at 505 Katherine Street. Here, the journalist meets a DJ bearing a striking resemblance to The Man With No Name, suggesting he continued his broadcasting endeavors under the radar.

This discovery is complemented by the unearthing of the Katherine Street Basement Tapes, a collection of recordings from that era. These tapes capture the essence of the underground radio movement,

In the days and weeks following his disappearance, theories ran wild. Had he been forced off the air? Had he grown disillusioned with the industry and staged an elaborate exit? Or had something more metaphysical happened—had he truly followed the blue bus to some higher state of existence?

Some whispered about government involvement. His broadcasts were known for challenging authority, and the early '70s were rife with paranoia. Had he drawn too much attention? Or had he simply burned out, walking away from it all in search of something greater?

For decades, these questions remained unanswered. And then, in 2025, The Man With No Name returned.



Editorial Introduction

Over fifty years ago, a voice disappeared from the airwaves. The Man With No Name, a DJ who seemed to exist outside of time, wove hypnotic broadcasts that blurred the lines between music, poetry, philosophy, and the unknown. His freeform FM shows were more than just programs—they were experiences, journeys into the cosmic abyss where sound and spirit intertwined.

Then, one night in 1972, he was gone.

The Final Broadcast 

His final transmission—a cryptic message, "I must follow the blue bus"—became an enduring enigma. His departure was abrupt, unexplained, and left behind only whispers and speculation. Some say he sought enlightenment in the Sonoran Desert, becoming the apprentice of a Yaqui shaman. Others claim he resurfaced years later in the depths of an underground pirate radio station in West Virginia, broadcasting in secrecy.

Now, in 2025, The Man With No Name has returned. And yet, his reappearance has only deepened the mystery.

In this special edition of Strobe, we explore his legend, his disappearance, and the competing stories of his life after radio. Did he truly embark on a decades-long shamanic journey, as his book Echoes of the Yaqui Way suggests? Or did he remain hidden, broadcasting from the underground in defiance of a world that had left freeform radio behind?

From The Other Side


Sound & Space 1984

The truth is elusive. But the signal remains.

The Freeform Years: A Voice Like No Other




The late 1960s and early 70s saw the rise of freeform FM radio, a revolution in sound and spirit. DJs were no longer just spinning records—they were curators of sonic experiences, building entire landscapes of music and ideas, unrestricted by rigid playlists or commercial interests.

Among them, The Man With No Name stood apart.

His broadcasts weren’t merely collections of deep album cuts; they were transmissions from another realm. He blended long-form rock improvisations, avant-garde jazz, ambient drones, spoken word, and obscure psychedelia into soundscapes that transported listeners beyond the everyday. His voice, a hypnotic and measured cadence, served as the guide through each auditory voyage, punctuating the music with cryptic wisdom, poetic musings, and philosophical riddles.

Many listeners swore his words carried deeper meaning, encoded messages meant only for those attuned enough to receive them. He spoke of perception, illusion, and transformation, hinting at realities just beyond reach. He invoked mystical concepts, name-dropped forgotten sages, and at times seemed to speak directly to individual listeners as if answering their unspoken thoughts.

Then, in 1972, it ended.

The night of his final broadcast, the third of his epic trilogy of remote desert broadcasts from deep outside Santa Fe, still remains legendary. Midway through his set—some say during a long improvisation by Can, others claim it was Terry Riley—his voice broke in.

"The time has come… I must follow the blue bus."

Silence.

The signal cut.

The Man With No Name was gone.


The Legend: Vanished into the Desert or Buried in the Underground?


For years, speculation swirled. Where had he gone? Why had he left? Two competing narratives have emerged, each with its own evidence and mysteries.

1. The Yaqui Shaman Narrative (As Told in Echoes of the Yaqui Way)

In his book, Echoes of the Yaqui Way, The Man With No Name presents his version of events. According to his account, his disappearance was not an abandonment but an ascension. He claims he followed a deeper calling, leaving behind the FM airwaves to embark on a journey of spiritual apprenticeship under a Yaqui shaman in the Sonoran Desert.

Unlike Carlos Castaneda’s semi-fictionalized accounts, The Man With No Name insists that his experiences were real—years of rigorous training, vision quests, and encounters with unseen forces. He describes stepping beyond the illusion of the modern world, unlearning societal conditioning, and coming to know a reality far more expansive than the one he had broadcast from his DJ booth.

The book serves as both memoir and guide, blending personal narrative with esoteric teachings. It outlines the trials he faced—navigating the desert alone for days, ingesting sacred plants under his mentor’s watchful eye, shedding his ego piece by piece until only pure awareness remained. His words suggest that he truly crossed into another world, one where time dissolved, and he lived outside the constraints of identity.

For decades, he stayed hidden, bound by the traditions he had embraced. Now, with his apprenticeship complete and his mantle passed to another, he has chosen to reemerge, sharing his knowledge for the first time.

But not everyone believes this story.

2. The Katherine Street Basement Tapes (The Pirate Radio Hypothesis)



Katherine St Basement Tapes:

A different story emerges from a set of recordings known as The Katherine Street Basement Tapes. Allegedly made in the mid 1970s, these tapes document a series of broadcasts from an illegal, underground pirate radio station known only as The Signal, operating from a hidden location in West Virginia.

In 2024, a long-forgotten set of recordings surfaced from a pirate radio station in West Virginia. Known as the Katherine Street Basement Tapes, they contained hours of underground broadcasts from an unnamed DJ who bore an eerie resemblance—both in voice and style—to The Man With No Name. The station was a rogue operation, broadcasting outside the law in the mid to late ‘70s and early ‘80s, spinning records that mainstream FM wouldn’t touch.

The host of these recordings had no official name, but his voice carried the same hypnotic cadence, the same deep knowledge of obscure music, and the same philosophical asides. He spoke of dreams, visions, and messages from beyond. His playlists blended rock, jazz, and electronic experimentation in a way that felt strikingly familiar.

And then there was the manuscript. Discovered alongside the tapes, it contained notes, playlists, and reflections that seemed to echo the themes of Echoes of the Yaqui Way—but in a different tone. Less mystical, more grounded. Less about shamanic initiation, more about survival in the underground.

Was this truly The Man With No Name? Had he abandoned the desert and returned to the mic in secret? Or was it a copycat, someone carrying on his legacy? The evidence remains inconclusive.

The tapes contain long, immersive sets of music—deep psych cuts, jazz freak-outs, experimental sound collages—interwoven with a voice that bears an uncanny resemblance to The Man With No Name. The cadence, the cryptic commentary, the seamless flow between music and thought—all unmistakably his style.

Could he have resurfaced not as a shaman, but as a rogue broadcaster, continuing his work in exile? If so, why did he never reveal himself? And why did he vanish once more?

Some theorists claim that The Signal was a safe haven for disillusioned FM DJs, a last stand for the freeform underground before corporate playlists took full control. If true, then The Man With No Name may not have been alone—only the last one standing.


Return to the Airwaves: One Last Transmission

And now, against all odds, he returns.

For one night only, The Man With No Name will take to the airwaves once more, presenting a special three-hour broadcast that intertwines readings from Echoes of the Yaqui Way with a curated selection of music—cosmic rock, jazz explorations, ambient textures—designed to take the listener on an auditory vision quest.

Find it here: Echoes of The Yaqui Way Broadcast


What will he reveal? Is this a farewell transmission? A final glimpse into the past? Or something more?

Tune in. Listen closely. Decide for yourself.


DJ Spotlight: 

Brother Love – The Voice of WAMO-FM



For this issue’s DJ Spotlight, we turn our attention to Brother Love, the enigmatic and revolutionary voice of WAMO-FM.

Ken Reeth (1938 – May 9, 2005) was a colorful and creative disc jockey well known to many hippies and rock music fans as Brother Love.

Brother Love's Underground was a radio show in the late-60's that was dedicated to psychedelic and underground rock music. It originated from Pittsburgh radio station WAMO-FM, with Reeth being its psychedelic DJ and emcee

Brother Love was a force of nature on the airwaves, blending deep soul, funk, psychedelic rock, and underground sounds with an unmatched passion. His broadcasts were raw, urgent, and alive, giving a voice to the counterculture at a time when mainstream radio was growing increasingly sanitized.

 A Playlist of vintage Brother Love Radio Airchecks.  Pick a show from the UP NEXT tab below and Blow Your Mind!

 

His signature phrases, his fearless approach to programming, and his dedication to the underground made him an icon in freeform circles. In this issue, we revisit his impact, his influence, and why his voice still matters today.


Era Reflections: The Disappearance of the Cosmic DJ



The Man With No Name wasn’t the only one to vanish. By the mid-1970s, the golden age of freeform FM was in decline. Corporate interests tightened their grip, reducing once-vibrant stations to rigid formats and market-tested playlists. The wild, unpredictable spirit of underground radio faded into static.

In many ways, his disappearance symbolized the death of an era. But did he truly escape it? Or did he continue broadcasting in the only way left—hidden, underground, waiting for the right moment to return?

As we reflect on this lost chapter of radio history, one thing is clear: some signals never die.


Final Thoughts

The debate over his true fate continues, but one thing is certain: in 2025, he re-emerged as both a voice and an author.

His return to the airwaves was unlike anything before. He did not simply play records—he orchestrated an experience. He spoke of the blue bus not as a metaphor, but as a literal moment of departure. He read from Echoes of the Yaqui Way, describing the dissolution of his old self and his rebirth in the desert. And through it all, the music pulsed, guiding listeners on a journey beyond words.

For some, his story is proof of a decades-long spiritual awakening, a genuine transformation into something beyond a DJ. For others, it’s a carefully woven myth, a way of shaping his own legend. And for those who believe the Katherine Street Basement Tapes tell the real story, the question lingers—was The Man With No Name ever truly gone? Or did he simply change frequencies?

Fifty years after his departure, The Man With No Name remains as mysterious as ever. His return raises more questions than answers.

But maybe that’s the point.

Maybe he was never meant to be understood—only heard.


STROBE SPECIAL EDITION: ECHOES OF THE YAQUI WAY

Editor’s Note: This issue is dedicated to the lost frequencies, the rebel DJs, and the transmissions that refuse to fade.


STROBE PRESENTS: LOST FREQUENCIES

A Cosmic DJ Soundtrack from the Era of Freeform FM

A deep dive into the sonic landscapes that defined the era of The Man With No Name, Lost Frequencies is a curated journey through the cosmic, the ethereal, and the mind-expanding. These are the records that would have pulsed through the airwaves in the golden age of freeform radio—music that drifts between time and space, meant to be experienced as much as heard.



Sunday, February 16, 2025

Strobe CD #10

 

"This is Strobe a new concept in radio programming".  Where we resurrect underground freeform radio circa 1968-1972.

Friday, February 14, 2025

STROBE Magazine #4

 Strobe - A New Concept in Radio

"This is Strobe a new concept in radio programming". Where we resurrect underground freeform radio circa 1968-1972.

The format we use to ensure authenticity is to source actual underground FM freeform radio playlists from underground radio shows of the 1968-1972 era and play only the records they actually played.  This is the undiluted real deal it's the historic and iconic sound of the underground.      

Tune in here:  https://newpdg2020.blogspot.com/2024/10/wild-fm-radio.html



Strobe: A New Concept in Radio – Issue #4




Cover Story: Krautrock – The German Underground Revolution

Subtitle: How Germany Redefined Rock with Cosmic Sounds

Breaking Free from the Past

In the late 1960s, Germany was in a period of reinvention. The country was still grappling with the aftermath of World War II, and a new generation of musicians sought to carve out a unique cultural identity separate from both the wartime past and the Western rock and pop trends of the UK and U.S. These artists rejected the blues-based structures that dominated Anglo-American rock, instead drawing inspiration from avant-garde composers like Karlheinz Stockhausen, minimalism, free jazz, and emerging electronic music. The result was a radical new approach to sound, one that fused experimentation with hypnotic rhythms and spacey textures—what would later be known as Krautrock.

The Sound of Cosmic Freedom

Krautrock is difficult to define because it wasn’t a single movement or genre, but rather an attitude toward music. The key elements often included:

  • Motorik Beats: A steady, propulsive 4/4 rhythm (often associated with Neu!) that gave the music a hypnotic, driving feel.
  • Improvisation and Experimentation: Many bands embraced long, freeform jams, rejecting traditional song structures.
  • Electronics and Synthesizers: Groups like Kraftwerk and Cluster incorporated early synths and tape manipulation techniques.
  • Diverse Influences: Everything from jazz, Indian classical music, and early electronic composers played a role.


The Pioneers of Krautrock

Can: The Rhythmic Explorers

Formed in Cologne in 1968, Can blended improvisation with relentless grooves, largely driven by the drumming of Jaki Liebezeit. Albums like Tago Mago (1971) and Ege Bamyasi (1972) showcased their ability to fuse funk rhythms with avant-garde textures. Tracks like "Vitamin C" and "Mushroom" remain essential Krautrock classics.

Neu!: The Architects of Motorik

Formed by Klaus Dinger and Michael Rother (both former members of Kraftwerk), Neu! stripped rock down to its purest rhythmic form. Their debut album, Neu! (1972), introduced the motorik beat, a repetitive, metronomic pulse that influenced everything from post-punk (Joy Division, Public Image Ltd.) to electronic music (David Bowie’s Berlin Trilogy).

Amon Düül II: The Psychedelic Warriors

While the original Amon Düül was more of a political art collective, Amon Düül II evolved into a full-fledged rock band. Their 1970 album Yeti remains one of the most essential Krautrock albums, mixing surrealist lyrics, heavy guitar work, and expansive jams.

Faust: The Avant-Garde Destroyers

Faust took the cut-up, collage approach of early tape experiments and applied it to rock music. Their self-titled debut album (1971) opens with the sound of radio static and quickly devolves into a mix of jazz, noise, and found sounds. Their later track "Krautrock" (from Faust IV, 1973) is one of the defining moments of the genre—22 minutes of hypnotic, repetitive, and disorienting music.

Kraftwerk: The Futurists

While Kraftwerk would later become the pioneers of electronic music, their early albums (Kraftwerk and Kraftwerk 2) were still very much in the Krautrock tradition. Their breakthrough, Autobahn (1974), still carried the hypnotic, endless rhythm of Neu!, but with a more polished, futuristic sound that pointed toward the rise of synthesizer-based music.

The Legacy of Krautrock

Krautrock didn’t just influence rock music—it laid the foundation for entire genres:

  • Post-punk and New Wave: Bands like Joy Division, The Fall, and Siouxsie & The Banshees borrowed the motorik beat and icy atmospheres.
  • Electronic and Ambient Music: Kraftwerk’s experiments led directly to techno, house, and ambient music. Brian Eno cited Cluster and Harmonia as key influences on his ambient work.
  • Indie Rock and Shoegaze: Stereolab, Radiohead, and The Flaming Lips all acknowledge Krautrock’s influence on their sounds.
  • Experimental and Noise Rock: Sonic Youth, Swans, and Spacemen 3 took inspiration from Can and Faust’s improvisational chaos.

Even today, the spirit of Krautrock remains alive in underground and experimental music, proving that the German underground revolution of the 70s was far more than just a passing movement—it was the sound of the future arriving decades ahead of its time.

Essential Krautrock Albums:

  • Can – Tago Mago (1971) – A wild, rhythmic journey into the outer reaches of sound.
  • Neu! – Neu! (1972) – Defined the motorik beat, influencing everything from punk to electronic music.
  • Amon Düül II – Yeti (1970) – Psychedelic, aggressive, and revolutionary in its approach.
  • Faust – Faust IV (1973) – Cut-up sound collages and industrial textures decades ahead of their time.

Tracks to Hear:

  1. "Halleluhwah" – Can
  2. "Hallogallo" – Neu!
  3. "Archangel Thunderbird" – Amon Düül II
  4. "Krautrock" – Faust


The Strobe Magazine Playlist.  Find all of the music from this issue here:





Lost Gems: Albums You Need to Hear

Subtitle: Krautrock’s Lesser-Known Classics

  1. Agitation Free – Malesch (1972)

    • Overview: A fusion of Middle Eastern influences and free-form psychedelic rock.
    • Must-Listen Track: "You Play for Us Today"
  2. Harmonia – Musik von Harmonia (1974)

    • Overview: A supergroup featuring members of Neu! and Cluster, blending electronic textures with organic warmth.
    • Must-Listen Track: "Watussi"
  3. Guru Guru – UFO (1970)

    • Overview: Hard-hitting psychedelic rock infused with jazz-like improvisation.
    • Must-Listen Track: "Stone In"


DJ Spotlight: Rich Robinson – The Visionary Behind FM 106.3



Introduction:

Rich Robinson was more than just a DJ—he was a tastemaker, a pioneer, and the driving force behind one of the most influential alternative rock stations of the late 20th century. As the Program Director of WHTG (FM 106.3), he helped shape the sound of modern alternative radio, championing underground and independent artists long before mainstream stations caught on. His influence stretched beyond the airwaves, creating a legacy that still resonates with music lovers today.

The Birth of an Alternative Giant

In the mid-1980s, WHTG was a small, locally focused New Jersey radio station with an eclectic mix of programming. But under Rich Robinson’s leadership, the station transformed into one of the first commercial alternative rock stations in the United States. He cultivated a playlist that was as diverse as it was groundbreaking, giving airtime to artists that mainstream stations ignored.

At a time when commercial rock radio was dominated by corporate classic rock and hair metal, Robinson and FM 106.3 championed artists like R.E.M., The Replacements, The Smiths, and The Cure. His curation wasn’t based on label payola or trends—it was built on passion, discovery, and a belief that music fans deserved more than the narrow playlists of the industry giants.

The Sound of FM 106.3

Unlike most radio stations of the time, FM 106.3 had a freeform approach that reflected the ethos of early underground FM radio. Robinson encouraged DJs to have creative control over their shows, allowing them to mix deep cuts, local talent, and emerging artists alongside established alternative icons. The result was a station that felt personal, unpredictable, and vital.

Listeners tuned in for the unexpected—a B-side from The Clash, a new single from a college rock band, or a track from an unsigned New Jersey act that Robinson believed in. FM 106.3 wasn’t just a radio station; it was a community of music lovers, and Rich Robinson was its guiding force.

Impact and Legacy

Robinson’s work at WHTG helped shape the alternative rock explosion of the late ’80s and early ’90s. Bands that he championed—once considered too niche for commercial radio—became household names. His influence extended beyond New Jersey, as other stations began to adopt the alternative format that he helped pioneer.

Even as corporate consolidation homogenized radio in the late ’90s, the spirit of FM 106.3 lived on in the countless DJs, programmers, and music fans who were inspired by Robinson’s approach. His legacy serves as a reminder that radio can be more than just a business—it can be an art form, a movement, and a lifeline for those seeking something real.

Essential Tracks from the FM 106.3 Era

If you want to experience the sound and spirit of Rich Robinson’s WHTG, here’s a playlist of tracks that defined the station’s golden era:

  • "How Soon Is Now?" - The Smiths
  • "Driver 8" - R.E.M.
  • "Left of the Dial" - The Replacements
  • "Under the Milky Way" - The Church
  • "Blood and Roses" - The Smithereens
  • "Kiss Them for Me" - Siouxsie and the Banshees
  • "Just Like Heaven" - The Cure
  • "Blister in the Sun" - Violent Femmes
  • "Here Comes Your Man" - Pixies
  • "Behind the Wall of Sleep" - The Smithereens



Era Reflections: 1970 – A New Decade, A New Sound



The dawn of the 1970s was a time of transition. The utopian optimism of the 60s was fading, replaced by a darker, more introspective energy. The music reflected this shift—rock became heavier, jazz got more experimental, and pop music splintered into new, uncharted territories.


Psychedelia’s Mutation into Progressive Rock and Hard Rock

While the 60s had been defined by freewheeling, acid-drenched jams, the new decade demanded something different. Psychedelic rock evolved into progressive rock, incorporating complex compositions and technical virtuosity. Meanwhile, the harder, blues-based side of psychedelia paved the way for heavy metal.

Key Albums That Defined 1970
  • Black Sabbath – Black Sabbath (February 13, 1970)
    • With its ominous tritone opening and doomy atmosphere, Black Sabbath’s debut birthed heavy metal overnight.
  • Miles Davis – Bitches Brew (March 30, 1970)
    • A groundbreaking fusion of jazz, rock, and avant-garde, this album introduced the world to jazz fusion.
  • Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin III (October 5, 1970)
    • While their first two albums leaned into bluesy hard rock, III explored folk influences, showcasing the band’s range.
  • The Stooges – Fun House (July 7, 1970)
    • Raw, primal, and chaotic—this proto-punk classic was years ahead of its time.
  • The Grateful Dead – Workingman’s Dead (June 14, 1970)
    • A pivot from psychedelia to rootsy Americana, foreshadowing the folk-rock movement of the 70s.


The End of the 60s Counterculture Dream

The Altamont Free Concert (December 1969) marked the dark turn of the hippie dream. Violence, bad drugs, and a fatal stabbing by the Hells Angels shattered the peace-and-love illusion of the 60s. By 1970, many of the bands that had defined the previous decade were either breaking up (The Beatles), evolving (The Rolling Stones’ Sticky Fingers signaled a grittier era), or losing key members (Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin both died within weeks of each other in late 1970).

The Rise of FM Radio and Underground Sound

While AM radio still controlled the pop charts, FM radio was the real underground. DJs like Tom Donahue and B. Mitchell Reed pushed album-oriented rock, playing extended tracks and deep cuts that would never make it onto AM. This era gave birth to freeform radio, which allowed stations to play full sides of albums, mix jazz with rock, and give airtime to progressive and experimental artists.

Tracks That Defined the FM Sound of 1970:
  1. "Down by the River" – Neil Young & Crazy Horse
  2. "Astral Traveler" – Yes
  3. "The Knife" – Genesis
  4. "Lola" – The Kinks
  5. "21st Century Schizoid Man" – King Crimson
  6. "Paranoid" – Black Sabbath
  7. "Machine Gun" – Jimi Hendrix Band of Gypsys
  8. "What Is and What Should Never Be" – Led Zeppelin
  9. "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down" – Miles Davis

1970 was not just the start of a new decade—it was the beginning of an entirely new era of rock. The idealism of the 60s gave way to heavier, darker, and more expansive sonic explorations, setting the stage for everything that followed.



Reader's Picks: Vinyl We Can't Stop Spinning


Featured Picks:

  • "Peaches en Regalia" – Frank Zappa (Submitted by Kevin in Boston): “A perfect mix of jazz, rock, and pure Zappa weirdness.”
  • "Opa-Loka" – Hawkwind (Submitted by Lisa in Portland): “Space rock at its finest.”
  • "Mother Sky" – Can (Submitted by Dave in Chicago): “The groove never stops.”


In the Groove: Audio Gear for the Ultimate Krautrock Experience



Subtitle: The Best Vintage Gear for Expansive Soundscapes

Turntables:

  • Dual 1219 – German precision with automatic and manual control for perfect playback.
  • Thorens TD-125 – High-end belt-driven turntable with an ultra-stable speed for those long Krautrock explorations.

Amplifiers:

  • Sansui AU-717 – Exceptional clarity and deep bass, ideal for immersive listening.
  • Harman Kardon Citation 12 – Warm, rich, and powerful—perfect for reproducing the atmospheric textures of the genre.

Speakers:

  • Klipsch Heresy – Crisp highs and deep lows, great for capturing the nuances of Neu! and Can.
  • Electro-Voice Interface A – Known for their excellent midrange response, making synthesizer-heavy music shine.


Companion CD: Autobahn to Infinity – A Journey Through Krautrock

To accompany this issue, we’ve put together Autobahn to Infinity, a companion CD capturing the essence of Krautrock’s mind-expanding journey. Featuring motorik beats, spaced-out jams, and groundbreaking electronic textures, this collection is essential listening.

Tracklist:

  1. "Ruckzuck" – Kraftwerk
  2. "Hallogallo" – Neu!
  3. "Vitamin C" – Can
  4. "Sowiesoso" – Cluster
  5. "Silver Cloud" – La Düsseldorf
  6. "Gamma Ray" – Birth Control
  7. "Isi" – Harmonia
  8. "Morgenspaziergang" – Kraftwerk
  9. "Stellar" – Ash Ra Tempel
  10. "Autobahn" – Kraftwerk (edit)


A Journey Through Krautrock