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Grauzone - Grauzone album flac

Grauzone - Grauzone album flac Performer: Grauzone
Title: Grauzone
Style: Synth-pop, Minimal
Released: 1981
Country: Switzerland
MP3 album: 1560 mb
FLAC album: 1375 mb
Rating: 4.5
Other formats: MP2 DMF TTA MMF WAV VOC AUD
Genre: Electronic

Grauzone (German for grey area, ) was a band from Berne, Switzerland that was active and disbanded in the early 1980s. Grauzone is most famous for their 1981 hit "Eisbär" ("Polar Bear"). The single charted at in Germany and in Austria. In addition to "Eisbär" they had some success with the singles "Film 2" and "Wütendes Glas".

GRAUZONE is the most big event of the year in Den Haag the line up is always surprizingling good an. .GRAUZONE starts when other party's stop. In Holland and looking for a good line up in a nice venu.Thank you so much Grauzone Festival. Great Lineup, kind staff and amazing place.

Grauzone official page All inquiries, contact: . rmlederzone-band. 1) Grauzone self-titled album LP + Eisbaer 12" maxi single - OR - 2) Grauzone Double LP with the self-titled album on one record (Side A & B) and the EPs/Singles on the other record (Side C & D.Grauzone updated their cover photo. 11 March at 05:00 ·. See all. Posts. Grauzone updated their profile picture. 11 March at 04:50 ·. Grauzone added a new photo. 7 March 2017 ·. Grauzone.

Listen free to Grauzone – Grauzone (Film 2, Schlachtet! and more). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last. A new version of Last. Overview (current section).

Mixed At Sunrise Studios. Recorded At Sunrise Studios. Record Company EMI Electrola GmbH. Writers Angela Schleitzer, Martin Eicher & Stephan Eicher. More Grauzone albums. Grauzone 1980-1982 Remastered. About Genius Contributor Guidelines Press Advertise Event Space.

Listen to Grauzone by Grauzone on Deezer. Writer: Christian Trüssel, Marco Repetto, Martin Eicher, Stephan Eicher, Composers: Grauzone. 03. Hinter Den Bergen.

Tracklist

Film 2 3:33
Schlachtet! 3:22
Hinter Den Bergen 2:31
Maikäfer Flieg 4:00
Marmelade Und Himbeereis 3:20
Wütendes Glas 3:21
Kälte Kriecht 3:21
Kunstgewerbe 1:07
Der Weg Zu Zweit 3:24
In Der Nacht 4:55

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
ASL-3304 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album) Off Course Records ASL-3304 Switzerland 1981
1C 264-46 500 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(Cass) Welt-Rekord 1C 264-46 500 Germany 1981
TC - EMC 3408, OC 262 46 500 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(Cass, Album, Dol) EMI, EMI TC - EMC 3408, OC 262 46 500 UK 1981
none Grauzone Grauzone ‎(Cass, Album, Promo) Abbey Road Studios none UK 1981
3408, EMC 3408, OC 062-46 500 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album) EMI, EMI, EMI 3408, EMC 3408, OC 062-46 500 UK 1981
ASL-3304 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album) Off Course Records ASL-3304 Switzerland 1981
1C 064-46 500 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album) Welt-Rekord, EMI Electrola 1C 064-46 500 Europe 1981
DKCD 9.01004 O Grauzone Grauzone ‎(CD, Album, RE) 3-Klang Records, Line Records DKCD 9.01004 O Germany 1991
BASICD 040 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(CD, Album, RE) Basic Mix BASICD 040 Spain 1991
DKCD 9.01004 O, DKCD 9.01004 O Grauzone Grauzone ‎(CD, Album, RE) 3-Klang Records, Line Records DKCD 9.01004 O, DKCD 9.01004 O Germany 1991
BASICLP 040 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album, RE) Basic Mix BASICLP 040 Spain 1991
1C 064-46 500 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album, RE, Unofficial) Welt-Rekord 1C 064-46 500 Germany 2017
GRZN002 Grauzone Grauzone ‎(10xFile, WAV, Album) Electric Unicorn Music Production GRZN002 Switzerland 2019
none Grauzone Grauzone ‎(LP, Album, RE, Unofficial) Not On Label (Grauzone) none Spain Unknown


Comments: (5)
I love Mercedes
Erol Alkan brought me here . . . . .
Bev
its funny , Discogs blocks everything, here seen : completely legal fully licensed release ! the rights are owned by UNIVERSAL Germany. the problem with discogs today is that every ididot and wanna be private detective states a release "unofficial" and immediately the release is blocked.
Quinthy
hi there, could you get in touch via [email protected] ? tried contacting you via discogs but it's not possible. i would love to know more about this vinyl.
Nagor
Sometimes it takes quite a while until a piece of art gets the recognition it deserves. And I’m not sure if the only selftitled album by swiss band GRAUZONE gets it’s recognition now but there seems to be a bit more awareness.The local newspaper of Bern (CH) wrote about the band in 2009 and at my recordstore there’ve been a few people requesting the availability of the LP as well as speaking of it’s importance. Then why hasn’t the Grauzone-album been recognized for what it is back when it came out?Well, german (as well austrian and swiss) Post-Punk & Wave had the same problem as Punk in the UK – the moment it got interesting to more than just a handful of people, the major record industry stepped up and tried to buy everybody into contract with them and put out potential hit singles.Grauzone’s album first came out on the small swiss indie-label Off Course Records and then the offer followed to re-release the LP on EMI (what would the Pistols say?...;).Since we’re living in a capitalist society – not that we could chose – economic decisions mostly win out over artistic issues. This circumstance killed so much art, if there’d be a graveyard for all those songs, pictures and writings it’d probably cover the surface of this planet fully.So with the single “Eisbär” being put out on EMI the tune took off to chart success. While the reaction of the band was “anybody likes to hear Eisbär can go and buy the single but don’t bother us about it”. They consequently refused to play the song on stage and it wasn’t even included on the album.Eventhough it should be said that “Eisbär” is a) not a bad song and b) since the lyrics arose of a nightmare by bandmember Martin Eicher it’s not even the usual lightweight pop-tune, I still kinda like the attitude of the band towards rejecting the commercial issue here. So the original label got some money to pay off a credit they received to release records but the band had no intention to act like a major-band meanwhile.Their stage appearance, incl. video-projections and improvisation, combined with the denial of playing the successful single resulted in a mainstream audience being interested in the band because of their hit and then disappointment when they didn’t play the tune.And before Grauzone could’ve been totally destroyed by commercial success they called it a day. Which I like by far better than a thousand examples of bands that reached this point and continued to release spiritless material.The term “NDW” (Neue Deutsche Welle) got pinned on almost any Rock/Pop/Punk/Wave tune with german lyrics that came out between 1979 and 1983. Some of the early NDW-stuff (bands like Mittagspause, S.Y.P.H., DAF and others) offered a creative, in the beginning indie-released and rather non-commercial sound, while later material (with acts like Frl. Menke, Spider Murphy Gang or Nena) didn’t really have anything to do with wave and radical or at least creative artistic visions.So when all of these different artists were kinda filed under the same tag it all became an unsophisticated musical pulp for the public.Grauzone wrote “Eisbär” and it became a hit during that period so they were forced to either join the club or leave (something similar happened to Fehlfarben with their song “Es geht voran”). And leave they did – the band broke up after only 2 years.So what makes their self-titled album and the few other tracks they recorded before and after so outstanding?Drummer Marco Repetto took a trip to London in 1979 and watched the evolution of punks dancing to the electronic sounds of Fad Gadget. Musically that probably was an important influence. Grauzone were able to create a sound that was as cold as wave could get with a certain human component of despair while the rhythm (real drums [partly looped] as well as drummachines) kept going in a way that really sounded like british or New York whitebread Disco with their punk past still at hand, even an industrial vibe.The 1982 version of “Wütendes Glas” they re-recorded as a b-side for the “Träume mit mir” 7” is a perfect example of that. One could not imagine more aloofness on a dancefloor. I play the song in my Ernest Drake DJ-set and it fits well with present tunes.That tune really has sound aesthetics of it’s own – you can look for something alike with german vocals and not much will turn up. Also if you check the “Swiss Wave – The Album”-compilation from 1980, Grauzone deliever by far the most sophisticated approach on the whole LP. Additionally the lyrics of Grauzone were socio-emotional descriptions of alienation that used german language in a unique way. Not that they were the only ones doing that around the time (the first Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft and Fehlfarben-tracks were partly written in a similar way) though Grauzone were more minimalstic and sort of more dadaistic (which would be a logical connection to Zürich and switzerland because of the original Cabaret Voltaire-cafe and the first dada-sessions there). What matters most is how effectively those words did and still do work on the listener embedded in the music.Emotionally speaking the record still expresses a lot about how I feel and the vibe of society at the moment - compared to, for example, most average 80s chart pop albums which do not affect me much at all.The fact that Grauzone tried to find a new way of expression by stepping away from standard guitar-dominated punk but didn’t have unlimited musical abilities made them angry. That combined with an anger about a society that’s even more stagnant seemed to have created the atmosphere for the album.A track like “Film 2” (with vocals so unobtrusive it could almost be called an instrumental) is minmal techno/electro/disco as well as postpunk/wave and even has a touch of dub. The synth-arpeggio (don’t really hear a bass here) sounds threatening, the beat keeps going while some percussive hits and what sounds like a harmonica are like a horrorfilm version of Jamaica-sounds. Then that guitar joins like a keyboard-motif by John Carpenter, completing the song. And rhythmically it’s just damn tight. For that matter the track’s been played by famous cosmic Disco-DJ Baldelli back in the eighties by the way. Not many bands would chose such a tune as an opener for their full length album...Followed by the song “Schlachtet” – one of the three best tunes on the LP. I listened to that song recently while the tv news were on. Comments about Hartz IV (state funded poverty in germany) combined with pictures of what I see around me everyday and then lines like “Die Kranken werden geschlachtet, die Welt wird gesund” (“The sick will be butchered, the world will be well”) left quite an impression. “Hinter den Bergen” sounds like Dark Wave with a dubby touch (a bit similar to the effect Bauhaus achieved with “Bela Lugosi’s dead”).“Kunstgewerbe” is another cool, short & minimalistic piece of electronic music.“Der Weg zu zweit” always reminded me of Abwärts.„In der Nacht“ is the very abstract end of the album. Again the vocals are mixed much in the background with reverb floating around the track. Finally a quality statement that should levae no doubt about how good the band and their album were - if you ask me; John Peel would’ve let Grauzone record a session for his show if he’d gotten the chance to know them!
Qag
I remember going to a friends house on a lake and I thought "Film 2" would've been a perfect soundtrack for a scene in a horror movie. I initially got onto Grauzone from a friend who played me the 12" of Eisbaer and I promptly bought that and the album and love them both even 30+ years later.Nice review or whatever you consider it.