German Oak
50 top tracks
German Oak
50 top tracks
Albums

German Oak
German Oak

Down In The Bunker
German Oak

Nibelungenlied
German Oak

Niebelungenlied
German Oak

Space Rock: An Interstellar Traveler's Guide
German Oak

Nibelungenlied LP
German Oak

The DooM That Time Forgot 2
German Oak

Niebelungenlied (1972-76)
German Oak

/mu/ presents Krautrock
German Oak

Azul - Experimental Sound
German Oak

Down In The Bunker (CD1)
German Oak

s/t
German Oak
Biography
In the strange Olympic summer of 1972, the Düsseldorf instrumental group (community of 5 hippies / open mind artists) German Oak entered the Luftschutzbunker (or Air Raid Shelter), in order to record their first self-titled LP. The purpose of recording in a bunker was to recreate the feelings experienced by German soldiers during the Allied invasion of 1944. The strange acoustic conditions in the bunker made the music, which was a series of long, spacious guitar jams, sound distant and filled wi...Read more on Last.fm
Read more
In the strange Olympic summer of 1972, the Düsseldorf instrumental group (community of 5 hippies / open mind artists) German Oak entered the Luftschutzbunker (or Air Raid Shelter), in order to record their first self-titled LP. The purpose of recording in a bunker was to recreate the feelings experienced by German soldiers during the Allied invasion of 1944. The strange acoustic conditions in the bunker made the music, which was a series of long, spacious guitar jams, sound distant and filled with echo.
Julian Cope, in his in-depth review of the album, describes the bands sound in unequivocal terms: "...imagine a brutally recorded, brazen and ultra-skeletal industrial white funk played with all the claw-handed technique of the Red Crayola recording their famous Hurricane Fighting Plane".
By consequence German Oak's music is very tortured, dark and weird, dominated by heavy, "distorted" guitar solos & rhythms. The background creates "painful" & "ambient" sequences thanks to delay echoes, electronic "fuzzy" noises & repetitive bass lines. A funkadelic / jazzy felt punctuates with discretion this grandiose. In a rather discretion they also recorded (1972-76) the moody, cloudy and experimental epic-kraut Nibenlungenieg.
Following in the footsteps of the percussive and organic Organisation and the remarkable Dom, German Oak had every reason to believe that this 3rd LP to be recorded by a Düsseldorf band would be warmly received. Unfortunately, German Oak were not only wrong in their assumptions that locals would embrace their music, but even local record shops rejected all the group's attempts to sell the albums in city outlets. Such was their lack of success that 202 of the original 213 copies were stored in the basement of the group's organist until the mid-1980s, when a thirst for undiscovered Krautrock finally brought German Oak back from the dead.
Line-up:
Wolfgang Franz Czaika - Caesar - Lead / Rhythmguitar
Ullrich Kallweit - Ulli - Drums / Percussion
Harry Kallweit - Harry - Electric Bass / Voice
Manfred Uhr - Warlock - Organ / Fuzz-Organ / Voice
Norbert Luckas - Nobbi - Guitar / A77 / Noises <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/German+Oak">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
