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Neu! 75 is the third studio album by German krautrock band Neu!, released in February 1975 on Brain Records. It was recorded and mixed at Conny Plank's studio between December 1974 and January 1975. The album was officially reissued on CD on 29 May 2001 by Astralwerks in the US and Grönland in the UK.
Overview
This album saw Neu! regroup after a few years' hiatus, during which time Michael Rother had worked with Cluster as the supergroupHarmonia. By this time, Rother and bandmate Klaus Dinger had somewhat diverged in their musical intentions for the band, with Dinger preferring a more aggressive, rock-influenced style than Rother's ambient predilections; the two compromised, and the resulting album showcases both sounds. Side one of the record, which reflects Rother's preferences, was recorded as a duo. On side two, Dinger switched from drums to guitar and lead vocals, with his brother Thomas and Hans Lampe double drumming. On both sides, the use of keyboards and phasing effects increased compared to the band's earlier records. Fact described the album's sound as "spartan psych-rock set to power driven drum tracks," while Thomas Jerome Seabrook identified it with kosmische Musik.
The track "Hero" inspired many musicians of the time, including John Lydon of the Sex Pistols, and is considered an example of proto-punk. David Bowie also alluded to the track with his album "Heroes" and its title track. The band Negativland (named after a song on Neu!'s first album) named their record label Seeland after the song of the same name on Neu! '75.
In 1979, NME critic Andy Gill gave Neu! '75 a perfect score. Reflecting that the band "took the repetitive pulse of rock, stretched it out and wove lush, shifting layers of sound over the framework to produce a distinctive, hypnotic music which, whilst undeniably rock, was definitely outside-looking-in," he stated that this style reached its "full fruition" on the "pivotally important" album. He considered side two "damn-near perfect as makes no difference, an achievement which exhausts superlatives," and the first side "less immediate but only slightly less satisfying: evocative, entropic, hot-summer-daze music which balances — and is even more successfully 'ambient' than — side two's sweaty nightclub pulse".
"Neu! review". NME. 2 June 2001. p. 39. ... Part transcendental dreamscape and part unhinged autobahn-punk... NEU!'75 is their apotheosis...
"Neu! review". Q. July 2001. p. 136. Their masterpiece, providing their most mesmerizing slow number in 'Seeland' and their most startling piece of proto-punk in 'Hero'.... A necessity for any record collection.
Blashill, Pat (5 July 2001). "Neu! '75 : Neu! Review". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 8 February 2009. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
Gill, Andy (July 21, 1979). "Neu: Neu '75". NME. Retrieved September 7, 2016.(subscription required)