Bureau B Releases Rüdiger Lorenz Synrise - Early Tape Recordings 1981-83
With selections from his first four releases, Synrise features sci-fi anthems and sine wave requiems, nebulous cosmic collages of snapping rhythm boxes, gurgling sequences and synthesised choirs.
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Hamburg, Germany, February 3, 2025 — Bureau B announces the release of Rüdiger Lorenz Synrise - Early Tape Recordings 1981-83, available now on LP, CD and digital download. If you're already aware of Rüdiger Lorenz, chances are you washed ashore on 'Southland', his cult kosmische curio graciously reissued by the ever-benevolent Bureau B in the middle of the last decade. Either that, or you're one of the few hundred electronic music obsessives who encountered his work the first time round, giddily grabbing up the eighteen cassette, vinyl and CD releases the prolific part-timer delivered DIY style on his Syntape and Syncord imprints between 1981-1998.
Despite a catalogue both copious and singular, and a renewed interest amongst the switched on and tuned in since Rüdiger's premature passing in 2000, his reception has remained sadly subterranean - another example of audio inequity. As such, it falls to 'Synrise', attentively assembled by Rüdiger's son Tim, to shine some rightful light on this unique talent.
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Other-worldly synthscapes
Based in Ingelheim on the south of the Rhein, Rüdiger was a pharmacist by trade, electing to spend his spare time and money on his musical monomania. Given the medicated nature of his stark and other-worldly synthscapes, one could be forgiven for presuming a predilection for the prescription pad, but in truth Lorenz was a teetotaller with an insatiable sonic thirst. This was the owner of 10,000 records and 38 synthesisers - a man who sang Kraftwerk's fahrn fahrn fahrn auf der Autobahn as a nursery rhyme to a tiny Tim while he sat between the blinking sequencers pretending to be a space man.
Although Rüdiger impressed as a member of a local beat group in the seventies, growing exposure to the likes of Neu!, Tangerine Dream, Reich and Riley pushed him towards the electronic and experimental, a style more suited to his solitary temperament. Unsurprisingly for a man who made eighteen solo albums around his day job, Lorenz was something of a loner, though it's hard to hear that through the emotional resonance of his releases. His search for sonic expression led him to overcome his lack of electrical knowhow, boldly soldering on to create organs, effects units and self-built modular systems, each in service to his specific sound.
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The sound of Synrise
Selected from his first four releases, 'Queen of Saba' (1981), 'Silver Steps' (1981), 'Wonderflower' (1982) and 'Earthrise' (1983), this septet boasts sci-fi anthems and sine wave requiems, nebulous cosmic collages of snapping rhythm boxes, gurgling sequences and synthesised choirs. "38-17-34" opens the collection with an insistent bassline and detuned chime, as the titular timecode is repeated by a disembodied vocal. Its main motif recurs in a variety of different tones, each lending a different energy or mood. Driven by a mechanical polyrhythm and insectoid hats, "Chamomilla Sabinae" submerges you in immersive repetition with only the vocal outburst of the outro, screamed through a Space Echo, able to break the trance. The sprawling "Dreaming Of Saba" speeds into the outer rim, its fugue-like opening, built around moody synth strings and a plangent lead line, accelerated across the galaxy by a succession of warp speed sequences, before the engines abruptly cut out and our craft drifts through the disquiet of sparse interlude "Hmmm".
From there, things only get stranger. "Independance" opens with a robotic Star Spangled Banner and a recitation of Jefferson's declaration (vocoded and circuit bent (un)naturally), eventually evolving into a triumphant march of stately drum box and dreamy chords. "Promis of Sigma" balances melancholy and optimism in its ringing melodies and heart-rending chords, while "Anigre" ends the journey with Utopian grandeur, an electronic Elgar interrupted by a alien broadcast. Though originally released across four different cassettes, these seven tracks all belong to the same sonic universe - just not the universe we're living in.
Tracklisting:
- A1 38-17-34
- A2 Chamomilla Sabinae
- A3 Dreaming Of Saba A4 Hmmm
- B1 Independance
- B2 Promis Of Sigma
- B3 Anigre
About Bureau B
Bureau B is platform for exciting varieties of electronic, free-spirited music. The spectrum ranges from pop to avant-garde, and the label has amassed an impressive catalogue of reissues and new productions in recent years, including classics from the genre of electronic music in the 1970s and early 1980s popularly classified as Krautrock (Cluster, Roedelius, Moebius, Plank, Schnitzler), alongside new recordings by such formative artists as Faust, Kreidler, Roedelius, Tietchens, Moebius, to name just a few. Bureau B is based in Hamburg, Germany.
Jeff Touzeau
BB474_Synrise_Onesheet_ENG.pdf
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