Amon Düül II

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Amon Düül II
Origin Munich, Germany
Genres Krautrock, progressive rock, psychedelic rock
Years active 1968–present[1]
Labels United Artists
Atlantic

Amon Düül II (or Amon Düül 2) is a German rock band. The group is generally considered to be one of the founders of the Krautrock scene and a seminal influence on its development.

History

The band emerged from the radical West German commune scene of the late 1960s, with others in the same commune including some of the future founders of the Red Army Faction.[2] Founding members are Chris Karrer, Dieter Serfas, Falk Rogner (b. 14 September 1943), John Weinzierl (b. 4 April 1949), and Renate Knaup (b. Renate Aschauer-Knaup, 1 July 1948).

The band was founded after Weinzierl and the others met at the Amon Düül 'art commune' in Munich. The commune consisted mainly of university students, who formed a music group initially to fund the commune, with everyone who lived there joining in to play music whether or not they had any experience or ability. The commune split when they were offered an opportunity to record, which was boycotted by the more musically proficient members of the commune (who went on to form Amon Düül II). Recordings were made by the other members but were of very poor quality and were only released later (under the name Amon Düül) to capitalise on the success of ADII's albums. As Amon Düül II grew and personnel changed they still remained a commune, living together as a band.[3]

Their first album Phallus Dei ('God's Penis'), released in 1969, consisted of pieces drawn from the group's live set at the time. By this time the line-up was built around a core of Karrer (mainly violin and guitar), Weinzierl (guitar, bass, piano), Rogner on keyboards, bass player Dave Anderson, and two drummers (Peter Leopold (b. 15 August 1945) who had joined the group from Berlin, and Dieter Serfas). Renate Knaup at this point was only contributing minimal vocals but was very much part of the group. According to Weinzierl by this time "The band played almost every day. We played universities, academies, underground clubs, and every hall with a power socket and an audience".[3] Releasing an album brought the group greater prominence and they began to tour more widely in Germany and abroad, playing alongside groups such as Tangerine Dream, and in Germany staying in other communes including the pioneering Kommune 1 in Berlin.

Their second album Yeti saw them introducing arranged compositions along with the bluesy violin and guitar jams such as the long improvised title track. The next album Tanz der Lemminge was based on four extended progressive rock suites. By this time bassist Anderson had returned to England and joined Hawkwind, to be replaced by Lothar Meid (born 28 August 1942), and the group was augmented by synthman Karl-Heinz Hausmann (Karrer had formed a short-lived group in 1966 - supposedly named 'Amon Düül O' - with future Embryo founders Lothar Meid and drummer Christian Burchard).[4]

Still touring widely, they recorded their Live in London album in 1973 and in 1975 signed with Atlantic Records in the US, and United Artists Records Germany and initially disbanded in 1981.[1]

As well as their albums and live shows ADII received offers to write music for films, winning a German film award, the Deutscher Filmpreis, for their contribution to the film San Domingo.[5]

Amon Düül II's drummer Peter Leopold died on 8 November 2006. A memorial service was held for Leopold in Munich, where the remaining members of Amon Düül II sang a song for him. Leopold was replaced by multi-instrumentalist Daniel Fichelscher, for many years guitarist and drummer of Krautrock group Popol Vuh.[6] Fichelscher is not new to the group, and in fact has had a long affiliation with Amon Düül II, having played with them as early as 1972 in Carnival in Babylon.[1]

Bass player Lothar Meid died 3 November 2015.[7]

Band members

  • Chris Karrer – violin, guitars, saxophone, vocals (1969-1981)
  • John Weinzierl – guitar, bass, vocals (1969-1977)
  • Falk Rogner – organ, synthesizer, electronics (1969-1971, 1972-1975, 1981)
  • Renate Knaup – vocals, tambourine (1969-1970, 1972-1975, 1981)
  • Dieter Serfas – drums (1969)
  • Peter Leopold – drums, percussion (1969-1972, 1973-1979, died 2006)
  • Christian "Schrat" Thierfeld – bongos, vocals, violin (1969-1970)
  • Dave Anderson – bass (1969-1970)
  • Lothar Meid – bass, vocals (1971-1973, 1974, died 2015)
  • Karl-Heinz Hausmann – keyboards, organ, electronics (1971-1972)
  • Danny Fichelscher – drums, percussion, guitar (1972, 1981)
  • Robby Heibl – bass, guitar, violin, vocals (1973, 1975)
  • Nando Tischer – guitar, vocals (1975)
  • Klaus Ebert – guitar, bass, vocals (1976-1979)
  • Stefan Zauner – keyboards, synthesizer, vocals (1976-1979)
  • Jörg Evers – bass, guitar, synthesizer (1981)

Discography

Amon Düül II discography
Studio albums 15
Live albums 4
Compilation albums 14
Singles 2

Studio albums

Release Year Title Notes
1969 Phallus Dei
1970 Yeti Double LP
1971 Tanz der Lemminge Double LP
Also known as Dance of the Lemmings and in Italy as Journey into a Dream (Viaggio In Un Sogno)
1972 Carnival in Babylon
1972 Wolf City
1973 Utopia Originally released as a Utopia album; being a side project by Amon Düül II producer Olaf Kübler; only re-releases credit the band as Amon Düül II. Renate Knaup, Falk-U. Rogner and Chris Karrer are featured in one song of the album each, John Weizierl in two songs and Danny Fichelscher on four songs. Only Lothar Meid is featured in every eight songs of the album.
1973 Vive La Trance
1974 Hijack Also written Hi-Jack
1975 Made in Germany Released as a double LP in Germany and a single LP outside Germany
1976 Pyragony X
1977 Almost Alive...
1979 Only Human
1981 Vortex
1995 Nada Moonshine #
2010 Düülirium Originally released online as Bee As Such
First released on CD and vinyl in 2014

Live albums

Release Year Title Notes
1973 Live in London
1992 Live in Concert BBC recording from 1973
1996 Live in Tokyo

Compilations

Release Year Title Notes
1975 Lemmingmania
1978 Rock in Deutschland Vol.1
1989 Milestones
1993 Surrounded by the Bars
1994 The Greatest Hits
1996 Kobe (Reconstructions)
1996 Eternal Flashback
1997 Flawless
1997 The Best of 1969-1974
1997 Drei Jahrzehnte (1968-1998)
1999 The UA Years: 1969-1974
2000 Manana
2001 Once Upon A Time - Best Of 1969 - 1999
2005 Anthology A complete Amon Düül II career retrospective

Singles

Release Year Title Notes Album
1970 Archangels Thunderbird b/w Soap Shop Rock Yeti
1970 Rattlesnakeplumcake b/w Between the Eyes Non-album single
1971 Light b/w Lemmingmania Non-album single
1972 All the Years Round b/w The Tables Are Turned Carnival in Babylon
1974 Pigman b/w Mozambique Vive La Trance
1974 Mirror b/w Liquid Whisper Hijack
1979 Don't Turn Too Stone b/w Spaniards & Spacemen Only Human

Legacy

Amon Düül II influenced such bands in late 70s like Hungarian psychedelic hardcore 'shaman punk' band Galloping Coroners.[8]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Krautrock, BBC4, October 2009
  3. 3.0 3.1 Interview with John Weinzierl, accessed on May 13, 2009
  4. Communing With Chaos by Edwin Pouncey - 'The Wire' #144 (February 1996)
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Amon Duul II official site - "History" accessed on March 14, 2008
  7. http://www.expose.org/index.php/articles/display/lothar-meid-amon-dl-ii-bassist-rip-2.html
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links

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