Hauschka

Hauschka

Person from Germany

Genres: piano, ambient, instrumental, contemporary classical, experimental

Hauschka

About Hauschka

Volker Bertelmann is a composer/pianist (born October 11, 1966 in Ferndorf, Kreuztal, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany), who currently resides in Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, where he has lived since 1990 after he moved from Cologne. He started releasing music as Hauschka in 2004. Volker studied classical piano for ten years. His work as Hauschka is based upon a playful exploration of the possibilities of the 'prepared' piano - a disruptive intervention into the preconceived idea of the piano as a pure-toned instrument: by clamping wedges of leather, felt or rubber between the strings; preparing the hammers with aluminium paper or rough films; placing crown corks on the strings, weaving guitar strings around the piano's guts, or pasting them down with gaffa tape - his resulting tracks are composed both originally and charmingly. Rather than striving for any purist academic perfection, Volker’s playing seems as much informed by modern electronica or Indonesian gamelan as it is by any classical cannon. With the aid of his interventions, the piano becomes as much a machine for generating rhythms as it does for melody. Now and again Hauschka utilises additional, non-piano sounds such as synthesizer, drum machine, electric bass, or other acoustic instruments like vibraphone, strings or brass. His pieces may be seen as small rhythmic sound-vignettes or just quiet ballads which have their roots in east-asian harmonies, the minimalism of Reich, Glass, Nyman, etc., and also in Satie or Ravel. The foundations of Hauschka's piano music can equally be traced back to 20th Century composers like Henry Cowell, who picked the strings of his piano as if it were a zither. Cowell in turn influenced John Cage, who redefined the rules of piano sounds and playing with his own experiments. Inserting bolts, screws, and numerous other objects in between and on top of the strings, Cage created new sounds and percussive elements to the act of playing, redefining possibilities for the instrument. The rustling, drumming, harmonic soundings of these various objects has consequently inspired a whole bunch of composers, amongst them Arvo Pärt, Steffen Schleiermacher, Frangis Ali-Sade, Edison Denissow or Philip Corner and other artists from radical '60s grouping, Fluxus. But it would be too easy to locate the playful in the serious or academic realms. What Fluxus had constantly been trying to undermine, others have been succeeding in with a whole different kind of verve: in the '50s Fritz Schulz-Reichel became a celebrity under the name of "Schräger Otto", his modified Ragtime sounds making him a huge success in the USA. Since then modified piano-hammers or strings have appeared as an effect in various pop music tracks. In the early '80s US hipsters like The Waitresses and the England's The Flying Lizards were experimenting with metallic, distorted piano sounds, not denying their avant-garde references. Before his involvement with FatCat, Hauschka released two albums on the Karaoke Kalk label - 'Substantial' (2004) and 'The Prepared Piano' (2005); and a 7", 'What A Day' (2005) on the Ear Sugar label. Besides working as Hauschka, Volker is a member of Music A.M., a collaboration with Stefan Schneider (To Rococco Rot) and Luke Sutherland (Long Fin Killie); and of the electronic / club tracks duo Tonetraeger, his project with Torsten Mauss. Hauschka's first release for FatCat's 130701 imprint, the beautiful 'Room To Expand' was released in February 2007. That year also saw him undertake his first live shows in the UK and USA (where he supported múm on a number of shows to great acclaim). In September 2008, his follow up record, ‘Ferndorf’ was released. Where the previous album comprised mostly solo recordings of Hauschka’s ‘prepared’ piano (with a few electronic and instrumental overdubs), ‘Ferndorf’ is a far more expansive and fully-realised album, with many of the tracks also featuring a string duo, enabling an increased solidity. His new EP, ‘Snowflakes and Carwrecks’, was released in January 2009 and he is currently working on new material for an album set to be released in 2010. from http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/artistInfo.php?id=112

Taken from Last.fm

300,962 listeners  ·  4,955,603 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

37
stations playing
13
countries
62
tracks tracked
Heard alongside: Jeff Mills Plastikman Max Richter

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

Fly FM
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 128
245 Likes

Radio Rara
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 128
86 Likes

Hauschka — Top 30 songs of 63

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Hauschka Constant Growth Fails
Hauschka Freibad
Hauschka Cube ('Salon des Amateurs', 2011) ||| BluNite
Hauschka Eglantine Gouzy
Hauschka Nobukazu Takemura
Hauschka TG Mauss
Hauschka Wechsel Garland
Hauschka Neuschnee
Hauschka Cube (Ricardo Villalobos & Max Loderbauer Remix)
Hauschka Random Summer
Hauschka Para Bien (With Chica & The Folder)
Hauschka TwoAM
Hauschka Radar Michael Mayer Remix
Hauschka Kreuzung
Hauschka Amb3. Sunrise ||| BluNite
Hauschka Fragile
Hauschka Thames Town
Hauschka La Dilettante
Hauschka Girls (Hauntologists Remix)
Hauschka Radar (Michael Mayer Remix)
Hauschka Where Were You
Hauschka Hauberg
Hauschka Im Schlaf (With Barbara Morgenstern)
Hauschka Two AM (Patten Remix)
Hauschka Diversity
Hauschka Barbara Morgenstern
Hauschka Tarwater
Hauschka Bakerville
Hauschka Der Fluss
Hauschka Eltern
Constant Growth Fails
Freibad
Cube ('Salon des Amateurs', 2011) ||| BluNite
Eglantine Gouzy
Nobukazu Takemura
TG Mauss
Wechsel Garland
Neuschnee
Cube (Ricardo Villalobos & Max Loderbauer Remix)
Random Summer
Para Bien (With Chica & The Folder)
Radar Michael Mayer Remix
Kreuzung
Amb3. Sunrise ||| BluNite
Fragile
Thames Town
La Dilettante
Girls (Hauntologists Remix)
Radar (Michael Mayer Remix)
Where Were You
Hauberg
Im Schlaf (With Barbara Morgenstern)
Two AM (Patten Remix)
Diversity
Barbara Morgenstern
Tarwater
Bakerville
Der Fluss
Eltern