To Rococo Rot
To Rococo Rot
Electronic rock group
For the Record…
Selected discography
Sources
To Rococo Rot—originally the title of an art exhibition held by brothers/founders Robert and Ronald Lippok in Berlin in the mid-1990s—counts among the leading experimental acts to emerge from Germany. Their music, “a precise electronic sound architectural in its arrangement and often very beautiful, “as described by Jack Barron of Melody Maker, takes cues from dance and hip-hop, yet at the same time incorporates a variety of other styles. Thus, no one particular type of music figures prominently in To Rococo Rot’s sound. “We use everything we can get to create our sound, “said Ronald Lippok, who also serves as one-half of the group Tarwater with Bernd Jestram, as quoted by Billboard magazine’s Dylan Siegler. “In Tarwater and To Rococo Rot, we’re not purists, and the side of our music that involves technology is not a big thing to us.”
In fact, Lippok stresses that his group’s inspiration comes primarily from punk rock and performance-art scores, thereby resisting the ever-enduring myth that Germans always gravitate toward machines and the industrial. Whereas many electronic bands tend to grow more and more detached, To Rococo Rot favor melodies, laid-back ambient arrangements, and “sweeping, intricately constructed panoramas, “according to Rolling Stone contributor Neva Chonin. The group’s tendency to combine electronic and acoustic forms has led to comparisons to American acts such as Tortoise, Trans Am, and Romes, as well as to European groups like Circle, Stereolab, and Fridge. They have released two “proper” albums: Veiculo in 1997 and The Amateur View in 1999, a “moving, amusing, and utterly compelling” set, according to Barron.
Formed in Berlin, Germany, in 1995, experimentalists Robert Lippok, on guitar and electronics, and Ronald Lippok, on drums and effects, created To Rococo Rot following a stint with a free-form performance art and music collective. Enlisting bassist Stefan Schneider, also a member of the highly regarded German group Kreidler, the two brothers initially set out to develop music for their stage performances. The result was a combination of electronic engineering and sampling, as well as entertainment. Although more of a multimedia installation in the beginning, the trio soon wanted to demonstrate that their creations were not reserved for the art-school scene, and, accordingly, released their music as an untitled, vinyl-only picture disc and began playing live as To Rococo Rot. The recording was later reissued in 1996 by the Kitty Yo label, titled simply cd. Although rough around the edges compared to later records, Richard Fontenoy in Rock: The Rough Guide likened the trio’s debut to “a feast of shifting structures and hypnotic texturing.”
With cd and subsequent albums, To Rococo Rot made an overt attempt to marry the art-school sensibility of experimentation with the accessibility of pop music. With such intentions, they joined the burgeoning German electronic rock scene of the 1990s, one that harkened back to 1970s experimentalists such as Can, Neu!, Amon Duul, and Cluster and upgraded the sounds of the past with technical innovations such as hard-disc recording and digital sampling. “And while they don’t disguise their music’s mechanized origins, “explained Siegler, “the humans involved impart undeniable melodic sophistication…. [T]hese groups’ low-key experiments in whirring trance, amiable ambient, and minimalist melodicism represent a unified German musical front not matched in the United States since the dawn of Krautrock.” Along with To Rococo Rot and the band members’ respective side projects Tarwater and Kreidler, other bands associated with this period of creativity included Mouse On Mars and Schneider TM, both of which were lauded by the British press and achieved success with the alternative crowd in the United States.
In particular, To Rococo Rot has established themselves as one of the more florid of these groups, “offering staggered, hollow drum beats and samples woven into thoughtful polyphony, “continued Siegler. This organic quality was fully evidenced on the trio’s first “proper” studio album, Veiculo. Released in 1997 on the City Slang label and produced with David Moufang of the Deep Space Network and Source Records, the album won wider attention than the group’s debut, receiving a warm reception in both the dance club and rock circles. Fontenoy described Veiculo as “a selection of lo-and hi-tech devices blended into a groovy hybrid sound of music in transition, all
Members include Robert Lippok, guitar, electronics; Ronald Lippok, drums, effects; Stefan Schneider, bass.
Formed trio in Berlin, Germany, 1995; signed with City Slang, released first “proper” album Veiculo, 1997; released The Amateur View, 1999.
Addresses: Record company; —Mute Records (U.S.), 140 W. 22nd St., 10th Floor, New York City, NY 10011, phone: (212) 255-7670, fax: (212) 255-6056, e-mail:mute@mute.com; City Slang website: http://www.ciyslang.com.
bleeps, cycled samples, and heavy on the low end, too.”
A successful live act as well as producers of what is often referred to as a sort of onstage laboratory, To Rococo Rot gained more fans with showings at festivals such as Popkomm in Cologne, Germany. Thereafter, the trio released the Paris 25 EP, consisting of two remixed tracks and three new postmodern dance floor tracks. By now attracting offers from record companies in the United States, To Rococo Rot signed a deal in 1998 with Mute Records for American distribution. Their music, said Mute chairman Daniel Millers to Siegler, has “a broad appeal for people listening to dance and alternative. They’re accessible and listen-able in their own way.” Early the following year, the group appeared at Mute’s Mini-Meltdown festival with Kreidler, as well as the legendary band Faust, and released a ten-inch single entitled “Telema” to precede their next album.
In the spring of 1999, To Rococo Rot arrived with The Amateur View, garnering rave reviews in both Europe and overseas. Here, the trio opted for less dub, and more emphasis on sparse arrangements and melody, as well as a polished and totally professional sound. “Over the course of eleven tracks, “wrote Ryan Schreiber for Pitchfork,” you’ll be led through another green world and into a sea of such remarkable tranquility, you’d think you were on a moonbase. The music’s underwater, oceanic attributes are perfect for a day in the tub, lounging in your temperature-controlled environment, dreaming of a swim in a rural Minnesota lake.” Highlights from the album included “Greenwich, “a track employing distant urban noises—the tapping of a manual typewriter—and jazzy keyboards, and “A Little Asphalt Here and There, “a song that “takes listeners on an aural stroll so immediate, it’s almost tactile—past sites of hissing white noise, through valleys of murmuring synths, across bright patches of chattering drum machines.”
To Rococo Rot also prefer live recording to remixing, and to that end often collaborate with other musicians to blend electronics with instrumentation. For example, “A Little Asphalt Here and There” features New York-based turntablist l-Sound. In the past, the trio has also worked with the likes of Move D from Heidelberg, Germany’s Source Records, as well as D from London’s Soul Static record label. Always looking to the future yet appealing to the more mainstream listener, To Rococo Rot have already proven themselves an important presence in the rock world. “At least as far as rock (as opposed to techno/drum ’n’ bass) is concerned, “concluded Fontenoy about the trio’s influence, “the futuristic present hasn’t sounded this good for a very long time.”
cd, Kitty Yo, 1996.
Veiculo, City Slang, 1997.
Paris 25 (EP), Emperor Jones, 1998.
The Amateur View, City Slang/Mute, 1999.
Books
Buckley, Jonathan and others, editors, Rock: The Rough Guide, Rough Guides Ltd., 1999.
Periodicals
Billboard, May 22, 1999.
Melody Maker, April 24, 1999.
Rolling Stone, August 19, 2000.
Online
Audiogalaxy, http://www.audiogalaxy.com (November 27, 2000).
City Slang, http://www.cityslang.com (November 27, 2000).
Ink Blot, http://www.inkblotmagazine.com (November 27, 2000).
Pitchfork, http://www.pitchforkmedia.com (November 27, 2000).
—Laura Hightower
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
President Obama Accepts Peace Prize
Transcript from: NPR All Things Considered; 12/10/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...that must be our work your honor. GONYEA: It was a speech but also a philosophical discussion, a rumination on the use of power and the military by a president wrestling with and justifying the difficult decisions his office requires. Don Gonyea, NPR...
|
|
USING TECHNOLOGY TO IMPROVE PERFORMANCE:ANEESH CHOPRA
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 12/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...and Associate Director for Technology in the Office of Science& Technology Policy, I am focused on harnessing the power and potentialof technology and innovation to execute on the President`s vision for a21st Century economy - one where jobs...
|
|
DRINKING WATER:ROBYN PIERCE
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 12/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...10, 2009 In2001 our local utility company Dominion Virginia Power, orchestrated anaggressive campaign convincing area residents...Chesapeakebetween 1957 and 1974 fly ash from Dominions Yorktown Power generatingstation was disposed of in 4 abandoned sand and gravel...
|
|
DRINKING WATER:MARY A. FOX, PHD, MPH
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 12/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...community health. Unfortunately, systematic healtheffects research in any one small community will have limitedstatistical power to detect changes in health outcomes.In absence of traditional epidemiological studies, human healthrisk assessment methods...
|
|
DRINKING WATER:KEN LADWIG
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 12/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...Ladwig Senior Research Manager Electric Power ResearchInstitute Committee on House Energy...senior project managerat the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). EPRI is an...the environment for the global electric power industry. EPRI bringstogether scientists...
|
|
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA DELIVERS REMARKS ON ACCEPTANCE OF THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
Transcript from: Washington Transcript Service; 12/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...which tribes and then civilizations sought power and settled their differences. And over...statesmen seek to regulatethe destructive power of war. The concept of a "just war...the defeat of theThird Reich and the Axis powers, World War II was a conflict in which...
|
|
'Brothers': Family Ties, Unraveling In Wartime
Transcript from: NPR Fresh Air; 12/4/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...Parker and Donnie Darko could be so credibly messed up and volatile? Maguire isn't big physically, but his tautness radiates power. Responsibility is his mantra. When he's thrown in a pit with one of his men, he coldly orders the soldier to forget his...
|
|
L.A. Philharmonic's Revolutionary New Conductor
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 10/9/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...took the stage. (Soundbite of cheering, applause) JAFFE: When the cheering finally died down, the hype dissolved in the power of Beethoven's Ninth. (Soundbite of music, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony) JAFFE: Dudamel is just 28 years old and the...
|
|
The Climate Conundrum Over Nuclear Energy
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 12/11/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...more energy. RICHARD HARRIS: Nuclear power poses a major conundrum. Nobody's thrilled...hand, nuclear plants generate lots of power and very little carbon dioxide. And when...in the mix. Tom Terbush at the Electric Power Research Institute says his utility-funded...
|
|
Despite Action, Spain's Carbon Footprint Increases
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 12/10/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...electricity needs. Spain's investment in wind power was a bit more successful. (Soundbite...valley SOCOLOVSKY: An ad by the Spanish power company, Iberdrola, shows wind turbines...battled the windmills of La Mancha. Spanish power companies have invested heavily in renewables...
|
|
SIC 2082 Malt Beverages
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...revenues. Additionally, some state legislatures created their own Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) agencies with rule-making power, and 32 states have allowed citizens to vote for or against the sale of liquor in various cities or counties. Background and...
|
|
SIC 2421 Sawmills and Planing Mills, General
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...on rivers, using running water as their power source. As railroads spread across the...it. With the shift from water to steam power, mills became larger and more complex...extended their useful lives. Electric power began to replace steam power in the early...
|
|
SIC 2731 Book Publishing
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...considered themselves to operate within "the publishing aspect of the communications industry." However, this concentration of power among relatively few publishers led to criticism regarding the quality and diversity of materials published. Industry observers...
|
|
SIC 3052 Rubber and Plastics Hose and Belting
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...Hoses are used in such varied markets as automobiles, construction, and oil and gas. Transmission belting is used to help power cars, industrial machinery, agricultural equipment, household appliances, and construction equipment. Flat belting, commonly...
|
|
SIC 3331 Primary Smelting and Refining of Copper
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...plumbing, with 16 percent of the market share; building wire, 14 percent; commercial refrigeration and air conditioning and power utilities; each 8 percent; automotive electrical, telecommunications, and in-plant equipment, each 7 percent; electronics...
|