Klaus Wunderlich

8 粉絲

by Tony WildsKlaus Wunderlich was born to a policeman in the Saxony town of Chemnitz in 1930. As a teenager he worked for the local opera rehearsing singers but soon chose popular music over classical. By 1951 he was ready to tour West Germany, which led to a standing gig at the Tiny Cabaret Simple in Mannheim. Here he was playing winsomely in a beer hall, and the owner and patrons liked him enough to buy an expensive organ. Then Telefunken found and signed him. Wunderlich experimented with the Hammond, as all the great pop organists have done, to discover and add to its range of extraordinary sounds. It was not long before he was using organ and early synthesizer to reproduce strings, horns, and so forth. To overcome the early synthesizers one-note-at-a-time limitation, he became an expert at multi-tracking, effects, and other production wizardry. The magic was not all technical, however. Wunderlich, like a benign Black Forest gnome, played music that pandered to popular taste but also pushed the boundaries for keyboardists. He wrote some great tunes and arranged many others in a zany way not seen since Lenny Dee, whose career was peaking as Wunderlich picked up the baton. Wunderlich shared Ethel Smiths affinity for Latin and Brasilian rhythms, Lenny Dees zany pop sense, and Jean-Jacques Perreys lighthearted invention and technical facility. A long series of albums for Telefunken included some Moog albums and demos for the Wersi super-organ, which was something like a Hammond stuffed with Moog capabilities. The Hammond Pops and other Wunderlich albums are notorious, mainly because the music and jackets are rife with cheese and cheesecake. There is a lot of mush to sift through, to be sure, but fine gems twinkle there too, as if out of a fairy tale by the brothers Grimm.

查閱更多
default playlist img
Icetea2023年3月29日
default playlist img
A Prairie Windstorm2023年2月9日
default playlist img
Traditions2022年12月2日
default playlist img
Ännchen von Tharau2022年11月21日

Klaus Wunderlich :

by Tony WildsKlaus Wunderlich was born to a policeman in the Saxony town of Chemnitz in 1930. As a teenager he worked for the local opera rehearsing singers but soon chose popular music over classical. By 1951 he was ready to tour West Germany, which led to a standing gig at the Tiny Cabaret Simple in Mannheim. Here he was playing winsomely in a beer hall, and the owner and patrons liked him enough to buy an expensive organ. Then Telefunken found and signed him. Wunderlich experimented with the Hammond, as all the great pop organists have done, to discover and add to its range of extraordinary sounds. It was not long before he was using organ and early synthesizer to reproduce strings, horns, and so forth. To overcome the early synthesizers one-note-at-a-time limitation, he became an expert at multi-tracking, effects, and other production wizardry. The magic was not all technical, however. Wunderlich, like a benign Black Forest gnome, played music that pandered to popular taste but also pushed the boundaries for keyboardists. He wrote some great tunes and arranged many others in a zany way not seen since Lenny Dee, whose career was peaking as Wunderlich picked up the baton. Wunderlich shared Ethel Smiths affinity for Latin and Brasilian rhythms, Lenny Dees zany pop sense, and Jean-Jacques Perreys lighthearted invention and technical facility. A long series of albums for Telefunken included some Moog albums and demos for the Wersi super-organ, which was something like a Hammond stuffed with Moog capabilities. The Hammond Pops and other Wunderlich albums are notorious, mainly because the music and jackets are rife with cheese and cheesecake. There is a lot of mush to sift through, to be sure, but fine gems twinkle there too, as if out of a fairy tale by the brothers Grimm.

隨時上JOOX欣賞 Klaus Wunderlich 的歌曲!每當說到一位擁有出色歌曲和專輯的歌手時,我們一定會想到擁有 8 粉絲的Klaus Wunderlich。如果你也正在尋找 Klaus Wunderlich 的歌曲,那就太好了!JOOX將會為你提供 Klaus Wunderlich 的MV和歌曲合輯,你必會喜歡這些歌曲!