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Kopf Zahl Bauch

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Download links and information about Kopf Zahl Bauch by Harald " Sack " Ziegler. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Electronica genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 41:12 minutes.

Artist: Harald " Sack " Ziegler
Release date: 2002
Genre: Electronica
Tracks: 11
Duration: 41:12
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Urlauber (featuring Harald) 4:12
2. Schenken (featuring Harald) 3:12
3. Flugbahn (featuring Harald) 3:15
4. Freundchen (featuring Harald) 2:14
5. Einsam (featuring Harald) 4:57
6. Eistrompete (featuring Harald) 3:44
7. Lila Regen (featuring Harald) 3:36
8. Das Koeln (featuring Harald) 5:50
9. Toy Tech Two (featuring Harald) 2:58
10. Zwei Wochen zwei (featuring Harald) 4:03
11. Zusammen(H)Alt (featuring Harald) 3:11

Details

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Sack und Blumm's Harald "Sack" Ziegler had already released a couple of hard to find solo LPs before Kopf Zahl Bauch. But because of its strength and relatively wider availability, this first CD eclipses his earlier opuses to become the first essential Ziegler item. All the Dada pop elements of his duo with Frank "Blumm" Schültge found their way on this disc: the toy instruments, the childlike melodies, the odd sounds, the quirky rhythms, the feeling that pop music is an activity consisting of having fun with obsolete objects. At times Ziegler sounds like a German Pascal Comelade, at others like a Manu Chao immersed in German electronica instead of Latin rhythms (one can only suggest a collaboration between the two after listening to "Schenken"). But don't be fooled by these comparisons: Ziegler's style is his own. Kopf Zahl Bauch is an album of fresh material, but since it took a year and a half to complete, some tracks had already slipped out on 7" releases. Never mind that; they find a real home here. Friends from the German electronica scene helped complete a few tracks, among them Mouse on Mars, Joseph Suchy (some shredding electric guitar in "Urlauber"), Reuber, F.X. Randomiz, Marcus Schmickler, and Mr. Blumm himself. There is not a wasted track on this gem of awkward kitsch pop. Highly recommended, especially to fans of Felix Kubin, Nova Huta, and the like. ~ François Couture, Rovi