In the 'Concert Hall' section, we present Minimum Maximum,a two-hour performance by Kraftwerk, compiled from the most successful shows that the band performed in Moscow, Budapest, London, Berlin, Tallinn, Warsaw, Tokyo, Paris and Ljubljana in spring and summer 2004. This isn’t the classic line-up. Wolfgang Flür and Karl Bartos left the quartet back in the late eighties. They were replaced on stage and in the studio by Fritz Hilpert (sound engineer on 1991’s The Mix album) and Henning Schmitz (sound engineer of the band since the late seventies). So, seasoned people.
At the same time, of course, we shouldn’t forget that the concert is made in the spirit of Kraftwerk—dry and restrained: four middle-aged people stand almost motionless behind electronic stands, constantly turning knobs, which has become a meme. Rock da house! The static picture is compensated for by a huge graphic screen.
’W In the 'Concert Hall' section, we present Minimum Maximum, a two-hour performance by Kraftwerk, compiled from the most successful shows that the band performed in Moscow, Budapest, London, Berlin, Tallinn, Warsaw, Tokyo, Paris and Ljubljana in spring and summer 2004. This isn’t the classic line-up. Wolfgang Flür and Karl
Kraftwerk — Minimum Maximum Live↑2024-03-01T00:00:00.000+02:00↑kraftwerk-minimum-maximum-live
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In the 'Concert Hall' section, we present Minimum Maximum, a two-hour performance by Kraftwerk, compiled from the most successful shows that the band performed in Moscow, Budapest, London, Berlin, Tallinn, Warsaw, Tokyo, Paris and Ljubljana in spring and summer 2004. This isn’t the classic line-up. Wolfgang Flür and Karl