Kraftwerk — Minimum Maximum Live
In the 'Concert Hall' section, we present Minimum Maximum,
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.
“Wouldn’t it have been easier to put robots on stage, like you used to do?” the interviewers asked. “We did it recently in Bonn, Cologne and Paris, at the Musée de la Musique for six months. The robots were a moving exhibit behind glass, but then we were touring in Japan and other places, and we missed them. I think they missed us too. And the audience missed them, so we had to reunite. But they’re only appropriate for use during The Robots. You can’t have them playing the other songs and, if we sent the robots out on the road, it would be a fully mechanised show, which is very different to what we’re doing now (mimes fingers playing instrument).
It’s the man-machine after all. That would bethe machine-machine, ” explained one of the band’s founders, Ralf Hütter.
There were no smartphones yet, so the crowd only occasionally glowed with the screens of digital cameras