In the proper spirit of professionalism, the aura of the group shifts away from the solely musical into wider concerns with things social, economical and political; even into small everyday details. Humour too belongs here.
PETER KEMPER
Only Utopias are Realistic
The Cassiber-Concept
Peter Kemper was a music Journalist und radio host when in 1982 he invited Cassiber for their first public appearance at the Alte Oper in Frankfurt.
For the heroes of progress, the early eighties in Germany are a kind of
In England and America, punks open garbage cans to poke in the waste of society. In his art magazine
The Berlin art collective
On the other side, a new kind of criticism emerges: ‘Subversion by Affirmation’. The credo of the New-Wave-movement in rock is ‘I want to be a machine’. The reign of abstraction, the artificial, the functional is to be undermined by aggressively overstretching the inevitable: subversion by confirmation! In the early eighties, an ecologically motivated consciousness of crisis and an increasingly felt emptiness of communication, purposelessness, boredom and lethargy -the down sides of the over-stimulated affluent society - come into the light. One of the first German punk bands, S.Y.P.H. from Solingen paraphrase the paradox when they sing: ‘Back to the concrete, back to the U-Bahn, back to concrete. Here the human is still a human; disgust, disgust; nature, nature; I only love pure concrete.’
Then childishness and stylized naivety are resurrected in the
At the same time an alternative programme of musical ricochets forms in Frankfurt: Cassiber, four multi-instrumentalists with dangerous contraband from the sound lab, where the energy of punk is fused with improvisation out of free jazz, and the more austere forms of classical music - the whole enterprise driven by a rough rock-impulse; the ‘charm of the familiar’ colliding with the strangeness of the unexpected. Since it seems impossible to create totally new music now, only deconstruction of available material can promise innovation.
The ear-piercing cry-chant of Christoph Anders, the noise-splinters of his guitar, his martial beats on iron and steel; Heiner Goebbels’ piano clusters and sampling-injections: attempts to restrain the sound-chaos; melodic cries from Alfred Harth’s saxophone; rhythmic-disruptive actions and deliberate percussive confusions from British Art-Rock-Drummer Chris Cutler - it’s a concept that appears like a calculated explosive charge in the context of the Neue Deutsche Welle. These four visionaries use jazz only as a reservoir of energy, not as a performance style or a musical genre. Alfred Harth: ‘When I’m on the ball, a little niche opens up in my playing, where you can find very rare sound-blossoms, sharp, piercing, cutting figures.’ The indomitable Sturm und Drang attitude of Cassiber is unique in the European scene.
Simultaneously Anders and Goebbels with