Neu! 2


title: "Neu! 2" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1973-albums", "albums-produced-by-conny-plank", "neu!-albums"] topic_path: "arts/music" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neu!_2" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox album"]

FieldValue
nameNEU! 2
typestudio
artistNeu!
coverNeu2_albumcover.jpg
released1973
recordedJanuary 1973
*Krautrock<ref name"nyt"/
*experimental rock<ref name"nyt"/
*proto-punk<ref name"Pitchfork"/
length42:14
labelBrain, United Artists
producerConny Plank, Neu!
prev_titleNeu!
prev_year1972
next_titleNeu! '75
next_year1975
misc{{Extra chronology
artistKlaus Dinger
typestudio
prev_titleNeu!
prev_year1972
titleNeu! 2
year1973
next_titleNeu! '75
next_year1975
nameNeu! 2
typestudio
single1Super/Neuschnee
single1date1972
::

| name = NEU! 2 | type = studio | artist = Neu! | cover = Neu2_albumcover.jpg | alt = | released = 1973 | recorded = January 1973 | venue = | studio = | genre =

Neu! 2 is the second studio album by the krautrock band Neu!. It was recorded in January 1973 and mixed in February 1973, both at Windrose-Dumont-Time Studios in Hamburg, West Germany, and released in 1973 by Brain Records. It was reissued by Astralwerks in the US and by Grönland in the UK and Europe on 29 May 2001.

Critic Paul Morley included it in a list of the "100 Greatest Albums of All Time" in 2003.

Overview

This album further focused the classic Neu! krautrock sound, with the 11-minute "Für Immer" in particular being the archetypal example of their style -- a forward-driving vamping, propelled by Klaus Dinger's drumming and Michael Rother's layered guitar with its fluid lines and droning harmonic structure. Pitchfork described the album as featuring a proto-punk sound, while Fact labeled it "spartan psych-rock set to power-driven drum tracks."

Side 2 of the record caused consternation at the time. Neu! had quite simply run out of money to finish recording the album, so the second side consists entirely of their previously released single "Neuschnee/Super", manipulated at various playback speeds on a record player, or mangled in a cassette recorder. Critics at the time dismissed this as a cheap gimmick and a rip-off. While it was indeed an experiment born of desperation and necessity, it was entirely in keeping with Neu!'s pop art aesthetics, taking a "ready-made" sound object and re-presenting it with a series of stylized manipulations, and also quite in keeping with the way Neu!'s music deconstructed and pared down the form of rock music. Dinger subsequently pointed to side 2 as being a prototype of the now ubiquitous multiple remixes which typically accompany any pop single release.

Legacy

Ben Sisario of The New York Times described the album along with the band's other early albums as "landmarks of German experimental rock," also referred to by journalists as krautrock.

"Super 16" appears in the films Master of the Flying Guillotine and Kill Bill.

Track listing

| all_writing = Klaus Dinger and Michael Rother | headline = Side one

| title1 = Für Immer | note1 = "Forever" | length1 = 11:17 | title2 = Spitzenqualität | note2 = "Top Quality" | length2 = 3:35 | title3 = Gedenkminute (für A + K) | note3 = "Minute's Silence (For A + K)" | length3 = 2:06 | title4 = Lila Engel | note4 = "Lilac Angel" | length4 = 4:37 | headline = Side two

| title5 = Neuschnee 78 | note5 = "Fresh Snow 78" | length5 = 2:32 | title6 = Super 16 | length6 = 3:39 | title7 = Neuschnee | note7 = "Fresh Snow" | length7 = 4:07 | title8 = Cassetto | note8 = "Cassette" | length8 = 1:48 | title9 = Super 78 | length9 = 1:36 | title10 = Hallo Excentrico! | note10 = "Hello Excentrico!" | length10 = 3:44 | title11 = Super | length11 = 3:11 }}

Personnel

;Neu!

  • Michael Rother – guitar, bass guitar, keyboards, zither, percussion, electronics, cassette recorder
  • Klaus Dingerkoto ("Japanese banjo"), 11-string guitar, drums, percussion, Farfisa electronic piano, vocals, electronics, record player

;Additional personnel

References

References

  1. Jurek, Thom. "Neu! 2".
  2. Chamy, Michael. (13 July 2001). "Neu!, Neu! 2, and Neu! 75 (Astralwerks)".
  3. Sirota, Brent S.. (5 June 2001). "Neu! 2 review".
  4. Taylor, Nicholas. (28 May 2001). "Neu!: Neu! 2".
  5. (July 2001). "Neu! 2 review".
  6. Blashill, Pat. (5 July 2001). "Neu! - Neu! / Neu! 75 - Astralwerks (2001)".
  7. (2004). "The Great Rock Discography". Canongate.
  8. (2003). "Words and Music: A History of Pop in the Shape of a City". Bloomsbury.
  9. Sirota, Brent S.. (5 June 2001). "Neu! '75 review".
  10. (15 March 2013). "Krautrock figurehead Klaus Dinger's final album to get posthumous release".
  11. (4 April 2008). "Klaus Dinger, Drummer of Influential German Beat, Dies at 61". The New York Times.

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