"I never had many problems to do my music and to give it to a record company. Rarely do they try to argue with me about my music, probably because it's still too far-out"
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Schulze’s punchline lands with a sly inversion: artistic freedom isn’t granted because the industry is enlightened; it’s granted because the gatekeepers don’t know what to do with him. “Probably because it’s still too far-out” reads like a compliment and an indictment at once. He’s not bragging about being tolerated - he’s pointing out that the usual machinery of control (notes from A&R, demands for a radio edit, pressure to mimic the market) only bites when executives can imagine a product. When the music is alien enough, interference becomes impossible.
That’s a distinctly post-70s electronic musician’s power move. Schulze came out of the German kosmische scene where synthesizers, sequencers, and long-form structures were less “songs” than environments: side-long odysseys designed for headphones and altered attention. In that ecosystem, “far-out” wasn’t a marketing adjective; it was a working method, a refusal of pop’s frictionless three-minute loop. The record company relationship he describes isn’t intimacy, it’s benign neglect - the label distributes the artifact and hopes some niche audience finds it.
The subtext is almost Mencken-esque in its quiet cynicism: the culture industry argues with you when it understands you. Schulze’s autonomy is a byproduct of being legible only to the converted. There’s pride here, but it’s not romantic. It’s pragmatic: stay weird enough and they can’t edit your imagination.
That’s a distinctly post-70s electronic musician’s power move. Schulze came out of the German kosmische scene where synthesizers, sequencers, and long-form structures were less “songs” than environments: side-long odysseys designed for headphones and altered attention. In that ecosystem, “far-out” wasn’t a marketing adjective; it was a working method, a refusal of pop’s frictionless three-minute loop. The record company relationship he describes isn’t intimacy, it’s benign neglect - the label distributes the artifact and hopes some niche audience finds it.
The subtext is almost Mencken-esque in its quiet cynicism: the culture industry argues with you when it understands you. Schulze’s autonomy is a byproduct of being legible only to the converted. There’s pride here, but it’s not romantic. It’s pragmatic: stay weird enough and they can’t edit your imagination.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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