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Die Engel des Herrn (album)

Die Engel des Herrn
DieEngelDesHerrn1992cover.jpeg
Studio album by Die Engel des Herrn
Released 1992
Recorded 1988-9
Genre Krautrock, pop, art rock
Label L.S.D., Captain Trip Records
Producer Klaus Dinger
Klaus Dinger chronology
Néondian
(1985)Néondian1985
Die Engel des Herrn
(1992)
Live As Hippie-Punks
(1995)Live As Hippie-Punks1995

Die Engel des Herrn (styled as "DIE (b)ENGEL DES HERRN") is a 1992 studio album by the band Die Engel des Herrn. It was originally released in a limited edition of 1000 on the private label L.S.D., which Klaus Dinger created when he failed to find a record label willing to release the album. When Dinger signed to Captain Trip Records in 1995 all copies of the album not yet sold were bought up and sold by CTR, although no more copies of the album were ever pressed. Consequently only 1000 copies of the album exist, and it is one of the rarest Klaus Dinger albums.

Following the recording of Néondian in 1984, Dinger was enormously in debt. He attempted to reform Neu! with Michael Rother in 1985, but the reunion faltered and the new album (eventually released as Neu! 4) was shelved in early 1986. Dinger then began recording demos for a second solo album along the lines of Néondian, but was dropped from Virgin Records before the album could be professionally finished (it was eventually released as Blue in 1999). Dinger, severely disillusioned with the music industry, opted to form a new band using younger musicians.

"...during the rescue of Néondian at Conny's studio, [the studio musicians] were onto 500 Marks a day. It was no good experience. It was the way they make music. Some people call them the whores of rock. For me, it's nearly impossible to work with these people on this 500 Marks per day level. ...my solution was to go back to where it all starts and that is normally schooldays [sic]. Young people who are not corrupted by business and money and all these difficult things. I was prepared to go a long way with these young people."

The as yet unnamed band performed at a concert in Düsseldorf, and then began recording an album at Dinger's studios near Kamperland, Netherlands. They adopted the name "Die Engel des Herrn" or "The Angels of the Lord". The band name is sometimes written as "Die (b)Engel des Herrn", which translates as "The Rascals of the Lord". Dinger was joined by lead guitarist and violinist Gerhard Michel and drummer Klaus Immig.

The album's music is deliberately light and pop-ish, demonstrating Dinger's desire that the band be signed to a major label. There is a prominent use of the mellotron as well as sound recordings throughout the album.


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