Home Playlist Sessies Essentials Top 100 Library
  • Koen (2002)
    1. twal siree
    2. hahver
    3. wabbit regghae
    4. pohlhahs
    5. ausfahrt : ohlbahrt
    6. döhre
    7. Stampertje
    8. marse
    9. au ville Köhn
    10. Mendelköhn
    11. Sankt-Almost
    12. mohronn
    13. niplöhn, dedzu !
    14. plöhs
    15. Mixomatosis
    16. nigewöhne
    17. Vlammsche Röhs
    18. fahrt
    19. Öhrosong
    20. könöhn
    21. zwähtähf
    22. klöhrgöhr
    23. föhnen
    24. langoorn
    25. skreve
    26. Mendelssöhn
    27. Köhn's death

  • We Need More Space in the Cosmos (2009)
    1. The ocean that has no west and no east
    2. Space is no place
    3. Goodbye pluto
    4. Trans-neptunian objects
    5. The aids of space
    6. For about one minute, it seemed to work just fine
    7. Opinions are like assholes, the internet is full of them
    8. Alpha arietis

    Having already paid tribute to Bruce Willis on his previous full-length, fro this latest album Kohn's Jurgen De Blonde doffs his cap to those other great action heroes of our time, Klaus Schulze and Jean-Michel Jarre. We Need More Space In The Cosmos is another striking vintage-style synthesizer album with a definite leaning towards the kosmische end of the broad krautrock spectrum. These are words oft written on these pages, and truth be told there's no shortage of albums like this at the moment. It would seem that experimenting with progged-up '80s new age sounds and post-Popol Vuh chord sequences is this year's Takoma-style guitar album. But as with all those solo acoustic fretboard outings that inundated us over the past couple of years, you'd be fairly hard-pressed to find a bad one. 'Trans-Neptunian Objects' finds De Blonde in especially fine form, eschewing drone convention in favour of big, sustaining synth string sequences, while experimental fidgeting creeps into the set via the bumblebee nag of 'For About One Minute, It Seemed To Work Just Fine', before the kraut-punk fuzz-out of 'Opinions Are Like Assholes, The Internet Is Full Of Them' shifts the album up a gear or two. Good stuff. Read more on Last.fm.