The Sound of the Machine: My Life in Kraftwerk and Beyond is Karl Bartos’s first full account of his journey from post‑war German childhood to co‑architect of one of the most influential bands in modern music. As a core member of Kraftwerk during their most celebrated run, Bartos helped shape pieces like “The Robots,” “Computer Love,” “The Model” and “Tour de France,” tracks that still define our collective image of the electronic future. Here, he steps out from behind the band’s carefully maintained mystique to tell the more human story of how those stark, iconic sounds came to be.
Bartos recalls his early years in a country rebuilding itself, his first encounters with pop and classical music, and his training as a percussionist. He then leads readers into the inner world of Kling Klang studio, where Kraftwerk forged their aesthetic through painstaking experimentation and rehearsal. Far from bloodless automatons, the group emerges as a volatile mix of personalities and ideas, working long hours to refine textures, rhythms and lyrics until they achieved a rare clarity. Bartos writes about the joy, humour and occasional tensions of this process with a tone that is both analytical and generous, offering insight into how specific tracks were conceived and shaped.
The memoir also follows his parallel life as a teacher and his subsequent creative work after leaving Kraftwerk, showing how questions about technology, humanity and culture have continued to guide his projects. Along the way, Bartos reflects on how the band’s image has been interpreted, on the commodification of “innovation”, and on the current state of digital music culture. Cerebral but never dry, The Sound of the Machine offers both an inside history of a pivotal group and a thoughtful meditation on what it means to make music with - and sometimes against - the machines that surround us.
Weight: 648g
Dimensions:198 x 139 x 52 (mm)