Tone Float

Tone Float is the only LP by the German band Organisation. Organisation was a predecessor to Kraftwerk, which was formed by two members of the band, Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider-Esleben, after the album's release.

Tone Float
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 1970
RecordedGermany
Genre
Length41:19
LabelRCA
ProducerConny Plank & Organisation
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Recording and release

The album was produced by Konrad "Conny" Plank. Of the album's recording, Hütter would later say:

The studio was in the middle of an oil refinery. When we came out of the door we could hear the sound of those big flames burning off the fumes – all kinds of industrial noises.[2][3]

Sales were poor and RCA opted to drop the band, which then dissolved following the departure of Hütter and Schneider-Esleben to Kraftwerk.

The album has never been officially reissued, although bootleg CDs and LPs appeared in the 1990s. These often included a bonus audio-track, erroneously titled "Vor dem blauen Bock", which in fact is an instrumental track named "Rückstoß Gondoliere", from a 22 May 1971 performance by Kraftwerk on the Bremen Beat-Club TV show. This song features the short-lived line-up of Florian Schneider, Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger (Ralf Hütter had left the group during this period to study architecture). Rother and Dinger left Kraftwerk shortly afterwards to form Neu!.

Track listing

Detail from the back cover of the 1970 RCA Victor official release – note the traffic cone symbol, also a feature on early Kraftwerk albums.

All tracks are written by Schneider-Esleben, Hauf and Monicks[4].

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Tone Float"20:46
Side two
No.TitleLength
2."Milk Rock"5:24
3."Silver Forest"3:19
4."Rhythm Salad"4:04
5."Noitasinagro"7:46

Personnel

  • Basil Hammoudi – glockenspiel, conga gong, musical box, bongos, percussion, vocals
  • Butch Hauf – bass, shaky tube, small bells, plastic hammer, percussion
  • Ralf Hütter – Hammond organ, organ
  • Alfred "Fred" Mönicks – drums, bongos, maracas, cowbell, tambourine
  • Florian Schneider-Esleben – electric flute, alto flute, bell, triangle, tambourine, electro-violin, percussion
Additional personnel

Release details

Country Date Label Format Catalog
United Kingdom June 1970 RCA Victor Vinyl SF 8111[6]
gollark: Hmm?
gollark: Much snappier.
gollark: I think Dragon sounds better than Turtlegistics myself.
gollark: What?
gollark: It has nicer features and some worse ones: bugginess, WIP autocrafting (mostly works, though), pluggableish backends (so you could theoretically implement "send over drone" as a storage backend), introspection module support (items direct to inventory), no GUI (unless <@307926450059870208> got that sorted), and a cooler name.

References

  1. Klaus Kehrle. "Tone Float - Organisation". allmusic.com. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  2. Interview in Select magazine, 1991
  3. Pascal Bussy: "Kraftwerk: Man, Machine and Music", SAF Publishing Ltd., Reprinted 1993, 1997, 1999: pp. 26
  4. Organisation: Tone Float (RCA Victory, 1970)
  5. Tone Float (LP). Organisation. Great Britain: RCA-Victor. 1970. SF 8111.CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. "Organisation – Tone Float". discogs.com. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
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