New York, NY (Top40 Charts) The German city of Düsseldorf is renowned for its fashion, design, vibrant arts scene and proximity to the rest of Europe. Bowie loved his visits there in the 1970s, and in the 1980s Düsseldorf helped shape two of the finest electronic albums in recorded history. The first came in 1981 with Kraftwerk's 'Computer World', whilst the second followed four years later with the 1985 release of Düsseldorf group Propaganda's 'A Secret Wish'.
Now, four decades on after recording that legendary LP, ex
Propaganda members Claudia Brücken and Susanne Freytag alongside original producer Stephen Lipson, have reunited to form a new group: xPropaganda and to release a stunning new album, The
Heart Is Strange. It will be released by UMC on the ZTT label on 20 May 2022, and complemented by a special live show taking place at London's Garage on 24 May 2022 where Claudia, Susanne & Stephen will perform 'The
Heart Is Strange' in full, as well as some much-loved
Propaganda classics from their back catalogue. It promises to be a momentous evening.
After the original line up split in 1987, the individual band members of
Propaganda pursued various solo projects and musical adventures. Fast forward to the spring of 2018 and Claudia and Susanne reformed as xPropaganda to play two sold out headline shows at The Garage in Islington, London. Having felt creatively inspired by the experience, the duo then reconvened with 'A Secret Wish' producer Stephen Lipson to write new music.
The results of these sessions, held over two years, can be heard on 'The
Heart Is Strange'. It evokes the spirit and passion of classic
Propaganda whilst sounding effortlessly contemporary. With its strident beats and glacial soundscapes offset beautifully by Claudia and Susanne's expressive, passionate vocals, stand outs include the smouldering, slow burner 'Chasing Utopia', the intense, obsessive 'No Ordinary Girl' and the jagged pop glory of 'Don't (You Mess with Me)'. The album's epic opener 'The Night' sets the benchmark in the same way 'Dream Within A Dream' did for 'A Secret Wish', a 6-minute journey of pulsating, nocturnal electro bliss. All throughout 'The
Heart Is Strange', producer Stephen Lipson adds a panoramic quality that mirrors his recent excellent
Hans Zimmer collaboration for the score to the latest Bond film, 'No Time To Die'. Over a quarter of a century on, all of the promises of 'A Secret Wish' are fulfilled once again on a new album that is conceptually and sonically the follow up that never was to 'A Secret Wish'.
Formed originally as a trio in Düsseldorf, West Germany in 1982,
Propaganda emerged from that city's thriving post-punk avant-garde music and arts scenes. Founding members included established industrial musician Ralf Dörper, visual artist
Andreas Thein and vocalist Susanne Freytag, later expanding to a five-piece with the addition of classically trained musician Michael Mertens and a second vocalist also from the Düsseldorf scene, Claudia Brücken.
Propaganda's startling, pioneering electronic sound swiftly caught the ears of various members of the UK music press and the radio legend John Peel. After hearing the band's music on Peel's late-night show, they were swiftly signed to producer Trevor Horn's newly established ZTT by journalist-turned-A&R-man, Paul Morley. As one of the 'holy trinity' of ZTT's legendary founding acts - alongside Frankie Goes To Hollywood and The Art Of Noise -
Propaganda exemplified the mid-'80s zeitgeist for beautifully crafted, sonically thrilling, boundary-pushing pop music.
The band's debut album 'A Secret Wish' arrived in 1985, hot on the heels of two of the era's standout electronic singles - the sinister, propulsive powerhouse 'Dr Mabuse' and the shimmering pop-art of 'Duel'. Produced by Stephen Lipson 'A Secret Wish' is undoubtedly one of the most satisfying and complete musical statements of the 1980s. Mixing intelligence, passion, state-of-the-art technology, Edgar Allen Poe poetry, twisted love songs, lush soundscapes and future-forward electronic beats it is now rightly spoken about in the same breath as other masterpieces like The Human League's 'Dare', ABC's 'The Lexicon Of Love', 'Please' by
Pet Shop Boys and Depeche Mode's 'Violator'. Its influence on subsequent generations of electronic musicians, producers and DJs is incalculable.
Propaganda quickly achieved international success, attracting dedicated followings across
Europe and the Americas. The supreme, sensual electronic sound and enigmatic image of the group belongs as much in the new music and technology landscape of the 2020s as it did to the 1980s.
xPropaganda's Claudia and Susanne note; "We always thought it was a shame that an album as distinctive and acclaimed as 'A Secret Wish' seemed destined to be a one-off. It certainly meant a lot to us, and it never seemed right that the story stopped there. Working again with Stephen Lipson and means that we can turn our dreams about what the ZTT follow up to 'A Secret Wish' would sound like into a reality. The reality is 'The
Heart is Strange.'"