Popol Vuh were one of the first Krautrock bands to turn their focus -- thanks to their late founder, lone constant member, and musical director,
Florian Fricke -- to ambient music (a full half-decade before
Eno called it that) and ethnic fusions of various sorts. They released almost two dozen albums, scored a handful of films by
Werner Herzog -- including Nosferatu and Aguirre, Wrath of God -- and continually experimented with form, tone, context, and format. A decade after
Fricke's death, the German
SPV imprint celebrates his legacy with this double-disc set. The first features a smattering of
Popol Vuh tunes from throughout their tenure. It makes for compelling listening despite an apparent paradox:
Fricke and company conceived of recordings as albums (as well as scores), so hearing tracks placed outside that context would -- theoretically at least -- be an erratic listening exercise. It's not. In fact, it's sequenced beautifully. The second disc pays tribute to
Popol Vuh via a set of remixes by a wide assortment of producers and DJs. These include
Peter Kruder's slow, ambient dub re-creation of "Aguirre I/II [Lacrima Di Rei Edit]" and
Moritz von Oswald's reworking of "Gaerten Pharaos [Dark Development Edit]" from the same soundtrack.
Oswald's version features throbbing percussion in the lower registers with genuinely subtle vocal effects and a high-pitched synth jabbing in and out of the mix seemingly at random. Elsewhere,
Stereolab remix "Hosianna Mantra," keeping the chorus and original instrumentation before injecting a guitar that eventually takes the proceedings over. Other participants include
Mouse on Mars,
A Critical Mass,
Thomas Fehlmann,
Haswell & Hecker,
Miko Vainio,
Alex Barck, and
Roland Appel. Usually, remix projects like this one are very mixed bags in terms of quality. That said, perhaps due to the open-ended nature of
Fricke's and
Popol Vuh's source material, this set is very consistent. The collection also includes liner notes by
Fricke contemporary and friend
Klaus Schulze. ~ Thom Jurek